DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Rep. Kevin Kiley leaves GOP, further shrinking Speaker Johnson’s majority

March 9, 2026
in News
Rep. Kevin Kiley leaves GOP, further shrinking Speaker Johnson’s majority

Rep. Kevin Kiley (California) said Monday that he is immediately changing his party affiliation on the House’s official roster from Republican to independent, further complicating the ability of Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) to manage the Republican Conference. Last week, Kiley said he would seek reelection as an independent.

During a news conference, Kiley said he will continue to caucus with House Republicans “for the remainder of this term” but pledged to be “an independent voice.” It remains to be seen what practical effect his move will have, but it narrows the number of registered Republicans in the chamber to 217. Democrats hold 214 seats, and there are three vacancies. Kiley will be the only independent.

The two-term congressman attributed his decision to redistricting efforts in California, which resulted in his district becoming more blue. Because of redistricting, Rep. Ami Bera (D), who currently represents California’s 6th District, will run for reelection in the 3rd District against Kiley.

“I reached a decision that, since gerrymandering seeks to elevate partisanship above everything else in our politics and governance, seeks to make it the sum and substance of our politics, then the best way to counter gerrymandering and its insidious impacts on democracy is simply to take partisanship out of the equation,” Kiley said.

Kiley, a moderate, has occasionally broken with Johnson in key matters, making him an unreliable vote for a speaker struggling with a razor-thin majority.

Last month, for example, Kiley was among six Republicans who voted with Democrats to end President Donald Trump’s stepped-up tariffs on Canada, rebuking the president in the first of what could be several congressional challenges to his trade policies.

Spokespeople for Johnson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Kiley’s decision.

Speaking to reporters Monday, Kiley noted that he did not give House GOP leaders a heads-up before ending his party membership.

Though he will be identified as an independent from California, Kiley said he will continue caucusing with Republicans because of “administrative purposes.” Committee assignments in the House run through party leadership. To remain in his committees, Kiley must be attached to one of the two parties.

Kiley told reporters, however, that his new designation “reflects the way that I have always approached my role as a representative.”

“I’ve always said I’ll be an independent voice for our district,” he said.

The post Rep. Kevin Kiley leaves GOP, further shrinking Speaker Johnson’s majority appeared first on Washington Post.

Resident Evil Requiem Review: The Best Resident Evil Game Since RE4
News

Resident Evil Requiem Review: The Best Resident Evil Game Since RE4

by VICE
March 9, 2026

When Capcom revealed Leon Kennedy at The Game Awards 2025, some worried that the Resident Evil Requiem would struggle to ...

Read more
News

Mark Leckey Has Made a Disquieting Music Video for Sheet Noise

March 9, 2026
News

White House says it fired NTSB member over misconduct, but Todd Inman denies allegations

March 9, 2026
News

Man who was viciously stabbed bled to death after someone stole his ambulance, family says

March 9, 2026
News

‘Crazy pills’: Internet in disbelief watching Trump’s ‘double speak’ on Iran war

March 9, 2026
LAPD officer under investigation for allegedly taking cash from unlocked Tesla

LAPD officer under investigation for allegedly taking cash from unlocked Tesla

March 9, 2026
The right and wrong ways to reduce oil prices

The right and wrong ways to reduce oil prices

March 9, 2026
Millions of student-loan borrowers are kicked off of Biden’s key affordable repayment plan in a surprise court reversal

Millions of student-loan borrowers are kicked off of Biden’s key affordable repayment plan in a surprise court reversal

March 9, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026