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Kevin McCarthy is no longer Speaker of the House in the United States. What the legislators from Massachusetts had to say about it

On Tuesday, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives in the United States voted to remove embattled Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-California, in a vote that will go down in history. It was the first occasion that anyone could remember in recent history that the chamber had taken such an action.

According to the report in the Washington Post, the vote in the chamber was 216 to 210.

According to the Associated Press, McCarthy’s primary adversary, Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida in the United States House of Representatives, was the one who proposed the “motion to vacate.” This move brought together more than a handful of extreme Republican critics of the speaker and many Democrats who feel he is undeserving of leadership.

It is not apparent what the following actions will be. According to the AP’s reporting, however, there is no clear candidate to take over leadership of the Republican majority in the House.

According to the Washington Post, the most recent attempt to remove the Speaker of the House was made in 1910 against then-Speaker Joseph G. Cannon, R-Ill., who survived the attempt. The vote, however, created an opportunity for Democrats to seize control of the chamber, as the publication pointed out.
U.S. Representative Jim McGovern, Democrat for the 2nd District, stated in a post on X, which was originally known as Twitter, that he believed McCarthy, who gained the gavel only after many ballots, had run out of time.

McGovern characterised McCarthy as someone who “constantly opposes bipartisanship and shows he is untrustworthy.”

“He handed over his gavel to members of the MAGA radical group, which has caused havoc in Congress and dysfunction that is harmful to our nation. I’m not going to help Trump escape the infighting within the Republican Party. “In regard to the motion to vacate, I will cast my vote in the affirmative,” McGovern stated.

McCarthy “put his ambition ahead of the American people and his job before the institution,” U.S. Representative Lori Trahan, Democrat of the Third Congressional District, wrote in a post on X.

“He was a poor Speaker, and the People’s House came to a complete standstill as a result of his inability to lead.” “Dedicated parents and their children deserve better,” added Trahan.

U.S. Representative for the 4th District Jake Auchincloss, a Democrat, was as uncompromising.

“Trust is the most valuable commodity in Congress. According to a post that Auchincloss made on X, Speaker McCarthy is insolvent. “On multiple occasions, he has betrayed his pledge and submitted to the authority of [former President Donald] Trump. I won’t be casting a vote to keep him in his position as speaker.

Rep. Katherine Clark, Democrat of the 5th District in the United States, who serves as the whip for the Democratic caucus in the House, did not mention McCarthy by name when she posted to X that “You can’t steer a ship without a moral compass.”

Rep. Seth Moulton, Democrat of Massachusetts’ 6th Congressional District, explained his support to oust McCarthy by stating, “He can’t be trusted.

“This is what happens when you sell your soul to the most extreme members of your caucus,” Moulton continued. “This is what happens when you sell your soul.” After rescuing him from a crisis contrived by the GOP the first time, Democrats decided they wouldn’t get him out of another jam this time.

In light of the fact that the House is currently looking for a senior leader, Representative Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts’s 7th Congressional District offered an alternative solution: “Republicans, you’re welcome to join us and vote for [House Minority Leader] Hakeem Jeffries [of New York] for Speaker of the House.”