Party | Candidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Hakeem Jeffries (NY 8) | 212 | 49.1% |
Republican | Jim Jordan (OH 4) | 200 | 46.3% |
Republican | Steve Scalise (LA 1) | 7 | 1.6% |
Republican | Kevin McCarthy (CA 20) | 6 | 1.4% |
Republican | Lee Zeldin | 3 | 0.7% |
Republican | Tom Cole (OK 4) | 1 | 0.2% |
Republican | Tom Emmer (MN 6) | 1 | 0.2% |
Republican | Mike Garcia (CA 27) | 1 | 0.2% |
Republican | Thomas Massie (KY 4) | 1 | 0.2% |
Note: official party nominees in bold.
To a moderate Republican, the only thing worse than Gaetz is a Democratic political player. The only way a Republican can vote for the Democratic nominee is if that nominee is not a political operative.
A non-partisan speakership cuts the floor out from under Gaetz and his cronies, allowing the GOP to ignore its lunatic fringe and come back to the center.
When was the last time the Republicans let anything be non-political? Fucking surgical masks were political for crissakes! The moment a name comes out of the lips of a Democrat, Republicans will make it a partisan issue, no matter who is picked. Division isn’t a bug to them, it’s a feature.
And that’s the problem, isn’t it?
This is not how stuff works literally at all lmfao. There is no angle that what you’re saying makes any amount of actual sense.