17 Followers
70 Following
74 Posts
Fluent in sarcasm. More comfortable lurking.

#ProLifeMyAss

State Rep Scheetz:

The #GOP just proposed new restrictions on the types of #food eligible for purchase with #SNAP benefits, putting even more pressure on families with children.

In addition, they would aim to keep families with more than one vehicle from receiving help. 👎

@OyVeidt if I'm reading the source material right, that number is when a speaker was finally elected. We've passed 9 which means we've passed the 68th congress. If the election chooses a winner at 10, that will be tied with the 23rd congress. Ridiculous no matter how you slice it.

@GilliJamtin I am not an expert, but from my understanding, they would have to change the rules in order for it to be a majority instead of the plurality they are shooting for. In 1855 it took 133 votes and several months. https://history.house.gov/People/Office/Speakers-Multiple-Ballots/

Nothing can be done until the speaker is elected.

Speaker Elections Decided by Multiple Ballots | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives

The House has elected a Speaker 128 times since 1789. The Speaker is elected at the beginning of the new Congress by a majority of the Representatives-elect from a selection of candidates nominated on the floor prior to the vote. Usually, those candidates are chosen separately by the majority- and minority-party caucuses in a closed-door vote before the start of a new Congress. Members-elect have three options during the election for Speaker: they may vote for a particular candidate; they may vote “present,” which registers their attendance but lowers the threshold needed to win; or they may abstain from the vote. From 1789 to 1839, lawmakers elected the Speaker using secret ballots. But since the opening of the 26th Congress (1839–1841), amid heightened sectional tensions over slavery, the House has elected the Speaker viva voce, by voice vote. In cases of an unexpected vacancy during a Congress a new Speaker is elected by a majority of the House from candidates nominated prior to the election.There have been 15 instances of Speaker elections requiring multiple ballots (the records for the 2nd Congress, 1791–1793, are inconclusive, and the House has filled vacancies in the Speakership three times using a resolution). Thirteen of 15 multiple-ballot elections occurred before the Civil War, when party divisions were more nebulous. The last time a Speaker election required two or more votes on the floor happened in 2023.

Sorry, I could not resist.
@Flash I just told my husband that joke and he didn't get it. I'm still laughing.
@PhoenixMe just found an image which summed up my entire statement.