January 3, 2013
Boehner wins re-election as House speaker
AP Photo
House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio holds up a gavel in the House chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, after being re-elected House Speaker as the 113th Congress began.
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WASHINGTON -- Republican John Boehner narrowly won re-election Thursday as the speaker of the House of Representatives as the 113th Congress convened in an atmosphere of unusual uncertainty and turmoil.

Outwardly, the day had a festive air as children were allowed to sit in House members' seats and the usually somber halls of the Capitol complex teemed with revelers. Thursday also had an uplifting note, as Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., who suffered a major stroke last year, climbed the 45 outdoor steps into the Senate chamber with the help of Vice President Joe Biden and two Senate colleagues.

There were celebrations of the diversity of the new Congress. The Senate welcomed its first openly gay member. Senate Republicans welcomed the first African-American Republican in three decades. The House Democratic caucus for the first time had a majority of members who weren't white men.

But there were undercurrents of internal divisions lingering from the fight over the "fiscal cliff," and signs of partisan battles to come in weeks ahead.

Boehner set that somber tone. "Public service was never meant to be an easy living. Extraordinary challenges demand extraordinary leadership," the Ohio Republican told the House.

"So if you have come here to see your name in lights or to pass off political victory as accomplishment, you have come to the wrong place. The door is behind you."

Even the election of the speaker, usually a routine matter, had moments of tension. Twelve Republicans didn't vote for Boehner, and his 220-vote total matched the lowest for a speaker in 14 years, when there were fewer Republicans.

The dissenters were conservatives who've complained that Boehner is too willing to deal with Democrats. They're still upset over the fiscal cliff deal, saying it didn't contain enough spending cuts; 151 Republicans voted against the plan, and it passed only because of a huge Democratic vote.

Boehner has tried to get tougher, as four Republicans were tossed off key committees, and he attempted earlier this week to get a majority for a massive spending-cut package. But the suspicions lingered, and Democrats signaled Thursday that they're going to dig in.

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