Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy might not end up getting the Speakerās gavel when the next Congress is sworn in.
Arizona Rep. Andy Biggs is already preparing a challenge to the Californian, according to the Wall Street Journal.
āAll Iāll say at the moment is McCarthy doesnāt have 218, and there will be an alternative challenger,ā a representative for Biggs said of the House GOPās leadership contest on Monday.
McCarthy is slated to run for the office of Speaker of the House as per congressional tradition, in which party caucus leaders are elected to the position.
With contested House elections still uncalled for as of Monday, indications suggest that Republicans will end up with a small House majority of less than 225 seats.
Republicans affiliated with the conservative House Freedom Caucus plan to support Biggsā candidacy for Speaker sooner rather than later if McCarthy doesnāt agree to postpone caucus leadership elections slated for Tuesday, according to Politico.
The leadership election remains scheduled as planned.
Biggs, a member of the Freedom Caucus, wouldnāt have an easy path to the Speakerās gavel in a Congress with a paper-thin Republican majority, either.
A Speaker candidate needs 218 votes in the House, and a majority of less than a dozen seats doesnāt provide room for error.
A handful of Republican dissidents could tank the majorityās legislative and leadership plans.
Sources familiar with the effort have described Biggsā candidacy as an effort to tank McCarthy, according to Politico.
Biggsā bid would show the current Republican leader doesnāt have the support necessary to become Speaker, given the circumstances.
McCarthyās challengers envision Rep. Jim Jordan as the eventual compromise pick for Speaker, according to Politico.
An underwhelming performance in the Tuesday midterms has spurred criticism of Republican leadership, with members of Congress and Senators openly discussing the prospect of changes at the top.
Sen. Marco Rubio called for Senate Republicans to delay their own leadership elections, calling for the party to assess why a āred waveā didnāt ultimately materialize in the midterms.
McCarthy reiterated his intention to replace Nancy Pelosi as Speaker before it became clear that the GOP would only have a thin majority, according to the New York Times.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
