WASHINGTON – U.S. House Majority Whip Tom Emmer's tenure as the GOP's nominee for speaker lasted about four hours on Tuesday as fervent divisions within the party once again kept Republicans from finding a path out of an unprecedented situation.
A source familiar with Emmer's decision confirmed to the Star Tribune he dropped out of the speaker's race.
Emmer quickly exited a Capitol Hill building on Tuesday afternoon, leaving behind a swarm of media.
"It seems as though if you want to make sure that you cannot be speaker of the House, the best thing that you can do right now is run for the office," said GOP U.S. Rep. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota.
Earlier in the day, Emmer overcame a field of roughly seven candidates to become the party's latest standard-bearer in the chamber. He won the nomination after five rounds of voting amid the party's dire struggle to find a replacement for former speaker Kevin McCarthy.
"I think Tom Emmer would be a great speaker," Pennsylvania GOP Rep. Glenn Thompson, the Republican leader of the House Agriculture Committee, said before Emmer dropped out.
Yet shortly after Emmer won the nomination, the challenge he faced in winning a House floor vote became clear. Texas GOP Rep. Troy Nehls, who told reporters he didn't vote for Emmer during the closed-door meeting on Tuesday, said more than 20 lawmakers didn't plan to support the Minnesota Republican for speaker, which could doom Emmer's chances.
"People are talking; he's had some issues with the former president," Nehls said. "I think some of the comments that he's made in the past, I'm not going to get specific, but I think it's causing him some problems today."