Boehner To Leave Congress At The End Of October
News outlets report Friday morning that House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, plans to resign, amidst growing pressure from the conservative wing of the Republican Party. Politico notes that now, free from intra-caucus concerns, he will be free to push a clean stop-gap funding bill through the House to prevent a government shutdown.
USA Today:
Speaker John Boehner To Resign From Congress
In a shocking announcement, John Boehner told his GOP colleagues he will step down as House speaker and resign his Ohio congressional seat on Oct. 30. ... His resignation comes the day after Pope Francis became the first pontiff to address a joint meeting of Congress — a crowning achievement of Boehner's career — and amid a congressional fight over federal funding of Planned Parenthood that threatens another government shutdown. (Shesgreen and Allen, 9/25)
NBC News:
House Speaker John Boehner To Resign
Boehner has been under prolonged pressure from conservatives in his party, who have accused him of failing to fight the Obama administration on issues important to the GOP. Foes within his party had been pushing to oust him if he presented any legislation that would continue to fund the government and avoid a government shutdown without stripping federal funding for Planned Parenthood. (9/25)
The New York Times:
John Boehner Will Resign From Congress
Most recently, Mr. Boehner, 65, was trying to craft a solution to keep the government open through the rest of the year, but was under pressure from a growing base of conservatives who told him that they would not vote for a bill that did not defund Planned Parenthood. Several of those members were on a path to remove Mr. Boehner as speaker, though their ability to do so was far from certain. (Steinhauer, 9/25)
Politico:
Speaker John Boehner Retiring From Congress At The End Of October
Speaker John Boehner, who rose from bartender's son to the most powerful man in Congress, will retire at the end of October, ending a tumultuous five-year tenure atop the House of Representatives. ... Now that he doesn't have internal political considerations to weigh, Boehner is certain to push through a government-funding bill next week that funds Planned Parenthood, and keeps the government open. Boehner's decision, relayed in a closed Republican meeting Friday morning, will set off one of the most intense leadership scrambles in modern Congressional GOP politics. (Sherman, 9/25)