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HomeUSWill Matt Gaetz Participate in the House Speaker Vote?

Will Matt Gaetz Participate in the House Speaker Vote?

As Speaker Mike Johnson labors to lock down enough support to be re-elected to his post, every vote is critical. That has prompted speculation that former Representative Matt Gaetz, the Florida Republican who engineered the ouster of Mr. Johnson’s predecessor, could play a role in the outcome this time as well.

Mr. Gaetz resigned his seat in December after President-elect Donald J. Trump named him as his choice for attorney general. At the time, Mr. Gaetz said he did not plan to be sworn in to the new Congress despite having been re-elected to another two-year term days earlier.

But then, Mr. Trump dropped him from consideration amid resistance from Republican senators. There is no legal barrier to Mr. Gaetz showing up unannounced to participate in the speakership election. He flirted with the idea on social media last month.

And on Friday, Mr. Gaetz appeared to hint at some inside knowledge about the outcome, declaring on X that Mr. Johnson would be elected “on the first vote.”

“People might like or dislike that,” Mr. Gaetz wrote. “I’m just reporting the news.”

A representative for One America News Network, where Mr. Gaetz has signed on as an anchor, did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment about his plans.

It is not clear what role Mr. Gaetz would play if he materialized on the House floor on Friday, or whether he could in fact participate in the speaker election. A provocateur by nature, the Florida Republican has been more interested in sowing drama within his party than fostering unity. On Thursday, Mr. Gaetz hosted Johnson detractors on the first episode of his new program, “The Matt Gaetz Show,” to speculate on the race for speaker.

Because Mr. Johnson can likely afford to lose only one Republican vote — and Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky has already said he is a hard “no” — Mr. Gaetz could be a lifeline for the speaker if he chose to be.

But if he attempted to step in, Democrats would be all but certain to object. In his letter of resignation last month, Mr. Gaetz wrote that in addition to giving up his House seat, “I do not intend to take the oath of office for the same office in the 119th Congress.”

Notably, House members are not sworn in until after they elect a speaker, so in theory Mr. Gaetz could both participate in the speaker election and also stay true to his word that he won’t take the oath for the new Congress.

Content Source: www.nytimes.com

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