House Republicans are still far from electing a new House Speaker after their closed-door voting session Wednesday resulted in Rep. Steve Scalise as their speaker-designate.
If all current members are present and voting on the floor, Scalise would need 217 votes to win the speaker's gavel and can only afford to lose four Republican votes. Several lawmakers are looking to throw a wrench into the current majority leader's speaker plans, saying they will instead vote for Rep. Jim Jordan, who ran against Scalise for the nomination and lost.
The floor vote for the speakership, though, will likely not play out until Thursday with the House adjourning for the night.
Here's where that process sits now:
- The GOP elected Scalise for speaker nomination: Scalise won the House GOP’s nomination for speaker during a secret ballot vote Wednesday, beating out Jordan 113-99. The threshold to succeed was a simple majority of the conference rather than the 217 majority needed to win the gavel on the floor.
- House quickly recessed: The House, hours after the nomination vote, gathered at 3 p.m. ET, then recessed — a procedural step.
- Scalise now searches for votes: The speaker designate on Wednesday afternoon was well short of the 217 votes he needs to be elected speaker and began meeting individually with undecided lawmakers.
- Battle for majority leader: If Scalise becomes speaker, he will vacate his role as majority leader, leaving the position up for grabs. Rep. Byron Donalds has thrown his name into the hat as has Oklahoma Rep. Kevin Hern. Minnesota Rep. Tom Emmer, the current House majority whip, is also expected to announce a bid for leader.
- Jordan backs Scalise: Jordan, with several lawmakers throwing their support behind him as they looked to spurn Scalise, said he plans to vote for Scalise on the floor and is encouraging his colleagues to do the same, a source with direct knowledge told CNN.
- Tough fight for Scalise: GOP Rep. Thomas Massie told reporters he thought “there’s at least 20” members ready to not vote for Scalise on the floor. Several members from the key Freedom Caucus — including Reps. Lauren Boebert, Chip Roy, Bob Good, Barry Moore and Michael Cloud — have already publicly stated they are not yet ready to back Scalise on the floor. Boebert, even after meeting with Scalise, remained a no vote.
- House out until noon tomorrow: Republican leadership announced Wednesday night that no further votes are expected in the House and they would adjourn until noon on Thursday giving Scalise time to search out support from within his conference.



