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Boehner expected to keep his speakership despite fiscal cliff stumbles

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — When Republicans chose John A. Boehner as House speaker two years ago, the former plastics salesman who had served two decades in Congress finally had the job he wanted.

Trouble was, he couldn’t have picked a worse time.

That reality played out again late New Year’s Day, when Boehner suffered a stinging rebuke as his rambunctious tea party-inspired majority — more conservative and less willing to compromise than he is — abandoned their leader on the “fiscal cliff” deal.

Boehner voted yes, but the majority of his majority and even his top two lieutenants voted no. If conventional wisdom held, the speaker’s tenure would be finished.

But Boehner is expected to be re-elected Thursday afternoon by a still rebellious Republican majority. Like the political disarray within the Republican Party nationally, the GOP ranks in the House are similarly divided. The lack of a challenger with a clear line of ascent all but ensures the Ohio Republican will keep his dream job.

Influential Republican activists agitate for change, and up-and-comers in Congress muse aloud about a run. Yet no one else in the House leadership, most notably the No. 2 Republican, Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia — Boehner’s strongest rival who split with him on the fiscal cliff vote — has stepped up.

Would-be challengers are reluctant to aim for the speaker’s job — and miss. Nor are they eager to take on a line of work that has proven as difficult as herding cats, keeping frogs in wheelbarrow or, it has been said, assembling a nation out of a loose federation.

“Who wants his job right now?” said strategist Ron Bonjean, who had been a top aide to an earlier GOP House speaker, Dennis Hastert of Illinois. “No one wants to take his place.”

That is not to say the first vote in the new House, scheduled for about 1 p.m., will be without drama.

Nothing prevents a renegade Republican from putting forward another nominee, although whisperings that one was coming have all but subsided. Cantor, in fact, nominated Boehner during the party’s own vote last month. And even though Rep. Tom Price of Georgia said in a radio interview that the House needs conservative, “red state” leadership, he is not expected to volunteer.

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