GoCubsGo wrote: ↑Thu Jan 05, 2023 7:16 pm
The only thing they can do is vote on a speaker or adjourn, they literally cannot do anything else until a speaker is elected.
The dems and the Rebels don't want to adjourn and it takes 218 to do so.
The talking heads are saying the Republicans want to adjourn until Tuesday because of family obligations or some such bullshit.
They want out of Dodge on Jan 6.
Good point, I hadn't thought of that. Where are the insurrectionists we need to slap the House GQP around?
Edit: There's a motion to adjourn until noon tomorrow. 15 minutes to vote electronically just began at 7:51 EST.
Edit 2: The motion to adjourn passed on a party line vote 219-213. The Dems wanted the Clown Show to continue, as you said yesterday. Idk which lone Repub crossed the aisle.
Tenth ballot
No changes except:
Byron Donalds (FL 19) 13 3.0%
Kevin Hern (OK 1) 7 1.6%
Seriously? In the midst of utterly impotent theater what's the point of ditching the Black man?
Eleventh ballot
No change except that Goofy Gaetz, a Tenth ballot Donalds voter, again voted for
Dolt .45 - 1 0.2%. The Black man loses yet another pointless vote, this time to a White supremacist.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Spea ... January_5)
Hakeem Hakeem Hakeem!!!
Kevin Kevin Kevin - oh wait, they clapped but didn't do that.
Donalds and Hern got scattered claps.
TRE45QN got booed.
It's now 162 years since we saw worse chaos, and at least they had the excuse then that no party had a majority.
December 1859 – February 1860
An election for speaker took place over the course of eight weeks, December 5, 1859 through February 1, 1860, at the start of the 36th Congress, following the 1858–59 elections in which the Republicans won a plurality of the seats. William Pennington (R-NJ5), a freshman congressman, received a majority of the votes cast in the 44th ballot and was elected speaker. The bitter election dispute deepened the rift between slave states and free states and helped push Southern political leaders further toward secession.
William Pennington (NJ 5) 117 50.22
Barely elected. The abaci must have been clacking to see if it was over 50%.
Ut-oh, did anything significant happen in 1861?
