Johnson survives House speaker鈥檚 vote. Now comes the hard part.
Despite faltering for a time during voting Friday, Mike Johnson won the House speakership again 鈥 thanks in good measure to Donald Trump鈥檚 support.
Despite faltering for a time during voting Friday, Mike Johnson won the House speakership again 鈥 thanks in good measure to Donald Trump鈥檚 support.
Mike Johnson managed to squeak through in his reelection to speaker of the House on Friday 鈥 but the drama and delay around the vote are an ominous sign for the Republicans鈥 ability to use their newly won unified control of Washington to pass significant legislation.
Three hard-line conservative House Republicans initially voted for other candidates on Friday afternoon, denying Mr. Johnson the absolute House majority he needed to return to the speakership on the first round of voting. But House Republicans held the vote open for roughly an hour until Reps. Ralph Norman of South Carolina and Keith Self of Texas came to the speaker鈥檚 well, changed their votes to support Mr. Johnson, and shook his hand.
The final result ends a bit of drama to kick off the new Congress. Speaker votes were once a pro forma exercise. House Republicans鈥 struggle to achieve even this basic act raises questions about how easy it will be for incoming President Donald Trump and his congressional allies to tackle their top legislative issues including border security, a crackdown on illegal immigration, and extensions of personal tax cuts that are set to expire 鈥 all issues Speaker Johnson promised to act on in his victory speech Friday afternoon.
House Republicans begin the new Congress with the slimmest majority in nearly a century: just a 219-215 margin. That鈥檚 already temporarily one seat fewer than on Election Day because of former Rep. Matt Gaetz鈥檚 resignation from Congress 鈥 and will shrink by two more seats when Reps. Elise Stefanik and Mike Waltz leave Congress to join the Trump administration.
During this vote, Messrs. Norman and Self initially joined iconoclastic libertarian-leaning Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky to oppose Mr. Johnson鈥檚 reelection. Led by Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, five other hard-line conservatives, who had refused to say publicly whether they鈥檇 back Mr. Johnson before the vote, declined to vote when their names were initially called. They grudgingly cast their support to Mr. Johnson when asked later in the vote after their symbolic protest.
Mr. Johnson had kept his conference mostly happy 鈥 until a few weeks ago, when he agreed to a bipartisan deal to avoid a government shutdown that infuriated House Republicans from across the ideological spectrum. The deal drew harsh criticism from Mr. Trump. But the president-elect vocally supported Mr. Johnson in this race. That likely got him across the finish line.
Mr. Roy, Mr. Norman, and nine other Republican members put out a joint statement after the vote saying that they鈥檇 backed Mr. Johnson 鈥渄espite our sincere reservations鈥 about his track record 鈥渂ecause of our steadfast support of President Trump.鈥
Mr. Self said that he鈥檇 spoken to Mr. Trump as he explained his vote to reporters after Speaker Johnson鈥檚 win.
鈥淭he Trump agenda is most important, and we need to shore up the processes in the House to make sure we have the strongest negotiating team for the reconciliation package that will come,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his was all about making the Trump agenda more successful.鈥
This vote comes just two years after House Republicans needed 15 roll call votes over four days to find the majority to elect Kevin McCarthy as House speaker, as many of the same hard-line Republicans that held out on Mr. Johnson Friday refused to vote for Mr. McCarthy until he made major concessions. One of those concessions was allowing any one GOP member to demand another vote for speaker 鈥 which those members used to force Mr. McCarthy from the speakership in October 2023. That led to weekslong chaos, with multiple Republicans failing to win a majority until Mr. Johnson, then a little-known member of the conference, emerged as a consensus choice.
GOP members expressed exasperation with their holdout colleagues before their switch.
鈥淚 am disappointed and frustrated. We are voting on the past, not on the future, and my colleagues need to know that now there鈥檚 President Trump in the White House and a majority in the Senate. ... I don鈥檛 agree with where they are, and I think they need to have a different perspective,鈥 Rep. John McGuire of Virginia told the Monitor shortly after the vote.
鈥淲e have to govern. And this is not a good indicator of governance as a party, and it鈥檚 a dangerous game, because if they get the math wrong they can actually throw it to the Democrats,鈥 said Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas.
It wasn鈥檛 clear until the vote itself whether Mr. Johnson would win enough votes for the speakership. He could afford to have no more than one Republican member vote against him because of the GOP鈥檚 historically slim House majority. In the end, after a lot of drama and uncertainty, that鈥檚 exactly where he landed.
Some Republicans insisted that Mr. Johnson鈥檚 ability to prevail was a good sign.
鈥淚t means we鈥檙e off to a much better trajectory than previously,鈥 said Rep. Max Miller of Ohio.
A win is certainly better than a more prolonged loss, and showed President-elect Trump鈥檚 power to cajole unhappy members. But today鈥檚 drama may be just the first high-wire act Speaker Johnson will have to perform.