Oh, If This Is What Schumer Wanted to Do, Republicans Should Nuke the...
Bill Maher Delivers One of the Most Devastating Attacks Against the Left Yet
Some Democrats Are Admitting They Lied Before The Election
Missouri Official Makes The Right Move on Gun Control Proposal
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 242: What the Old Testament Says About Fearing...
With an Honest Press, Democrats Wouldn't Have Been Shocked at the Election...
What Does Trump’s Election Mean for Evangelical Christians?
MSNBC Guest Who Went After Pete Hegseth Facing Backlash From All Sides
How Elon Musk’s Government Efficacy Will Drive Out the Biden-Harris Admin’s Woke Agenda
Trump Taps Liberty Energy CEO Chris Wright for Department of Energy
Eric Adams Dropped Truth Bombs On The View
We Need to Stop This From Happening to Our Children
Trump Is Suing the Mainstream Media-- and They Ought to Be Afraid
There Was One Topic That Was Off Limits in Kamala Harris' Interview With...
Oprah's Hometown Newspaper Calls Her Out for Accepting $1 Million From Harris Campaign
Tipsheet

Report: GOP Leadership Considering Rules To Punish Party Disloyalty

A new congressional delegation will bring a new vote for leadership. With Democrats needing a miracle to gain a few seats, much less actually take the House, Republicans are close to a sure bet to be in control come November. That'll mean elections, and elections means a John Boehner who needs to have the support of his caucus.

Advertisement

There are a lot of members of the GOP caucus who don't very much like John Boehner. He's taken a lot of heat for being insufficiently conservative. To avoid an embarrassing vote, leadership might have some "rules tweaks" in the pipeline, as National Journal reports:

House Republicans are quietly discussing a proposal that could fundamentally alter the way future speakers of the House are chosen, according to multiple GOP sources, with the objective of avoiding a repeat of John Boehner's embarrassing reelection vote in 2013.

The rule tweak began as an informal discussion but has morphed into a concrete proposal that is beginning to circulate in the House. According to people briefed on it, any Republican who votes on the House floor in January against the conference's nominee for House speaker—that is, the candidate chosen by a majority of the House GOP during its closed-door leadership elections in November—would be severely punished. Specifically, sources say, any dissenters would be stripped of all committee assignments for that Congress.

"There's a real concern that there's between 30 and 40 people that would vote against the speaker on the House floor, so they're trying to change the conference rules to make sure that doesn't happen," said a GOP member familiar with the proposal.

Advertisement

The last time, as National Journal notes, there were 12 members who voted against Boehner's speakership on the House floor. The GOP leadership wants to present a more united front this time around.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement