Louisiana Republican Mike Johnson Re-Elected House Speaker

Johnson Able to Flip Pair of Holdouts to Retain Gavel
Mike Johnson
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) gives a thumbs-up as the House of Representatives meets to elect a speaker and convene the 119th Congress at the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 3. (Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press)

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WASHINGTON — Republican Mike Johnson won re-election to the House speakership on a first ballot Jan. 3, pushing past GOP hard-right holdouts and buoyed with a nod of support from President-elect Donald Trump.

A collection of hardline Republicans convened in the back of the House chamber during a tense roll call on the first day of the new Congress, one by one declining to vote or choosing another lawmaker. The standoff sparked fresh turmoil signaling trouble ahead under unified GOP control of Washington.

In the end, however, Johnson was able to flip two remaining holdouts who switched to support him, drawing applause from Republicans.



Bloomberg News reported that Republicans Keith Self of Texas and Ralph Norman of South Carolina, who initially voted for other candidates, switched their votes to Johnson after talks with the speaker’s allies. 

As the most recent speaker, Johnson’s weak grip on the gavel threatens not only his own survival but President-elect Trump’s ambitious agenda of tax cuts and mass deportations as Republicans sweep to power.

Newly elected House lawmakers started casting votes as Johnson’s name was put forward for nomination by GOP Conference Chair Rep. Lisa McClain (R-Mich).

“No speaker’s perfect,” she said, adding that the goal is to make progress toward shared priorities for the country. “None of us will get exactly what we want.”

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Hakeem Jeffries

Jeffries 

Democrats put forward their own leader, Hakeem Jeffries of New York, as the only one with a track record of compromise and achievement in the face of “chaos and dysfunction” under the GOP majority.

“House Democrats are united behind the most powerful legislative leader in this chamber,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.), of Jeffries, recounting the many times their votes bailed out Johnson to ensure passage of important legislation.

With opposition from his own GOP colleagues, Johnson arrived with outward confidence after working into the night to sway hardline holdouts. A flop by Johnson could’ve thrown congressional certification of Trump’s 2024 election victory — scheduled for Jan. 6 — into turmoil without a House speaker. Even backing from Trump himself, usually a sure bet for Republicans, was no guarantee Johnson will stay in power.

“We don’t have time for drama,” Johnson said as he walked into the Capitol.

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Donald Trump

Trump 

The Louisiana Republican received a renewed nod of support from Trump. “A win for Mike today will be a big win for the Republican Party,” Trump posted on social media.

What was once a ceremonial day with newly elected lawmakers arriving to be sworn into office, often with family, friends and children in tow, has evolved into a high-stakes vote for the office of House speaker, among the most powerful elected positions in Washington. Vice President Kamala Harris was swearing in the senators.

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John Thune

Thune 

While the Senate is able to convene on its own and has already elected party leaders — Sen. John Thune of South Dakota as the Republican majority leader and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York for the Democratic minority — the House must first elect its speaker, a role required by the Constitution, second in the line of succession to the president.

Congress has been here before, when it took Republicans nearly a week and 15 rounds of voting to elect Kevin McCarthy as speaker in 2023, a spectacle unseen in modern times. McCarthy was then dumped by his party, a historic first, but he also was part of a long list of GOP speakers chased to early exits.

The stakes are higher this year as Trump prepares to return to the White House with the House and Senate in GOP control and promising to deliver big on a 100-day agenda.

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Chuck Schumer

Schumer 

Johnson has been working diligently to prevent defeat, spending New Year’s Day at Mar-a-Lago as he positions himself alongside Trump. The speaker often portrays himself as the “quarterback” who will be executing the political plays called by the “coach,” the president-elect.

But Johnson also warned that without a House speaker, there would be a “constitutional crisis” heading into Jan. 6, when Congress by law is required to count the electoral votes for president, weeks before Trump is set to be inaugurated Jan. 20.

“We don’t have any time to waste, and I think that everybody recognizes that,” he said.

Johnson commands one of the slimmest majorities in modern times, as Republicans lost seats in the November election. With the sudden resignation of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), the tally dropped to 219-215. That left Johnson relying on almost every Republican for support in the face of Democratic opposition.

Heading into Jan. 3, he did not have the full support needed.

Texas GOP Rep. Chip Roy was among the most notable holdouts, an unflinching member of the Freedom Caucus who lashed into Republican leadership’s handling of the year-end spending bill for failing to cut spending and adhere to House rules.

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“Something MUST change,” Roy posted on social media. He eventually voted for Johnson.

One hard no was Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who voted for a different GOP leader, as did other far-right Republicans, including some who helped topple McCarthy.

“I think the holdouts are going to have to realize that, listen, Trump is right all the time,” said Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas), exiting the speaker’s office late Jan. 2. “Just know that Trump is right all the time, it’ll help you make a decision real simple.”

In many ways, Johnson had no choice but to endure political hazing by his colleagues, as they remind him who has leverage in their lopsided relationship. He was a last-ditch choice for the office, rising from the back bench once other leaders failed in the aftermath of McCarthy’s ouster.

Democrats under Jeffries were not expected not help save Johnson, as they have in the past with their votes when he faced a threat of removal.

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In the Senate, two Black women — Lisa Blunt Rochester of Delaware and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland — were being sworn in, both wearing suits in white of the suffragettes, the first time in the nation’s history two Black female senators will serve at the same time.

Sen.-elect Andy Kim of New Jersey also is making history as the first Korean American to join the chamber.

In the House, Sarah McBride is the first openly transgender person in Congress.

And Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, who recently suffered a fall overseas and underwent hip replacement surgery, will make her own return to Washington, a reminder of the power she wielded when Democrats last held the majority.

Associated Press writer Adriana Gomez Licon and Matt Brown contributed to this report.