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Rewritten from Washington Examiner 1 min read
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Signals flagged in the original

  • loaded language: 'swooped in like a 'witch on a broom''
  • loaded language: 'dejectedly walked back'
  • framing: EXCLUSIVE
  • framing: new book reveals
  • framing: sheds new light
  • editorializing: Leganski suggests he then knew they’d face trouble getting to 218 votes
  • vague attribution: as one member later recalled
  • omitted response: a named/criticized party is given no chance to respond

Analyzed by our bias model Full breakdown ↓

Rep. Marcy Kaptur Considered Voting for Kevin McCarthy in Speaker Election

Rep. Marcy Kaptur nearly voted for Kevin McCarthy during the 2023 Speaker election, as revealed in a new book by John Leganski. The book details the challenges McCarthy faced in securing votes and the dynamics among House members during the election process, which ultimately led to his election and subsequent removal as Speaker nine months later.

People
Marcy Kaptur Kevin McCarthy John Leganski Mike Turner Katherine Clark

Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH) nearly voted for Kevin McCarthy during his election for Speaker of the House in 2023, according to a new book by John Leganski, a former aide to McCarthy. The book, titled *Glory, Grief, and the Gavel: An Inside Guide to Running for Speaker of the House*, details Kaptur's contemplation of changing her vote to help McCarthy secure the position.

Kaptur, representing a predominantly Republican district, was seen discussing her potential vote with fellow Ohio representative Mike Turner during the voting process. Turner suggested that changing her vote could resolve the prolonged election. However, Minority Whip Katherine Clark (D-MA) intervened, dissuading Kaptur from making the switch.

The book also recounts the challenges McCarthy faced, including demands from conservative members of the Freedom Caucus, which complicated his path to securing the necessary votes. Ultimately, after four days of voting, McCarthy was elected Speaker with 216 votes after several holdouts switched their votes to 'present'.

Kaptur's potential crossover vote would have been unprecedented in modern times, as only one member of Congress has voted for the opposing party's nominee for Speaker since 1913. The book highlights the complexities and negotiations that characterized McCarthy's election process, which ended with his removal as Speaker nine months later.

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Bias Analysis

Bias score 65/100
wirepublicmainstream flavoredpartisanadvocacy
Inflammatory language 6/100

Bias Indicators Removed

  • loaded language: 'swooped in like a 'witch on a broom''
  • loaded language: 'dejectedly walked back'
  • framing: EXCLUSIVE
  • framing: new book reveals
  • framing: sheds new light
  • editorializing: Leganski suggests he then knew they’d face trouble getting to 218 votes
  • vague attribution: as one member later recalled
  • omitted response: a named/criticized party is given no chance to respond

Original vs. Neutral

Original Headline

Marcy Kaptur weighed voting for Kevin McCarthy in historic speaker vote: Book

Neutral Headline

Rep. Marcy Kaptur Considered Voting for Kevin McCarthy in Speaker Election