Live updates: Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana elected speaker of the House | CNN Politics

Rep. Mike Johnson voted new House speaker

WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 25: Newly elected U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) delivers remarks after the House of Representatives held an election at the U.S. Capitol on October 25, 2023 in Washington, DC. After a contentious nominating period that has seen four candidates over a three-week period, Johnson was voted in to succeed former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), who was ousted on October 4 in a move led by a small group of conservative members of his own party.  (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
New House speaker reveals what his first bill will be
00:58 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • New speaker: Rep. Mike Johnson secured the speaker’s gavel without losing any GOP votes Wednesday after weeks of party infighting left the House in chaos. The Louisiana lawmaker has been a vocal supporter of former President Donald Trump and was a key congressional figure in the failed efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
  • About the vote: There were 220 votes for Johnson and 209 votes for Democrat Hakeem Jeffries. There was unanimous GOP support behind Johnson. One Republican – Rep. Derrick Van Orden – was absent from the vote.
  • What was at stake: House Republicans faced intensifying pressure to elect a new speaker after former Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted more than three weeks ago. The House has remained effectively frozen since then — a dire situation as Congress faces a November funding deadline and as crisis unfolds abroad in Ukraine and with Israel’s war against Hamas.

Our live coverage has ended. You can scroll through the posts below to see how the day unfolded.

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Rep. Mike Johnson has been elected speaker. Here's what to know

Johnson takes the oath to be the new House speaker \ at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, October 25, 2023. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

After three weeks without a speaker, the House voted Wednesday to elect Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana.

Johnson secured the gavel without losing any GOP votes. The final tally was 220 votes for Johnson and 209 for House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

Here are the key things to know:

  • Johnson is a Trump ally. The speaker was a key congressional figure in the failed efforts to overturn the 2020 election for former President Donald Trump. He sent an email from a personal account in 2020 to every House Republican soliciting signatures for an amicus brief in the long-shot Texas lawsuit seeking to invalidate electoral college votes from multiple states.
  • He now faces pressing issues, including a potential shutdown. Government funding is set to expire on November 17, and the GOP-controlled House will need to work with the Democratic-led Senate to avert a shutdown. Lawmakers must also consider aid to Ukraine and Israel.
  • He’s pushing for an “aggressive schedule.” Johnson said following his victory that the House will move swiftly on several legislation, alluding to the GOP infighting that paralyzed the House. In the first vote under his speakership, House lawmakers passed a resolution in support of Israel with bipatisan votes.

CNN’s Piper Hudspeth Blackburn, Shania Shelton, Clare Foran, Haley Talbot, Sam Fossum, Morgan Rimmer and Kristin Wilson contributed reporting to this post.

Swing-district Republican attacks Democrats who heckled him over his support for Johnson

House Republican Mike Lawler, who comes from a New York swing district, dismissed concerns that his vote for speaker Mike Johnson could hurt him with voters back home and attacked Democrats who heckled him on the floor this afternoon. 

When asked about Johnson’s stance on social issues and his effort to gather signatures in a Texas lawsuit to invalidate electoral college votes in the 2020 election, Lawler downplayed any concern. He added: “Within any conference you’re going to have differences of opinion.”

Just as Lawler voted for Johnson on the floor this afternoon, a member from across the aisle shouted, “Bye bye!” alluding to his uphill battle in a frontline district. Lawler said he is “not really worried about a few heckles from Democrats in the chamber” and “the people in my district understand who I am.” 

House passes resolution in support of Israel in war against Hamas

The House passed a resolution in support of Israel in the war against Hamas – the first measure to come to the floor after Speaker Mike Johnson was elected earlier Wednesday following three weeks without a speaker.

The final tally was 412 to 10. 

Nine Democrats voted against the resolution:

  • Rep. Rashida Tlaib
  • Rep. Cori Bush
  • Rep. Jamaal Bowman
  • Rep. Andre Carson
  • Rep. Al Green
  • Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
  • Rep. Summer Lee
  • Rep. Delia Ramirez
  • Rep. Ilhan Omar

Six other Democrats voted present:

  • Rep. Pramila Jayapal
  • Rep. Joaquin Castro
  • Rep. Nydia Velázquez
  • Rep. Greg Casar
  • Rep. Jesus Garcia
  • Rep. Ayanna Pressley

Rep. Thomas Massie was the sole Republican who voted against the measure.

House voting now to pass resolution in support of Israel in war against Hamas

The House is now voting to pass a resolution in support of Israel in the war against Hamas – the first measure to come to the floor to be passed after Speaker Mike Johnson was elected this morning following three weeks of a speakerless-House.

This is expected to pass with overwhelming bipartisan support. 

GOP Rep. Bice considering running for Johnson's former leadership role

GOP Rep. Stephanie Bice of Oklahoma is considering a run for conference vice chair – the leadership role previously occupied by now-Speaker Mike Johnson, according to her spokesperson.

She is having conversations with her colleagues, her spokesperson said.

Biden spoke with newly minted Speaker Mike Johnson

President Joe Biden spoke with newly minted Speaker Mike Johnson to congratulate him on his win, the White House said.

House conservatives signal they'll give Johnson more runway on spending bills

House conservatives are signaling they’ll give the newly minted House Speaker Mike Johnson some runway and flexibility as the House barrels toward a November 17 spending deadline to fund the government.

This marks a clear departure from how those same members viewed former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s decision earlier this month to put a short-term spending bill on the floor, which ultimately led to his ouster. 

“I have never been comfortable with CRs (continuing resolutions), but it … is going to be difficult for Mike and anyone who steps into that job, but I think he is going to do a great job,” Rep. Eli Crane, a Republican, told CNN. 

Pressed on whether conservatives might give Johnson some leeway when it comes to keeping the government open, Crane said: “You know it is very possible that there will be Democrat and Republican votes working together. That being said, I think that just how he is going to lead, it is going to make it easier for everyone to follow his lead.”

In a letter to colleagues earlier Wednesday, Johnson outlined his first priority will be trying to pass the remaining spending bills that have so far languished in the House one by one. But Johnson indicated that given the time constraints, if those bills can’t pass quickly, he’d look to fund to government using what is known as a short-term spending bill or continuing resolution that would run either through January 15 or April 15, whichever the conference supports. 

Conservatives are largely still calling for spending cuts and may even demand them in a short-term spending bill. Asked if he would back a short-term spending bill through January, House Freedom Caucus Chairman Scott Perry told CNN only “if it cuts spending.”

“We don’t support a clean CR, I don’t support a clean CR,” he said. 

But the same members are warning they do believe Johnson starts in a more solid place with conservatives than McCarthy did. 

The reality for Johnson is that the same dynamics that befell McCarthy will exist for him.

The Senate and the White House are still controlled by Democrats and any spending bill passed will need Democratic support to become law and avert a shutdown. But what you hear from conservatives – at least in the minutes before and after Johnson won the speaker’s election – is they are willing to give some room for Johnson to maneuver in his new role. 

Asked if he would bring a vote to oust Johnson if he put forth a short-term spending bill at current spending levels, Rep. Matt Gaetz said he’s optimistic Johnson will be able to actually pass the individual spending bills. 

The challenge for House Republicans is they still have eight more spending bills to pass including two that have been stuck in committee because of disagreements within GOP ranks. In his letter to colleagues, Johnson set out an aggressive time table for passing the bills, but the issue will be finding a way to pass the legislation in just a narrow GOP majority.  

Conservatives are signaling that they feel more optimistic that Johnson will be able to unify the conference.

“The door to the speaker’s office now is open to the members and to the constituents, not just the lobbyists,” Rep. Matt Rosendale told reporters. 

The members who ousted McCarthy also told reporters that they have no regrets now about ousting McCarthy.

Johnson enters speaker’s office for first time since being sworn in

House Speaker Mike Johnson entered the speaker’s office for the first time after being sworn in, with his new name plate hanging above the door.

He did not answer shouted questions from the press. 

House expected to vote on resolution in support of Israel Wednesday afternoon

Speaker-elect Rep. Mike Johnson address members of congress at the Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday.

The House is expected to vote on a resolution in support of Israel on Wednesday afternoon, according to a notice from the House Democratic whip.

The timing of the vote has been pushed, and it is now expect this around 4:45 p.m. ET and 5 p.m. ET.

It will need to come up as a suspension vote — an expedited process that requires a two-thirds majority for passage. 

Sources told CNN earlier Wednesday that there was a “big push” to bring the bill to the floor once the House elected a new speaker. Rep. Mike Johnson secured the speakership with 220 votes.

There’s a strong desire among Republicans to show a functioning House after being paralyzed for weeks following the ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy. 

“We’re going to show not only Israel but the entire world that the barbarism of Hamas that we have all seen play out on our television screens is wretched and wrong and we’re going to stand for the good in that conflict,” Johnson said.

GOP lawmaker says he will propose rule change to motion to vacate rule

Rep. Dan Crenshaw leaves a House Republican caucus meeting at the US Capitol on October 12, in Washington, DC

Now that Speaker Mike Johnson was elected and the House reopened, one of the questions looming is whether Republicans will try to punish their eight colleagues who voted to oust former Speaker Kevin McCarthy — and whether there will be changes to the rules around how a motion to vacate the speaker chair is handled. 

GOP Rep. Dan Crenshaw told CNN he plans to propose a rule change to how a motion to vacate works so that the chair is not vacated until a new speaker is elected. 

“I think one that everybody would agree on is that if there is a vacate that the current speaker does not step down until a new speaker is elected,” Crenshaw said.

GOP Rep. Doug LaMalfa told CNN the threshold needs to be raised to at least 25 members so it’s not just one member bringing forward a motion to oust the speaker like GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz did with McCarthy.

But it remains an open question on if the eight Republicans who started all of this will be punished.

Johnson does not answer questions about looming shutdown as he takes victory lap

House Speaker Mike Johnson, fresh of his victory on the House floor, said he will pursue an “aggressive schedule” in the weeks ahead, pointing to the bipartisan support for an Israel resolution expected on the House floor shortly, but not taking questions on his plans to avoid a shutdown. 

Johnson alluded to the chaos that paralyzed the House and distracted from the GOP agenda. “We’re in the majority right now. We’ve gone through a little bit of suffering. We’ve gone through a little bit of character building, and you know what has produced more strength, more perseverance and a lot of hope, and that’s what we’re about to deliver to the American people,” Johnson said. 

Johnson said they will “govern well” and that the American people will be “very pleased with those results.” 

He added that they will get right to work and “dispense with all the usual ceremonies and deliberations that traditionally follow a new speakership.” 

“We have no time for either one, the American people’s businesses to urgent in this moment,” he added. 

He did not take questions.

Biden campaign says Johnson’s election "cements the extreme MAGA takeover" of House GOP conference

President Joe Biden’s campaign warned Wednesday that the election of House Speaker Mike Johnson “cements the extreme MAGA takeover of the House Republican Conference.”

In a statement, Biden campaign spokesperson Ammar Moussa criticized Johnson as a “loyal foot soldier” of former President Donald Trump, warning Johnson will seek “to ban abortion nationwide, lead efforts to deny free and fair election results, gut Social Security and Medicare, and advance the extreme MAGA agenda at the expense of middle-class families.” 

Biden has issued his own statement congratulating Johnson and urging Congress “to move swiftly” to address pressing issues.

Johnson says speakership battle has made House Republicans stronger

Newly elected Speaker of the House Mike Johnson delivers remarks on the outer steps of the House of Representatives after he was elected to be the new Speaker at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday.

In a news conference following his election, House Speaker Mike Johnson addressed the speakership fight within the Republican party that left the seat vacant for more than three weeks, arguing that it has made the conference stronger.

“We’re in the majority right now. We’ve gone through a little bit of suffering,” Johnson said with a smile, earning a few laughs from his GOP colleagues.

Biden congratulates Johnson and urges Congress "to move swiftly" to address pressing issues

President Joe Biden holds a press conference with Prime Minister of Australia Anthony Albanese the Rose Garden at the White House on October 25, 2023 in Washington, DC. 

President Joe Biden responded Wednesday to the news Louisiana Republican Rep. Mike Johnson has been elected House speaker, congratulating him while calling on Congress “to move swiftly to address our national security needs and to avoid a shutdown in 22 days.” 

In his statement, Biden acknowledged “real disagreements about important issues,” but noted “there should be mutual effort to find common ground wherever we can.” 

“This is a time for all of us to act responsibly, and to put the good of the American people and the everyday priorities of American families above any partisanship,” he added. 

Earlier Wednesday, Biden told reporters he wasn’t concerned that Johnson, who solicited signatures for an amicus brief in 2020 in the longshot Texas lawsuit seeking to invalidate electoral college votes from multiple states, would seek to overturn a 2024 Biden victory. 

“Because he can’t — look, just like I was not worried that the last guy would be able to overturn the election,” Biden said during a Rose Garden news conference. “They had about 60 lawsuits, and it went all the way to the Supreme Court — every time they lost. I understand the Constitution.”

Scalise says Rep. Mike Johnson is "ready to go"

Rep. Steve Scalise embraces Representative Mike Johnson in the House Chamber at the US Capitol in Washington, DC,, on Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023.

Majority Leader Steve Scalise offered words of support for House Speaker Mike Johnson following his election.

The pair are both from Louisiana and have known each other for years. 

“We got to get our country back on track. And Mike’s ready to go.”

Schumer calls on Johnson to work with Senate in "bipartisan way" as possible shutdown looms

Shortly after Speaker Mike Johnson was sworn in, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters that he plans to speak with Johnson about how to avoid a possible government shutdown next month. 

“Look, I look forward to sitting down with Speaker Johnson to discuss a path forward to avoid a government shutdown,” said Schumer. 

He also encouraged Johnson to work with Democrats in the weeks ahead.

Johnson says House will begin taking up the debt crisis "immediately"

House Speaker-elect Rep. Mike Johnson addresses members of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday.

House Speaker Mike Johnson said during his first remarks following his election that the chamber would begin taking up the debt crisis “immediately” as Congress looks to avert a government shutdown.

“We know this is not going to be an easy task, and tough decisions will have to be made,” Johnson said. “But the consequences, if we don’t act now, are unbearable.”

He added that he will establish a debt commission to address the issue.

Remember: Congress has until November 17 to pass a government spending bill to avoid a shutdown that would have impacts ranging from how federal agencies function to the salaries of federal employees.

Earlier Wednesday, Johnson proposed a short-term spending bill that would expire January 15 or April 15 — depending on what the House Republican conference decides — if Congress gets to the funding deadline without its single subject spending bills passed, according to a copy of his appropriations proposal provided to CNN.

Rep. Mike Johnson officially sworn in as House speaker

Newly elected US House Speaker Mike Johnson is sworn in at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on October 25.

Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana has been sworn in as speaker of the House.

The Dean of the House, Hal Rogers, read the oath of office.

Johnson thanks Jeffries and McCarthy in first address to House after speaker's vote

Rep. Hakeem Jeffries embraces Rep. Mike Johnson after becoming US House speaker in the House Chamber at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023. 

In his first address to the House after winning the speaker’s gavel, newly elected House Speaker Mike Johnson thanked Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries and former speaker Kevin McCarthy.

Johnson told Jeffries that he looks forward to working with him.

“I know we see things from different points of view, but I know in your heart you want to do what’s right — so we’ll find common ground there,” Johnson said.

On McCarthy, Johnson said, “Kevin has dedicated over two decades of his life to selfless public service, 16 of those years in this House.” 

He also thanked the “overworked” and “beleaguered” staff of the House.

Johnson said his wife couldn’t be with him for his election to speaker, saying “we couldn’t get a flight in time. This happened sort of suddenly” but pledged that “the People’s House is back in business.”

The sudden rise of the Louisiana congressman to the speaker’s office capped a 22-day vacancy for the second in line to the presidency, and just over 20 hours after he threw his name into nomination following the House failing to elect a speaker three different times after the ouster of Kevin McCarthy. But he made a promise to the chamber: “I will not let you down.”

He said that the first bill he will bring to the floor later Wednesday will be a resolution in support of Israel, an announcement that drew cheers in the chamber. 

Johnson also said the House would begin taking up the debt crisis “immediately.”

Johnson promised that his speakership would be known for “trust and transparency and accountability, for good stewardship of the people’s treasure, for the honesty, integrity that is incumbent upon us, all of us, in the people’s house.”

CNN’s Kristin Wilson contributed reporting to this post.

NOW: GOP Rep. Mike Johnson delivers remarks after being elected House speaker 

Rep. Mike Johnson is delivering remarks now in the House chamber after being elected speaker.

There were 220 votes for Johnson and 209 votes for Democrat Hakeem Jeffries. There was unanimous GOP support behind Johnson. One Republican – Rep. Derrick Van Orden – was absent from the vote.

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