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Trumpist hopeful Jim Jordan falls short again in second US House speaker vote

  • 22 of his fellow Republicans rejected the conservative lawmaker’s candidacy in the second ballot, two more than on the previous day
  • The leadership vacuum paralysing Washington is in its 15th day, with the House unable to address a looming shutdown or war in the Middle East and Ukraine

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US congressman Jim Jordan listens as the House of Representatives holds its second round of voting for a new speaker in Washington on Wednesday. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

US lawmakers rejected hardline conservative Jim Jordan’s bid for speaker of the US House of Representatives for a second time on Wednesday, as the leadership vacuum paralysing Washington entered a 15th day with no clear resolution in sight.

The lower chamber of Congress has been in a tailspin since Republican speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted by his party’s far right on October 3 – unable to address a looming government shutdown or war in the Middle East.

Jordan, an acolyte of scandal-engulfed Donald Trump, could only afford to lose four Republicans, but 22 of his colleagues rejected his candidacy in the second ballot – two more than were against him a day earlier.

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The Israel-Hamas conflict, a renewed push for aid to Ukraine and the threat of a government shutdown have dramatically upped the stakes, with Republican aides hoping the urgent need for Congress to respond would unite the fractured party.

US House Majority Whip Tom Emmer reacts after the House of Representatives failed to elect a new speaker during the second round of votes at the US Capitol on Wednesday. Photo: AFP
US House Majority Whip Tom Emmer reacts after the House of Representatives failed to elect a new speaker during the second round of votes at the US Capitol on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

But Jordan’s centrist colleagues, already wary of his hard-right politics, voiced irritation over a concerted effort to whip extra votes for the 59-year-old former wrestling champion.

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