It looks like Boehner's hand-picked successor, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy
is dropping out of the House Speaker race.
Recently he made headlines when he admitted the Benghazi hearings in Congress were really about smearing Hillary Clinton. When asked if this slip-up was the reason he's withdrawing:
“Well, that wasn’t helpful. I could have said it much better.” McCarthy admitted, adding he “should not be a distraction” from the panel finding the “truth.” “That’s part of the decision as well.”
Wunderkind Paul Ryan says he still doesn't want the job:
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) is the top choice of many GOPers to fill the speaker’s shoes. But he reiterated that he is not interested after McCarthy (R-Calif.) dropped out.
Some Republicans worry that the Tea Party wing in Congress will make it impossible for Republicans to elect anyone and that they might have to cross party lines to get the votes:
Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.), interviewed live on CNN, said McCarthy withdrew because although he could have won a majority of the Republican Conference, he would not have had 218 votes on the House floor.
Dent said it might be necessary to form a “bipartisan coalition” with Democrats to elect the next speaker and avoid having to appease the “rejectionist wing” of his own party, which he said has made the House ungovernable by insisting on “unreasonable demands.”