Johnson faces tough road on Trump agenda after dramatic Speaker vote
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) kept his gavel amid a threat from the right flank of the House GOP, but managing the House GOP is not going to get any easier from here.
The dramatic Friday Speaker vote on the House floor – in which three Republicans nearly kept Johnson from the gavel before two of them reversed course to support him – showcased the challenges ahead as Johnson aims to usher President-elect Trump’s ambitious legislative agenda through a razor-thin House majority.
Around a dozen Republicans had withheld support for Johnson ahead of the vote, demanding that Johnson make commitments on spending reductions and a more open process for crafting major legislation.
Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), who had withheld support for Johnson up to the vote, referenced widespread frustration with how Johnson handled a December short-term spending bill while issuing a warning.
“If anything happens like happened before – right before Christmas, there will be consequences,” Roy told reporters after Johnson’s election.
The point of a number of members initially withholding votes for Speaker, Roy said, “was about making clear to the conference that there's a block of folks who are going to want to make sure that we actually deliver.”
Johnson, for his part, did release a public statement shortly before the vote making commitments on working groups to implement government-reducing reforms. And after securing the gavel, he projected openness to scrutiny from members.
“It’s a very different situation than the last Congress was, and they can hold me accountable for that,” Johnson told reporters after the vote. “We’re going to have a member-driven, bottom-up process for this really important legislation, and we must succeed. We have no margin for error.”
Johnson’s top priority, now, will be crafting one or two bills jam-packed with Trump agenda items – such as extending Trump’s tax cuts and addressing border security – which they aim to pass through a party-line “reconciliation” process that bypasses the threat of a Democratic filibuster.
But getting the fractious House GOP behind the package could prove to be as tall of a task for Johnson as it was to secure the votes to be reelected Speaker.
In the razor-thin House majority, opposition from just a member or two can sink any party-line measure. The House currently has 219 Republicans and 215 Democrats, with that margin set to get even slimmer when a number of House members join the Trump administration.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.), in an interview with NBC’s Kristin Welkerfor “Meet the Press” that was conducted as the House was choosing its Speaker, said that Johnson has “a really, really tough job” with that margin.
“He's got a lot of folks that are headed in different directions,” Thune said. “I mean, as you know, that with a narrow margin like that, any individual member of the House of Representatives can have a huge impact.”
“We will need to be as a Senate and with the White House working closely as a team, if we're going to get an agenda done that we want to accomplish for the American people,” Thune said.
Plans for that massive bill of Trump priorities also got a new wrinkle last week of Trump’s surprise demands last month to raise the debt ceiling. To meet Trump’s request, House Republicans in December struck a handshake agreement to raise the debt ceiling in the reconciliation bill by $1.5 trillion while pairing it with $2.5 trillion spending cuts.
But figuring out those cuts and meeting those steep spending demands will be very tough, as forecasted by Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) – one of the Republicans who voted for a candidate other than Johnson before switching to support him.
“When the reconciliation bills come up and people have to sacrifice, because every dollar spent up here has got an advocate, fight for it,” Norman said of what he expects from the Speaker.
“If the cut is defined as a reduction of the increase, that's not going to sit well for a lot of us, and we're not putting up with that,” Norman added.
Rep. Keith Self (Texas), the other Republican who switched his vote from another candidate to Johnson, said that commitments from Johnson on who will be designing that massive bill helped win him over.
“We shored up the reconciliation team, because we know this will be a heavy lift to get the Trump agenda across the line in the reconciliation package,” Self said. “So, we shored up the negotiating team. That’s all we did.”
Self declined to elaborate on who the negotiating team would be, but said that it would include members beyond the leadership, including members of the House Freedom Caucus.
House Republicans are set to hold an all-day planning session for that Trump agenda bill on Saturday.
Johnson’s struggles do not stop there.
Eleven board members of the hard-line conservative group, including Roy, also sent a warning shot to Johnson in the form of a letter.
The members said that while they voted for Johnson to be Speaker “because of our steadfast support of President Trump and to ensure the timely certification of his electors,” they had “sincere reservations regarding the Speaker’s track record.”
The members made a number of requests in the letter, including that the reconciliation package should reduce spending and the deficit, that members must be allowed to offer amendments to legislation, and that leadership should abide by a 72-hour rule to give members time to read and debate proposed legislation.
The number of members on that letter is notable given the new 9-member threshold on triggering a snap vote on ousting the Speaker, known as the “motion to vacate.” If the 11 banded together, they could force Johnson out of the Speakership.
Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.), one of the 11 who signed that letter, said that the threat of ouster is an important accountability measure.
“You got to be careful. Nobody wants to have, you know, sword over their head, but we have a motion to vacate for a reason,” Ogles said of Johnson. “He's been given a job. He's got to go do that job.”
Mike Lillis, Mychael Schnell, and Rebecca Beitsch contributed.
Topics
-
Johnson wins dramatic reelection as speaker after 2 GOP hard-liners switch votes
Mike Johnson was reelected on Friday for a second term as House speaker.ABC News - 1d -
Republican Mike Johnson elected House speaker after dramatic vote reversals
President-elect Donald Trump congratulated Johnson, who eked out election as speaker of the House after a first ballot was kept open for more than an hour.CNBC - 1d -
House speaker’s dramatic reelection signals tough road for Trump
Meet the Press moderator Kristen Welker joins NBC’s Joe Fryer on Sunday TODAY to discuss how the tight vote for Mike Johnson to be reelected as House speaker is a preview of what Trump will face as ...NBC News - 22h -
Mike Johnson reelected as House speaker in dramatic vote
The new Congress kicked off in dramatic fashion on the House floor after Republican Mike Johnson won a full term as House Speaker after a razor-thin win. Two votes flipped in his favor after they ...CBS News - 1d -
How Donald Trump reacted to Mike Johnson winning the House speaker vote
President-elect Donald Trump congratulated Mike Johnson on social media after the Louisiana representative won his bid to remain as House speaker. CBS News' Ed O'Keefe has more.CBS News - 2d -
Jeffries outlines priorities for Democrats after Johnson wins House speaker vote
Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries introduced House Speaker Mike Johnson following the vote that reelected Johnson to the leadership role. Jeffries also called attention to priorities for Democrats as ...CBS News - 2d -
Trump boosts Johnson ahead of Speaker vote
President-elect Trump gave a public boost to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) hours before House lawmakers vote to determine whether he will keep the gavel to start the next Congress and amid ...The Hill - 2d -
Speaker Mike Johnson faces crucial vote as new congress begins
Mike Johnson continues to fight to keep his position as House Speaker as the newly-elected 119th congress will be sworn in Friday and is set to vote on who will fill the spot. At least one ...NBC News - 2d -
House speaker Mike Johnson faces crucial Friday vote as support in doubt
The embattled Republican can only afford to lose one vote as GOP prepares to elect its congressional leader. Mike Johnson ’s grip on the House speakership faces a crucial test on Friday, as ...The Guardian - 3d
More from The Hill
-
I was there on Jan. 6 — we cannot allow Trump to rewrite history
Every member of Congress, including Republicans in both chambers, have a duty to loudly and publicly oppose the pardoning of criminals who assaulted and tried to kill their colleagues and police ...The Hill - 20m -
Morning Report — Senate GOP leader eyes Trump tutorial
In today’s issue: © The Associated Press | J. Scott Applewhite Senate GOP leader eyes Trump tutorial President-elect Trump exults in the power he envisions with Republican control of the White ...The Hill - 1h -
Musk extends political tentacles into UK, Germany
Elon Musk is seeking to wield the power of his social media network to boost far-right political movements in the United Kingdom and Germany, after becoming a major backer of President-elect Trump ...The Hill - 1h -
Muslim, Arab voters face uncertain political future under Trump
Muslim and Arab American voters in the U.S. face an uncertain political future as President-elect Trump prepares to take office later this month. Long considered a reliable part of the Democratic ...The Hill - 1h -
Harris readies to certify Trump’s election win – and her decisive defeat
Kamala Harris is readying on Monday to certify the 2024 election results, affirming President-elect Trump’s victory as well as her decisive defeat to him after a whirlwind run for ...The Hill - 1h
More in Politics
-
I was there on Jan. 6 — we cannot allow Trump to rewrite history
Every member of Congress, including Republicans in both chambers, have a duty to loudly and publicly oppose the pardoning of criminals who assaulted and tried to kill their colleagues and police ...The Hill - 20m -
Morning Report — Senate GOP leader eyes Trump tutorial
In today’s issue: © The Associated Press | J. Scott Applewhite Senate GOP leader eyes Trump tutorial President-elect Trump exults in the power he envisions with Republican control of the White ...The Hill - 1h -
Musk extends political tentacles into UK, Germany
Elon Musk is seeking to wield the power of his social media network to boost far-right political movements in the United Kingdom and Germany, after becoming a major backer of President-elect Trump ...The Hill - 1h -
Muslim, Arab voters face uncertain political future under Trump
Muslim and Arab American voters in the U.S. face an uncertain political future as President-elect Trump prepares to take office later this month. Long considered a reliable part of the Democratic ...The Hill - 1h -
Trump’s Jan. 6 certification marks political comeback
President-elect Trump’s political comeback is set to be sealed on Monday as Congress certifies his election victory, a full 180 degree turn from four years ago, when he sat stewing in the White ...The Hill - 1h