Why Republicans seem stuck in selecting a new House speaker

Congressional Republicans had a brief window of opportunity this week to regroup from the unprecedented ouster of U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and move forward on pressing issues with new leadership and resolve.

Already, that window appears to be closing fast.

Why We Wrote This

The challenges surrounding the U.S. House speakership stem in part from personalities, polarization, and a GOP identity crisis, but also from decades of broader institutional neglect in Congress.

After Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise won an internal speaker-nominating contest over Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan on Wednesday, the rest of the conference did not immediately move to support Mr. Scalise en masse, and an announced floor vote had to be scuttled. Whoever eventually prevails, the increasingly clear fractures in the party have raised questions about the next speaker’s ability to move legislation or remain in the post longer than their predecessor.

The stakes are high, with the government due to run out of money Nov. 17, and allies Israel and Ukraine urgently seeking military aid and strong American leadership in the face ofemboldened adversaries. Some Republicans expressed frustration with the volatile internal GOP dynamics after an already tumultuous nine months under Mr. McCarthy.

“Most of our voters are tired of seeing the division, dissension, and discombobulation of our conference,” says Rep. Jodey Arrington of Texas. “I think they want to see unity, especially with the backdrop of what’s going on in the Middle East.”

Republicans had a brief window of opportunity this week to regroup from the unprecedented ouster of U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and move forward to address a range of pressing issues with a new House leader and a new sense of resolve.

But already, that window appears to be closing fast.

After Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise won an internal speaker-nominating contest over Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan on Wednesday, the rest of the conference did not immediately move to support Mr. Scalise en masse, and an announced floor vote had to be scuttled. On Thursday night, Mr. Scalise withdrew from the race.

Why We Wrote This

The challenges surrounding the U.S. House speakership stem in part from personalities, polarization, and a GOP identity crisis, but also from decades of broader institutional neglect in Congress.

Whoever eventually prevails, the increasingly clear fractures in the party have raised questions about the next speaker’s ability to move legislation or remain in the post longer than their predecessor.

“I think they will face the exact same challenges, maybe more,” says Matthew Bartlett, a GOP strategist and former Hill staffer based in Washington. “Governing is tough, and it’s even tougher when everyone thinks they’re going to get everything their way.”

That said, leadership matters, says Republican political consultant Whit Ayres.