Why This Old 1984 Photo of the Statue of Liberty Provides Some Great...
How an Italian Artist Commemorated America's 250th Birthday. It's Pretty Cool.
Grand Jury Indicts Former Olympian for Defacing Reflecting Pool
Separatist Group Admits to Killing US Pilot
Do Vague State Education Standards Open the Door to Classroom Activism?
The Left's Fascist Fallacy
Left Building Momentum to Pack Supreme Court
This Republican Has a Wild Idea for Fixing Housing Prices: Let the Market...
British Police Don't Want You to Watch This Footage of Their Mistake
'Vandals' Tear Down Buffalo, NY Flag Celebrating Somali Independence
America's Homelessness System Must Pursue Self-Sufficiency, Not Simply Housing
Federal Court Block Trump Administration DEI Firings Just Days After Related SCOTUS Case
Today's Aviation Day Celebration Might Be the Most Patriotic Event of the Century
Illegal Alien SNAP Fraud Plot Resulted in 'Substantial Hardship' for Victims
Ex-Army Contractor Convicted in $1.1M MRE Theft Scheme at Ft. Bliss
Tipsheet

Outgoing GOP Rep Says It Will Be 'Hard to Govern' Without a Large Republican House Majority

Outgoing GOP Rep Says It Will Be 'Hard to Govern' Without a Large Republican House Majority
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Outgoing moderate GOP Rep. Fred Upton (MI) said Sunday that it will be difficult for the Republican Party to govern if the party does not have 230 seats in the House following the midterm elections, calling into question whether House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) would have enough votes to become Speaker if the party does not reach that number.

Advertisement

Upton was asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" if McCarthy could represent a moderate like himself and someone like Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. Upton said the minority leader could "if he gets the margin."

"That's why this over-under number is so important," Upton explained.

Host Chuck Todd then pressed Upton on if he believes McCarthy will not be the Speaker if Republicans have less than 230 seats in the House.

Upton responded, "It will be very hard to govern for Republicans if we're under 230 knowing that we've got the MTG element that’s really not a part of a governing majority."

Currently, Republicans hold 209 House seats and Democrats have 221. There are five vacant seats in the House, with four of them previously being held by Republicans.

Greene has previously suggested that McCarthy "doesn't have the votes" to become Speaker if Republicans regain control of the House following November's elections.

"We know that Kevin McCarthy has a problem in our conference. He doesn't have the full support to be speaker," Greene said on Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz's "Firebrand" podcast in November.

"He doesn't have the votes that are there, because there's many of us that are very unhappy about the failure to hold Republicans accountable, while conservatives like me, Paul Gosar, and many others just constantly take the abuse by the Democrats," she continued.

Advertisement

McCarthy said Sunday on "Fox News Sunday" that he sees an "opportunity" to become Speaker if the GOP wins back the House in November.

And last month, the minority leader said that he was not concerned about the possibility of another GOP representative becoming Speaker should Republicans take back the House.

"If you're a minority leader the day of the election, you win, and you win the majority, you're probably going to be the Speaker," McCarthy told Punchbowl News at the time. "They're not going to change the coach between the playoff and the Super Bowl."

Upton announced earlier this month that he would be retiring at the end of his current term. He was one of 10 House Republicans to vote to impeach former President Donald Trump following the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement