How Mike Johnson went from 鈥榳ho?鈥 to House speaker
After a historic impasse, House Republicans Wednesday selected a new speaker, Mike Johnson of Louisiana. He is inexperienced in leadership and faces divisive and difficult issues 鈥 but he has the unanimous backing of his GOP colleagues.
After a historic impasse, House Republicans Wednesday selected a new speaker, Mike Johnson of Louisiana. He is inexperienced in leadership and faces divisive and difficult issues 鈥 but he has the unanimous backing of his GOP colleagues.
After three tumultuous weeks of stalemate and infighting, House Republicans ended their speakership saga Wednesday by elevating a relatively junior member with strong conservative bona fides, an amiable demeanor 鈥 and perhaps most important, few enemies.
Louisiana Rep. Mike Johnson, now in his fourth term, is the least experienced member to become House speaker in more than 80 years. His election, after a historic impasse in which three other GOP nominees tried and failed to win the gavel, came with both a sense of relief and trepidation. The new speaker, who stands second in line to the presidency after the vice president, will immediately have to contend with a series of divisive and difficult issues. They include a Nov. 17 deadline for funding the government and aid packages for Ukraine and Israel.
While Republicans rallied around the bespectacled Louisianian, who won unanimous support from his party, Mr. Johnson begins his speakership in a markedly weak position. With no leadership experience and no real relationships with his counterparts in the House and Senate, he will be trying to secure conservative policy goals from an exceedingly narrow and bitterly divided House GOP majority, while negotiating with a Democratic Senate and White House.听
For now, at least, some of the right-wing members who sparred with former Speaker Kevin McCarthy over spending and other matters before his historic ouster on Oct. 3 indicated they would give Speaker Johnson the benefit of the doubt as he gets his feet under him.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 blame the backup quarterback for the failures of the guy that just came out of the game,鈥 Scott Perry, chair of the hard-line Freedom Caucus, told reporters ahead of the vote.听
Mr. Johnson laid out an ambitious plan for accomplishing one of conservatives鈥 top priorities: passing all 12 appropriations bills, a process that has gotten logjammed more often than not in recent years. The goal is to avoid a massive 鈥渙mnibus鈥 spending bill that gives members little time to read what they鈥檙e funding or weigh in on funding levels for specific departments.听
鈥淚 am confident we can accomplish that objective quickly, in a manner that delivers on our principled commitment to rein in wasteful spending, and put our country back on a path to fiscal responsibility,鈥 wrote Mr. Johnson in a two-page memo to colleagues.
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According to his proposed timetable, the House would vote on the remaining eight bills by the Nov. 17 deadline, or extend funding temporarily to January or April in order to complete the process. That, he said, would give the House the upper hand in negotiations with the Democratic-led Senate and avoid a Christmas omnibus.听
Mr. Johnson is known for his genial manner.听Upon his election, he started his remarks by acknowledging the contributions of overworked听House staffers, the families of members of Congress, and former Speaker McCarthy. He also extended an olive branch to Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
鈥淚 know that in your heart you love and care about this country and you want to do what鈥檚 right. We are going to find common ground there,鈥 he said, receiving a standing ovation from both sides of the aisle.
Why everyone has to Google 鈥淢ike Johnson鈥
Despite serving as head of the conservative congressional Republican Study Committee, and vice chair of the GOP conference, Mr. Johnson was so little known that even prominent Republicans like Sen. Susan Collins told reporters they would have to Google him.
A southern Baptist and constitutional lawyer, he had long worked in support of conservative policy positions on abortion and same-sex marriage. He is seen as more of a policy wonk in the mold of former Republican House Speaker听Paul Ryan. Among the eight other candidates for speaker in the second-to-last round, Mr. Johnson had sponsored 46 bills, and had the听highest share听of sponsored legislation passed out of committee.听However, only听a few of his bills had Democratic co-sponsors, resulting in just 13% passing out of the House.听
Among the more controversial pieces of legislation he sponsored was the Stop Sexualization of Children Act of 2022, which critics dubbed a federal version of Florida鈥檚 鈥淒on鈥檛 Say Gay鈥 law 鈥 but with expanded scope. The bill proposed limiting federal funding of sex education to children age 10 and older, noting that some school districts had introduced sex education for children as young as kindergarten that included discussions of gender identity.听
Mr. Johnson is also controversial for his work limiting abortion access,听which has earned him an A-plus rating from Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America. In 2019, he joined 177 colleagues in co-sponsoring a bill prohibiting abortion nationwide after 20 weeks.听
Amicus brief to overturn 2020 election
But the issue Democrats and other critics highlighted most prominently was Mr. Johnson鈥檚 role in challenging the results of the 2020 election, calling him an 鈥渆lection denier.鈥 The constitutional lawyer, educated at Louisiana State University, spearheaded an amicus brief signed by 126 House Republicans in support of a case against four swing states, brought by the Texas attorney general.听
The case alleged that the sweeping electoral changes those states enacted in the run-up to the 2020 election circumvented the constitutionally designated role of state legislatures. The Supreme Court threw out the case, saying Texas did not have standing to bring it.听
Even if the case was brought by a state with standing, 鈥渋t would still lack merit,鈥 says Edward Foley, a constitutional law professor at The Ohio State University. For example, in lower courts there were 鈥渄efinitive rulings rejecting the claims that there was any basis for overturning the certification of the election in favor of President Biden in Pennsylvania,鈥 one of the four swing states involved.
Even those who say that some of the arguments may have had merit say that such electoral changes would have had to have been challenged prior to Election Day; otherwise, voters would be unfairly disenfranchised.听
鈥淭he time to bring most of these objections would have been before the election, while the violation was occurring 鈥 before all of the votes were accepted and tallied, rather than after the fact in terms of trying to change your election results,鈥 says Michael Morley, a professor at Florida State University College of Law who is known for his work on post-election litigation.
Moreover, adds Professor Foley, there were not enough ballots in question to have overturned the election in Pennsylvania alone 鈥 and it would have taken at least three states to undo Mr. Biden鈥檚 election.
Mr. Johnson, who at the time also raised other concerns about the 2020 election, including the now-debunked issue of voting machines from Venezuela, did not address 2020 election听concerns in his speech on the House floor today. But in a lengthy interview with The New Yorker in December 2020, he said that if such legal challenges failed, 鈥渁nd Joe Biden is the President, then what we do in America is work for the next election cycle鈥 鈥 something he outlined on his timeline for House GOP activity over the next year.听
Warning to world鈥檚 鈥渆nemies of freedom鈥
In remarks before the full House on Wednesday, the newly elected speaker described himself as听the son of a firefighter and the first in his family to graduate from college. He听spoke of his conviction 鈥 rooted in his faith 鈥 that all of his fellow lawmakers have been 鈥渙rdained鈥 by God to serve the country at this critical time.
鈥淎 strong America is good for the entire world,鈥 he said in his maiden speech, which received several bipartisan standing ovations. 鈥淲e are the beacon of freedom and we must preserve this grand experiment in self-governance.鈥澨
He called America鈥檚 record debt its No. 1 national security issue, and called for a bipartisan debt commission to begin work immediately.听
Last, Speaker Johnson addressed the world, which he noted had been watching this drama unfold over the past few weeks.
鈥淲e want our allies around the world to know that this body of lawmakers is reporting again to our duty stations,鈥 he said. 鈥淟et the enemies of freedom around the world hear us loud and clear: The people鈥檚 House is back in business.鈥
Indeed, within an hour, Chairman Michael McCaul of the House Foreign Affairs Committee was on the floor introducing his resolution supporting Israel in 鈥渄efend[ing]听itself against the barbaric war launched by听Hamas听and other terrorists.鈥 The resolution passed 412-10.
Editor鈥檚 note: This story was updated to more accurately describe the McCaul resolution on Israel.听