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Thursday, October 31, 2024

Speaker Mike Johnson pulling closer to Trump

By LISA MASCARO, AP Congressional Correspondent

HOLLAND, Ohio (AP) — Wherever House Speaker Mike Johnson goes, Donald Trump, seemingly, is not far away.

At a campaign stop for a House Republican candidate outside of Toledo, Johnson held up his cell phone as he has a dozen times before, and started filming — “Hey, Mr. President!” The crowd at the county GOP headquarters a couple hundred people deep knew what to do next.

“Is President Trump going to win Ohio?” They roared.

As Johnson travels the country trying to save his House Republican majority, and his own job as speaker, he has linked ever more tightly to Trump, a once uncertain relationship that has become increasingly beneficial to both.

The speaker is relying on the former president for his own political survival in the chaotic House, but also presenting himself as a partner to Trump, prepared to potentially challenge the election results, and, if Trump retakes the White House, deliver a MAGA agenda in Congress. Trump said over the weekend they have a “little secret” for winning, and Johnson, who backed a legal challenge to the 2020 election Trump lost, did not contradict him.

With the presidency and control of Congress at stake, Johnson, who in many ways is an accidental House speaker after taking over after Kevin McCarthy was ejected in a historic far-right revolt, is uniquely positioned to play a central role in both outcomes.

“We’ve been working on this assumption all along that we have to make it ‘too big to rig,’” — and that’s not just a slogan,” Johnson told The Associated Press between campaign stops in Ohio over the weekend.

If Trump wins, as Johnson expects he will, “this will all be an afterthought.”

And if not?

“We’ll sort it out. We’re going to follow all the way through.”

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It’s a remarkable journey for Johnson, 52, a religious-rights lawyer from Louisiana, first elected alongside Trump in 2016 and now second in the line of succession to the presidency. He celebrated his first year on the job last week, before arriving in the Buckeye State, among 230 cities in 40 states he has visited since seizing the gavel.

To hear Johnson tell it, Trump “is the head coach” and “I’ll be the quarterback,” and together they are preparing to run the play on an “ambitious” 100-day agenda with Republican senators — cutting taxes, securing the U.S. border and taking a ”blow torch” to federal regulations — if they sweep the White House and Congress.

While Johnson did not call out Heritage’s Project 2025, he did describe a detailed proposal to push the federal agencies out of Washington and restaff the federal workforce, pointing to the America First Policy Institute and other think tanks with their databases of potential new hires.

“We’re going to be able to bring the federal government to heel,” Johnson said near Akron.

Johnson said he and Trump talk all the time about the plans.

“He’s thinking big about his legacy,” Johnson said. “He’s thinking big about what we can do.”

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