President-elect Donald Trump backed House Speaker Mike Johnson in his campaign to hold onto the gavel, writing on his social media platform that the Louisiana Republican has his “Complete & Total Endorsement.”
“Speaker Mike Johnson is a good, hard working, religious man. He will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN,” Trump said on Truth Social Monday.
Trump, who will begin his second term in office on Jan. 20, with plans for a sweeping reform agenda focused on immigration and other priorities, urged his party to stick together heading into 2025. “LETS NOT BLOW THIS GREAT OPPORTUNITY WHICH WE HAVE BEEN GIVEN,” he wrote.
Johnson responded, promising to “quickly deliver” on the incoming president’s agenda. The speaker election is Friday when the new Congress begins. Days later, Trump’s victory in the 2024 election is set to be certified by the new Congress on Jan. 6.
Trump’s statement follows recent warnings that Johnson could face defections within his party in Friday’s vote for speaker. He can only afford to lose a handful of Republican votes, given Republicans’ slim House majority. Republicans won a razor-thin House majority in November with 220 seats. Since then, Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., stepped down from his seat to pursue a Cabinet nomination, from which he later withdrew, bringing the number of House Republicans to 219.
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., announced last week that he would not support Johnson’s re-election. “I’m not persuaded by the ‘hurry up and elect him so we can certify the election on J6’ argument,” Massie said in a post to X. “A weak legislative branch, beholden to the swamp, will not be able to achieve the mandate voters gave Trump and Congress in November.”
Support for Johnson among some Republican members appeared to falter amid his efforts to push through a bipartisan end of year spending deal that was ripped apart by billionaire Elon Musk, a close Trump ally. Republicans voted against the plan and then voted down a slimmed-down agreement that included a demand by Trump to raise the debt ceiling, though the true deadline to lift the nation’s borrowing limit is not likely to come until mid-next-year.
Johnson ultimately passed a deal that did not include Trump’s provision for a debt ceiling increase and angered some conservatives over its lack of spending cuts.
The President-elect’s latest statement follows a show of support on Sunday from Republican congressman Mike Lawler who argued that Johnson inherited these circumstances from former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who was ousted by a group of eight Republicans.
Lawler, R-N.Y., said in an interview with ABC News that Johnson “inherited a disaster” and that the removal of McCarthy “will go down as the single stupidest thing I’ve ever seen in politics.”
“With that said, removing Mike Johnson would equally be as stupid,” Lawler said on “This Week.” “The fact is that these folks are playing with fire and if they think they’re somehow going to get a more conservative speaker, they’re kidding themselves.”
NBC News has previously reported that Trump had expressed support for Johnson in November during a meeting with House Republicans, according to GOP sources. But Trump appeared to waver on his support for Johnson shortly after the president-elect denounced the bipartisan government funding deal the speaker released earlier this month.
“We’ll see,” Trump responded on Dec. 19 when asked whether he still had confidence in Johnson.
Trump’s statement Monday may tamp down rumblings inside the House that Republicans should search for an alternative to Johnson.
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