Kevin McCarthy drops out of Speaker of the House Run

Kevin McCarthy drops out of Speaker of the House Run

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Kevin McCarthy
Kevin McCarthy

Kevin McCarthy drops out of Speaker of the House Run

Who should become the Speaker of the House?

Is Your Congressman a Swamp Rat? Take the Test.

House Republicans reverse course on gutting congressional ethics office after a firestorm of criticism

House Republicans reversed course Tuesday amid a firestorm of criticism over their plans to gut a congressional ethics office.

Republicans backed off the proposal that drew the ire of President-elect Donald Trump, who campaigned on a promise to “drain the swamp” of Washington influence and corruption.

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan and top Republicans had warned colleagues not to pursue the proposal, which would have weakened the independent ethics office.

But the GOP leaders initially appeared resigned Tuesday after rank-and-file lawmakers supported the change, testing the leaders’ ability to control their majority.

“Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose,” Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) told reporters Tuesday.

By late morning, though, as  the full House was set to vote on the broader rules package, Republicans switched course.

Aides said the agreement was reached unanimously by leaders and lawmakers.

The changes would have fundamentally altered the independent Congressional Office of Ethics that was created in 2008 after a series of congressional scandals — including one involving former lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

McCarthy said he agreed with Trump — that the first day of the new Congress was not the time for such controversial changes — and he said he made some of the same arguments during a private session with Republican lawmakers.

Ryan made a similar plea, aides said.

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