Boehner to quit Congress
Under pressure from the right, House Speaker Boehner quits
U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker John Boehner will leave Congress at the end of
October after struggling with repeated rebellions by conservatives
during a tumultuous five-year reign as the chamber's top Republican.The
65-year-old Ohio lawmaker stunned Republican House members at a meeting
on Friday morning with the announcement that he would leave the top job
in the 435-seat chamber and resign his seat effective on Oct. 30.
U.S.
Representative Kevin McCarthy, 50, of California, the No. 2 House
Republican, quickly became the leading contender to replace Boehner as
speaker. While loyal to Boehner, McCarthy has built personal
relationships with conservative groups and tacked right recently to back
the shutdown of the Export-Import bank.
Boehner (pronounced BAY-ner) told reporters McCarthy "would make an excellent speaker."
Boehner
has faced constant pressure from conservatives who believe he was too
willing to compromise with President Barack Obama and too frequently
relied on Democratic votes to pass crucial legislation.
Obama praised the speaker as "a good man" and said he hoped Boehner would be in a position to get a lot done before he leaves.
Boehner
told reporters he was stepping aside to avoid another brewing House
battle over his leadership. Conservatives had threatened a revolt and
possible government shutdown over spending next week.
"It's
become clear to me this prolonged leadership turmoil would do
irreparable harm to the institution," Boehner told a news conference. He
fought back tears as he thanked his family but happily sang
"Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah" to indicate he was far from broken up about the
decision.
"It's the right time to do it, and frankly I'm entirely comfortable doing it," Boehner said.
His
move eased the threat of a federal government shutdown next week,
Republicans said, freeing Boehner to forge ahead with a "clean" spending
bill that funds the women's healthcare group Planned Parenthood without
fear of reprisal from conservatives who object to the group's abortion
services.
But the battle over
Boehner's successor could coincide with fights later this year over
government spending and raising the federal debt limit, complicating
those battles and adding more uncertainty for financial markets.
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, a
longtime foe of Boehner and his predecessor as speaker, said his pending
departure would be "a distraction" during the spending debate and
called his decision "seismic to the House."
On
Thursday, Boehner, a Roman Catholic, realized a longtime goal of
hosting Pope Francis for an address to Congress. As he stood with the
pope to greet crowds on the Capitol's West front, he broke down in
tears.
'TODAY'S THE DAY'
Boehner
said he had planned to step down as speaker at the end of 2014 but
changed his calculation when his No. 2 at the time, Eric Cantor, lost
his seat last year in a Republican primary.
He
then planned to announce in November that he would leave at the end of
this year, he said, but came to the conclusion after his morning prayers
on Friday that "today's the day I'm going to do this. Simple as that."
He informed staff just before the morning meeting with Republican House members.
"I
saw him recently and he looked weary. Understandably, he was tired,"
U.S. Senator John McCain of Arizona, also a Republican, told reporters.
"Sometimes we fail to appreciate that these are human beings with human
emotions and lives to lead."
An
NBC News/Wall Street Journal opinion poll on Friday found 72 percent of
Republican primary voters were dissatisfied with Boehner and Senate
Republican Leader Mitch McConnell.
Raucous cheers broke out at a gathering of religious conservatives in
Washington when Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, a candidate for the 2016
Republican presidential nomination, announced that Boehner planned to
step down.
"I'm not here to bash anyone," Rubio told the crowd. "But the time has come to turn the page."
Despite their clashes, Boehner
frequently had bowed to the House's conservative wing, standing by as
conservatives forced a government shutdown in 2013 and abandoning
comprehensive immigration reform in 2013 and 2014.
Many
Republican lawmakers predicted McCarthy would be the next speaker. The
five-term lawmaker has built bridges to Tea Party conservatives and
bucked Boehner by abandoning support for renewing the charter of the
U.S. Export-Import Bank.
Conservatives
successfully killed renewal of the bank's charter, arguing government
should not meddle by picking economic winners and losers. Ex-Im offers
financing to foreign buyers of U.S. goods.
McCarthy ignored reporters' questions about his future plans as he exited the morning meeting.
"Now
is the time for our (House Republican) conference to focus on healing
and unifying to face the challenges ahead and always do what is best for
the American people," he said in a statement.
There was no immediate market reaction.
Phil
Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors, said:
“The near-term news is good in that it suggests that Boehner is going to
get a clean bill through as his last act as speaker, but the question
becomes what happens post-Halloween and who the new speaker is going to
be.”
The son of a bar
owner and one of 12 children, Boehner is the only college graduate in
his family. He grew up in Cincinnati and served in the U.S. Navy in
1969, then became a small businessman before launching a political
career.
On Thursday
evening as Boehner left the Capitol, he told two reporters - one from
Politico and another from the Washington Post - that he had nothing left
to accomplish after bringing Pope Francis to the Capitol, Politico
reported.
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