Speaker Mike Johnson sent House members home early Tuesday after a group of Republicans blocked action on the chamber floor, extending a standoff over President Donald Trump’s elections bill.
The procedural rebellion, led by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, prevented Johnson from advancing Republican priorities, including the annual Pentagon policy bill. Luna said she would end her protest if GOP leaders agreed to add Trump’s voter ID and proof-of-citizenship measure to the defense bill.
By Tuesday afternoon, Johnson told members to leave Washington early after concluding he could not regain control of the floor. It was the second straight week House Republican leaders dropped planned votes.
The disruption could complicate Johnson’s plan to move other parts of Trump’s agenda this month, including billions in Pentagon funding tied to the Iran war.
The dispute has intensified tensions inside the narrowly divided House Republican conference. Many Republicans blamed about a dozen hard-line members for blocking consideration of the defense bill, which some saw as one of their last major legislative efforts before the November midterms.
As the procedural vote was failing, Johnson told Luna and Rep. Tim Burchett that they were wrong, they don’t get it and that their votes would lead to embarrassment, according to three sources familiar with the remarks. Neither lawmaker changed their vote.
Johnson later said, “We have the smallest margin in US history. We’re nearing an election. People get very emotional about things, and sometimes they make irrational decisions.” Earlier, he called Luna’s actions a “self-inflicted wound” for his party.
Rep. Troy Nehls criticized the delay, saying, “I think we have squandered away an opportunity to do something great for the Fourth of July.”
Luna defended her tactics: “The fact that I’m being singled out because I know procedure — I’m not stupid. I’m going to fight on behalf of the American people.”
Republican leaders face a broader problem: Congress does not currently have the votes to pass Trump’s elections overhaul in the form he wants, even with Republican majorities in both chambers. Luna and others have urged Senate Republicans to change Senate rules, but Senate GOP leaders have said they do not have the votes to do that.
Trump publicly urged the defectors to back down, but some hard-liners questioned whether he was serious because he remains focused on the bill.
Rep. Thomas Massie said some Republicans were becoming more willing to oppose procedural votes: “There are people who normally wouldn’t vote against the rule and are doing it.”