KEY POINTS
  • U.S. House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy has yet to publicly win support from enough members of his caucus to ensure he is elected House speaker in January.
  • A small band of House Republicans on the far right are publicly lobbying against him, while behind closed doors McCarthy is resisting demands from the broader conservative House Freedom Caucus.
  • Congressional aides say the uncertainty over McCarthy's support within the party is holding up key decisions about coveted committee spots.
U.S. House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) presides over a news conference about the Save Our Sequoias Act at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., June 23, 2022. 

WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy's struggle to secure enough support within his party to win House speaker in January is putting key decisions on hold and potentially hindering the party's ability to implement its agenda when it assumes the House majority next year, according to Republican congressional aides.

The California lawmaker needs 218 out of 222 Republicans in the House to elect him speaker on Jan. 3 if he wants to avoid a messy public floor fight and multiple rounds of voting. As of Tuesday afternoon, McCarthy was still short by at least five votes.