WASHINGTON –
GOP Reps. Elise Stefanik and Chip Roy each gave fellow House Republicans their pitches Thursday to succeed Rep. Liz Cheney in their conference's third-ranking leadership position.
The House GOP conference will vote Friday morning on the leadership position.
Stefanik of New York highlighted a unified message of the conference leading into the 2022 midterms and how she flipped a Democratic district, while Roy of Texas noted he was legislatively more conservative, per several lawmakers in the room.
Stefanik has remainedthe clear frontrunner to lead the House GOP Conference as she was endorsed by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California, Minority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana and former President Donald Trump.
However, Roy threw his hat into the ring Thursday evening as conservatives in the party argued the process to pick a successor should be slowed down, and someone more legislatively conservative should be considered.
Cheney's ouster from the leadership role Wednesday was essentially a proxy fight over support for Trump.
Cheney was one of 10 House Republicans who voted in January to impeach the former president. But Stefanik served as one of Trump's most vocal defenders in Congress during his two impeachments.
"Elise has intelligence, an endorsement from American Patriot Brandon Judd and the National Border Patrol Council, she has an A+ from the NRA, and she loves our Veterans," Trump said in a statement Monday. "We need someone in Leadership who has experience flipping districts from Blue to Red as we approach the important 2022 midterms, and that’s Elise!"
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Stefanik posted a statement minutes after Cheney's ouster listing an agenda mirroring Trump's. She advocated protecting the border, securing elections, reopening schools, supporting law enforcement and strengthening the military.
The leadership post is a prominent role communicating the party's message as Republicans strive to regain control of the House in the 2022 election.
Stefanik won her seat in 2014 after Democrats held it for 20 years, and she said she knows what it takes to grow Republican seats.
"I know firsthand the discipline and message it takes to fight back against the biased national media and the entire Democrat and Far-Left infrastructure," Stefanik wrote.
McCarthy, though he's endorsed Stefanik, welcomed others to pursue the position. “Always healthy to have debate,” McCarthy said. “Anybody can run.”
Some conservatives were wary of Stefanik after the voice-vote ouster of Cheney.
Cheney has an 80% lifetime rating from Heritage Action for America, a conservative advocacy group, compared to 48% for Stefanik. Cheney was also rated more supportive of Trump, voting with him 92.9% of the time, compared to 77.7% for Stefanik, according to FiveThirtyEight.com.
Roy circulated a memo Tuesday to Republican colleagues arguing against placing Stefanik in leadership. Roy's three-page memo noted a dozen times Stefanik voted against Trump's agenda, including against his signature tax cut, against his border security measures and in favor of a drilling ban in the Gulf of Mexico.
Several conservative Republicans said this week they had preferred competition to Stefanik. Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, said he was "always for having multiple choices." Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., said Stefanik shouldn't run unopposed.
Speaking to reporters as the candidate forum ended, Roy said the debate within the caucus was a "healthy thing" and they should be debating the leadership position and issues.
When asked what differences he highlighted between him and Stefanik, he said, "I think you can look at policy issues, you see a pretty clear distinction."
Stefanik said Thursday evening she believes she is "in a strong position going into tomorrow" and that she highlighted her "status of flipping a district in 2014" to her colleagues.
Rep. Guy Reschenthaler, R-Pa., was confident the vote will be in favor of Stefanik Friday, and said she has been whipping the votes for weeks.
Reschenthaler continued that he believes the caucus will be focused on a "unified message" and moving forward from the Cheney ordeal. To him, Stefanik is the best person that "can drive home the message of the entire conference is not her individually."
McCarthy told reporters the candidate forum was "healthy" and that he was glad members got to "ask questions. You get to hear debates of different styles and ideas and how to best move forward."
Republican members questioned Stefanik and Roy on how they would "best reach out, how to represent the conference, and styles of leadership," according to the Minority Leader.
Per Scalise, the conference focused on the upcoming 2022 midterm elections and "the importance of being united to take back the House."
Trump, following the news Roy had announced his intention to run against Stefanik, released an additional statement, saying, "Can’t imagine Republican House Members would go with Chip Roy—he has not done a great job, and will probably be successfully primaried in his own district. I support Elise, by far, over Chip!"
When asked about the statement, Roy responded: "My thoughts are about doing my job for the people in my district here and what we're doing here by having a good, solid discussion and debate among Republicans."