The Hill’s Morning Report — High drama as McCarthy ousted: Who will be next Speaker?

The House of Representatives does not have a Speaker. 

In a historic turn of events, Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) was ousted from his post Tuesday by a small group of House Republicans, led by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) — along with Reps. Andy Biggs (Ariz.), Ken Buck (Colo.), Tim Burchett (Tenn.), Eli Crane (Ariz.), Bob Good (Va.), Nancy Mace (S.C.) and Matt Rosendale (Mont.) — who joined with Democrats to remove him in a 216-210 vote. 

IT’S THE FIRST TIME the House has voted to remove a sitting Speaker, a development that will catapult the chamber into another chaotic Speaker’s race, following January’s marathon election of McCarthy. The chamber is now in uncharted territory . 

The far-right conservatives who voted to remove McCarthy have been a thorn in his side since he assumed the Speakership, demanding concessions that put his gavel in a more fragile position. During the debt limit fights this summer, House Freedom Caucus members were able to bring the House floor to a standstill by using procedural maneuvers. The situation came to a head last weekend, when McCarthy ended up working with Democrats to avert a government shutdown — a move the handful of conservative rebels stringently opposed.  

Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.), who was presiding over the chamber Tuesday, said McCarthy’s ouster will put a “stain on the institution.” 

“The office of Speaker of the House of the United States House of Representatives is hereby declared vacant,” he announced. 

Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.), a key McCarthy ally, was declared acting Speaker — Speaker pro tempore — chosen from a list designated by McCarthy and shared with the House clerk. Members in both parties expect that the Speaker pro tempore has the chief responsibility of presiding over a new Speaker election (The Hill and The New York Times).  

McCarthy told his fellow House Republicans Tuesday that he would not seek reelection to the Speakership, and it remains unclear who the conference will nominate to succeed him. The House adjourned for the week Tuesday night, and the GOP conference is expected to hold a candidate forum next Tuesday to select their pick for the job (The Hill and Politico).  

The former Speaker let loose during a press conference late Tuesday, airing his grievances about his defectors, singling out Gaetz (The Hill).  

“You all know Matt Gaetz,” McCarthy said. “You know it was personal. It had nothing to do about spending, it had nothing to do about everything he accused somebody of he was doing. It all was about getting attention from you.” 

The New York Times: Gaetz is facing a House Committee inquiry into allegations of sexual misconduct and misuse of funds. McCarthy has argued Gaetz’s move against his Speakership is payback. 

The Washington Post: Republicans are sick of Matt Gaetz, and they’re not quiet about it. 

Roll Call: How the vote to boot McCarthy played out inside the chamber. 

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? The House is effectively leaderless, and as acting Speaker, McHenry doesn’t have all the powers an elected Speaker does. It’s putting the chamber in limbo weeks ahead of the new government funding deadline Congress agreed upon over the weekend. 

And while the members who voted to oust McCarthy are united in their opposition to the California Republican, they’re less than united in who they want to see succeed him. That there isn’t an obvious answer to the question was part of McCarthy’s ability to win the long battle for the job in January — he never let a serious alternative emerge (The New York Times). 

The New Republic: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) is the big winner in the McCarthy trials. 

The Hill: President Biden urged the House to quickly elect a Speaker after McCarthy was removed from the post. 


3 THINGS TO KNOW TODAY

▪ The Biden administration announced today it is forgiving another $9 billion in student loans for borrowers who have been on an income-driven repayment and Public Service Loan Forgiveness plan.  

▪ Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) is planning to lead a bipartisan delegation of senators to China, Japan and South Korea this month as part of an effort to advance U.S. interests in the region. 

▪ All 10 manufacturers of the first drugs selected for Medicare price negotiations will be participating, the White House said Tuesday, even as many of them are currently suing the administration in an effort to halt the process. 


Morning Report’s Alexis Simendinger is on leave. 


LEADING THE DAY 

Former President Trump’s latest White House campaign appears more disciplined than his previous bids for the Oval Office, strategists say, even as the GOP front-runner faces legal battles that could derail his run. Trump’s 2024 presidential bid was initially criticized as sluggish and disorganized after his launch last November, but he’s since then surprised observers with a fairly streamlined and at times savvy campaign. The former president took many off guard when he preempted President Biden with plans to visit Detroit amid the auto strike, The Hill’s Julia Mueller reports, and he has beefed up his ground campaign considerably in Iowa and other early-voting states in the hope of undercutting top rivals like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R).  

“His approach is still that renegade cowboy, loose cannon approach — it’s still what makes Trump Trump — but the fact that there’s an infrastructure beneath him that is following up, making sure they do all the detail work, handle all those details is a very important factor,” said GOP strategist Saul Anuzis.  

The Hill: The Trump campaign is ramping up public pressure on the Republican National Committee (RNC) to scrap plans for additional presidential primary debates, urging the party to essentially crown Trump the presumptive nominee. The RNC, which is neutral in the primary process, is unlikely to pause the debates anytime soon. 

The New York Times: Trump said shoplifters should be shot, part of a string of violent remarks. 

© The Associated Press / Stephanie Scarbrough | Vice President Harris swears in Laphonza Butler (D-Calif.) to the Senate on Tuesday. 

CALIFORNIA SENATE DREAMIN’: Newly sworn in Sen. Laphonza Butler’s (D-Calif.) appointment to fill the vacancy left by the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) is throwing a wrench into the high-stakes California Senate primary as questions surround whether she will add herself to the crowded field in the coming months. Butler has for years served in the background of the political scene, but has suddenly found herself at the forefront after California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) tapped her to fill the final stretch of the longtime California senator’s term and will now have to weigh whether to run in next year’s primary (The Hill). 

The Hill: Black lawmakers praise Butler, don’t want her pitted against Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), a candidate for Feinstein’s seat. 


2024 ROUNDUP:

▪ Senate Republicans are watching the rebellion in the House with growing alarm, concerned about what the chaos will mean for the GOP’s brand in the 2024 election. 

▪ Two top advisers to Trump claimed without evidence that Democrats are working to “steal” the 2024 election. 

▪ Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s political operation is aggressively trying to persuade New Hampshire Democrats to switch parties to vote for him in the state’s first-in-the-nation Republican presidential primary. 

▪ How Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy turned his elite education into a degree in devil’s advocacy

▪ Biden is in murky water with student loan advocates and supporters after showing his next steps for student debt relief may not be available for all borrowers like he originally promised. 

▪ Republican Kari Lake, who lost the race for Arizona governor last year to Democrat Katie Hobbs, filed the papers to run for Senate Monday. 

▪ Voters in the Keystone State will be heading to the polls next month to weigh in on a vacant Pennsylvania Supreme Court seat that could put Republicans one step closer to retaking the high court’s majority. 


WHERE AND WHEN 

The House convenes on Tuesday. 

The Senate meets at 10 a.m. 

The president will announce efforts to cancel student debt and support students and borrowers at 1:30 p.m. In the afternoon, Biden and the vice president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.  

The White House press briefing is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. 


ZOOM IN 

© The Associated Press / Seth Wenig | Former President Trump at the New York Supreme Court on Tuesday. 

The judge overseeing Trump’s New York fraud trial issued a limited gag order for all parties Tuesday. As The Hill’s Ella Lee reports, Judge Arthur Engoron issued the gag order barring Trump and any party in the case from posting or speaking publicly about members of his staff, after Trump released personally identifying information about the principal clerk on Truth Social while the hearing was underway. 

“Personal attacks on members of my court staff are not appropriate, and I will not tolerate it under any circumstance,” Engoron said, adding that he warned counsel off the record about the former president’s comments yesterday, but the warning went unheeded. 

In a Truth Social post that went up while Trump was sitting in the courtroom Tuesday, Trump targeted Engoron’s principal law clerk — who was sitting just a few feet away — calling her “Schumer’s girlfriend” and reposting a picture of her alongside the Senate majority leader. 

The Associated Press: Trump turns his fraud trial into a campaign stop as he seeks to capitalize on his legal woes. 

CNN: Former White House chief of staff John Kelly confirmed several disturbing stories about Trump. 


ELSEWHERE 

INTERNATIONAL 

The U.S. and European coalitions supporting Ukraine are showing significant cracks nearing 20 months of Russia’s invasion, worrying officials in Kyiv and its backers that Russian President Vladimir Putin could succeed simply by waiting out the war. Ukraine aid is at the center of partisan spending fights in Washington; meanwhile, Polish officials anxious over elections are lashing out at Kyiv. And in NATO ally Slovakia, a party headed by a pro-Kremlin politician came out on top in parliamentary elections. The Hill’s Laura Kelly reports that while Russian officials are not yet celebrating, they are optimistic that time is on their side.  

Meanwhile, the succession of the Russian private military company Wagner Group is creating another clash between the Kremlin and the organization’s senior officers. Wagner’s next leader has been up in the air after the death of the company’s founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin, in an August plane crash. Putin wants to exert more oversight of Wagner after the company led an aborted rebellion against him in June, but Wagner fighters are still trying to hold onto their influence. The Hill’s Brad Dress reports there are rumors they may end up backing Prigozhin’s son, the 25-year-old Pavel Prigozhin, or someone else connected to Wagner’s old guard to lead the military company.  

Reuters: “They’re just meat”: Russia deploys punishment battalions in echo of Stalin. 

The Associated Press: India tells Canada to remove 41 of its 62 diplomats in the country, an official says. 

The Wall Street Journal: Ecuador was a retirement paradise for Americans. Then the drug gangs arrived. 

© The Associated Press / Evan Vucci | President Biden met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House in September. 


COURTS  

The Supreme Court appeared hesitant to upend the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Tuesday by finding the agency’s funding mechanism unconstitutional. The case marks one of the biggest legal threats to the CFPB since its inception just over a decade ago, but the high court’s liberals and several conservatives voiced skepticism over two lender trade associations’ arguments that the funding setup violates Congress’s power of the purse. The agency, first envisioned by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), was established as part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law to crack down on predatory lending and enforce consumer protection laws in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis (The Hill). 

Tuesday’s battle over the CFPB is just the first in a string of Supreme Court cases that could dramatically reel in bureaucratic power. The court is taking on the authority of federal agencies in earnest this term, with several high-profile arguments implicating the administrative state still to come (The Hill). 

Roll Call: The Supreme Court sounds skeptical that Congress overstepped its spending power. 

The president’s son, Hunter Biden, pleaded not guilty to three firearms charges during his arraignment in a federal court in Delaware on Tuesday, amid a high-profile legal battle that has pitted him against the Justice Department as the 2024 presidential campaign gets underway. His plea comes after a plea deal in the same court fell apart in July (NBC News). 

Delaware Online: Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty to federal gun charges in Wilmington. What happens next? 

Politico: As the president pushes gun safety, Hunter Biden will mount a Second Amendment defense. 

The Hill: What to know about Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial after crypto firm FTX collapsed. 


OPINION 

McCarthy’s gone. Republican dysfunction is here to stay, by Dana Milbank, columnist, The Washington Post

The new isolationist Republicans are taking a page from the old antiwar Democrats, by Joseph Bosco, opinion contributor, The Hill.    


THE CLOSER 

© The Associated Press / Mark Thiessen | Two brown bears look for salmon at Brooks Falls at Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska, in 2013. 

And finally … 🐻 Fat Bear Week is upon us. Starting today, bear fans will turn their attention to the furriest vote around: the annual contest for the big lugs of Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska. 

For the uninitiated, Fat Bear Week is a celebration of the brown bears of Katmai National Park and Preserve as they binge before their annual hibernation, who compete in a March Madness-style bracket that shows off their tonnage. Katmai media ranger Naomi Boak told The Washington Post she hopes fans will appreciate the mix of this year’s contenders. 

“As we put a bracket together, it’s really easy to have just the big guys,” she said. “But what we really want is to tell the story of this incredible ecosystem, the success of the bears and their many successes.” 

The 12 contestants were revealed Monday, and the public can start voting at noon today, with polls closing on Oct. 10 (CNN). Check out some supremely fat bears and cast your votes HERE


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Tags Andy Biggs Bob Good Chris Christie Chuck Schumer Dianne Feinstein Donald Trump Eli Crane Hakeem Jeffries Hunter Biden Joe Biden John Kelly Ken Buck Kevin McCarthy Laphonza Butler Matt Gaetz Matt Rosendale Nancy Mace Patrick McHenry Ron DeSantis Steve Womack Tim Burchett Vivek Ramaswamy Vladimir Putin Volodymyr Zelensky

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