Washington (CNN)Conservative momentum to oust John Boehner from his position as speaker of the House continued to build through the weekend, with two alternatives emerging and a major national conservative group joining the effort.
On Sunday night, Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar and Iowa Rep. Steve King became the latest to express opposition to Boehner for speaker. In an op-ed published on Breitbart.com, King outlined a litany of complaints with the Speaker, arguing Boehner hasn’t done enough to oppose President Barack Obama’s signature health care law or the President’s executive action on immigration and pointing to passage of the recent government funding bill, which tackled neither, as evidence.
Leadership aides, however, remain confident that Boehner will hold onto his position as the top Republican in the House. Conservatives need to gather nearly 30 lawmakers opposed to him to force a second round of voting in the race.
But the developing coup attempt is the latest reminder for the Ohio Republican that conservatives remain a troublesome and unpredictable force in his caucus that can cause public embarrassment if not out-and-out regime change.
“We need a Speaker who will help us all keep our oath, including his own, to the Constitution, not one who has consistently blocked our efforts to keep ours. I will vote for an alternative candidate for Speaker,” King wrote.
Those frustrations are shared by many of his fellow conservatives, and the passage of the cromnibus last month pushed already simmering tensions with Boehner to a boiling point.And it threatens to start things off on precisely the wrong foot for Republicans as they take full control of Congress and seek to prove to Americans they’re the party that can govern in time for 2016.
Conservatives say they count at least nine lawmakers who have publicly said they’ll oppose Boehner at this point.GOP Reps. Ted Yoho of Florida and Louie Gohmert of Texas both offered themselves up as alternatives to Boehner this weekend, after two prominent conservatives in the House — Rep. Jim Bridenstine of Oklahoma and Thomas Massie of Kentucky — came out publicly opposed to him.
North Carolina Rep. Walter Jones, an early organizer of the effort to unseat Boehner, told a local North Carolina paper that he plans to support Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida, whose name will also be offered as an alternative to Boehner on Tuesday.“I want us to have a leader who is willing to stand up for conservative, religious principles I believe in. It is to make a statement and it’s based on many months of consideration,” Jones said.
National conservative group FreedomWorks has launched a national campaign in support of the effort, urging its members to call their lawmaker and tell them to vote against the Ohio Republican as speaker. And Bridenstine launched a short-lived website pitching Gohmert as speaker that included endorsements from both himself and Massie for the Texas Republican, which was soon after wiped of its content.