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House Republicans strike tentative deal to make it harder to oust Speaker

Hardline conservatives have struck a tentative deal with House Republicans concerned about chaos in the chamber, agreeing to raise the threshold to force a vote to oust the Speaker in exchange for concessions on rules changes — potentially putting Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on a glidepath to keep the gavel come January.

The deal — which multiple sources confirmed to The Hill — would significantly weaken the House “motion to vacate” rule, eliminating the threat of any one member triggering a kind of snap vote that resulted in the ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). That historic ouster has loomed over Johnson’s tenure in the top job.

Under the agreement, hardline conservatives would agree to raising the threshold to force a vote on ousting the Speaker from one member to nine members. The mechanism has been a key point of contention within the House GOP conference since McCarthy’s ouster. Hardline conservatives were adamant about keeping it to one lawmaker before Wednesday.

In exchange for that concession, other members would drop the proposed rules changes — spearheaded by those in the Main Street Caucus — that aimed to punish members for rebelling against the majority of the party in ways that risked grinding legislative activity to a halt. Proposed penalties included removing members from committees if they support a motion to vacate against a Republican Speaker.

Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), who has been a vocal opponent of the rules changes, called them a “non-starter.”

“All of the targeting amendments and stuff, those are all gone. And that was, as I tweeted out earlier, those were a non-starter,” he said. “Those were a deal-killer.”

The deal was hatched shortly before Republicans voted on a nominee for Speaker, and after President-elect Trump threw his support behind the Louisiana Republican. Johnson, members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus and those in the self-described pragmatic Main Street Caucus were involved in the discussions. Johnson met members and allies of the Freedom Caucus minutes before Wednesday’s internal election, two sources told The Hill.

Conservatives who balked at the proposed changes — many of whom are members of the Freedom Caucus — had plotted to oppose Johnson’s nomination to the Speakership in Wednesday’s internal GOP elections as a form of protest. First they planned to nominate a last-minute protest candidate; then they planned to force a recorded vote on Johnson’s nomination to showcase opposition.

But after the agreement, Johnson was nominated to remain Speaker by unanimous voice vote. No member voiced opposition, according to multiple sources in the room. 

That is good news to the Speaker, who will have another slim majority and will need near-unanimity to be elected Speaker on the House floor when the new Congress convenes on Jan. 3.

Some lawmakers, however, are warning that the situation is tenuous. Roy, who has been a leading voice on the Speakership talks, wrote on X “Much more work to be done” when discussing the agreement.

“For now – those offering the retaliation amendments agreed to set aside ALL of them while conversations continue about organization, so @SpeakerJohnson was chosen as Speaker,” he wrote.

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), meanwhile, told reporters “they are still going to be negotiating that as we get to January.”

Proponents of the “accountability amendments” in question were bitter about the chaos that plagued House GOP over the last two years, not only from the weeks of standstill after McCarthy’s ouster, but from legislation that hardliners blocked by tanking procedural votes. 

They worried such actions could impede President-elect Trump’s agenda as he takes office, and pointed to the rebellions as a reason why Republicans did not win more House seats.

But the hardline conservatives balked at the proposals, which were antithetical to their goals of further democratizing power. Such punishments for breaking from the party would prevent members from representing their constituents, they argued.

An internal memo circulated among conservatives before the deal was struck on Wednesday said that the amendments would be “sowing seeds of division” when Republicans will have “no room for error in the next Congress,” and argued the rules would “punish those who fought for President Trump and his agenda for years and provide excuses for those who will likely obstruct it.”

One proposed amendment from Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wis.) would have consequences for members who support a “motion to vacate” the Speaker, removing them from committees. 

“We need to have cohesion and unity. We need to have parameters set,” Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wis.) told The Hill in an interview on Wednesday morning, before the deal was struck.

Van Orden said that if unified Republican control of government does not change how the House GOP operates, “then Republicans don’t deserve the majority.”

“If we don’t act boldly and decisively, then we have no business governing. And that is a flag that I’m planting in the ground. So we’ve got the House, we’ve got the Senate, got the White House, and if we don’t act on the mandates that were given by the American people, we don’t deserve it.”

Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.) proposed two rules changes, the first of which would remove members from committees if they voted against the “rule” — procedural votes that govern debate and consideration of legislation on the House floor and are tests of party loyalty. 

His second proposal would have imposed similar consequences for those who vote for the party’s “Speaker Designate” on the House floor,  a scenario that led to the House taking days to officially elect McCarthy as Speaker in January 2023, preventing the House from conducting any legislative activity.

Rep. Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.), too, had an amendment to remove members from committees if they defy the party on a procedural vote.

Johnson told Politico on Tuesday that he was not in favor of those rules changes, saying he was “not in favor of punitive measures and rules.”

But the hardliners had wanted to see him explicitly advocate against the proposed rules changes.

“He can say he opposes them, but he’s not going to try and stop them or whip against them,” Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.) said. 

Johnson, according to Crane, told House Republicans that he would not put his thumb on the scale and that it would be up to the House GOP Conference to decide on the rules.

That fueled the risk of a formal show of opposition to Johnson. But the brokering of a deal, which caused a slight delay to the start of leadership elections as it was negotiated on Wednesday, ended with unanimous approval for the Speaker in a massive win for him.

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