We are excited to reclaim the majority and to get to work with our colleagues in the House to enact President Trump's agenda.
We have a mandate from the American people, a mandate not only to clean up the mess left by the Biden-Harris-Schumer agenda, but also to deliver on President Trump's priorities.
We will make sure that the President and his team have the tools and the support that they need to enforce border security laws and to remove the violent criminals who are wreaking havoc in every one of our states.
We will work to make America prosperous again by streamlining the bureaucratic machine and overturning costly Biden-Harris regulations.
And we will work to restore American energy dominance.
Not just our energy security, but energy dominance, which will lower costs and bolster our national security.
We're going to lead this here and take you live to the nation's capital, where House Republican leaders are speaking after their internal elections.
I'm honored to be selected by my colleagues, the service chairwoman of the conference.
Elise is leaving and is a loss for our conference.
She has done incredible work, and I will build upon her success and wish her well.
As a leadership team, we are ready to stand shoulder to shoulder with President Trump to legislate our America First agenda.
Our winning message resonated with the American people, which delivered Republicans a trifecta in government.
House Republicans have been laying the groundwork for months, and we are ready to govern.
I look forward to all that we will achieve together.
And with that, I will bring up our new conference secretary, Erin Houchin.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I am honored to have been selected by my colleagues to serve as conference secretary for the 119th Congress.
I am ready to get to work to start implementing President Trump's agenda, to work alongside him every day to get this country back on track.
I am now proud to introduce our Conference Vice Chair, Flake Moore.
Hello, everyone.
Exciting times.
Good to be back in session.
Off of a really strong message from the American people that we need conservative leadership to govern our country, move things in the right direction.
I can tell you that the conference is excited about the opportunities that lie ahead, primarily legislatively.
We have been battling, building good, strong legislation to address energy, to address border, all the issues that we know Americans are focused on, and it just goes to die in the Senate.
We're looking forward for an opportunity to move this legislation that we built last term and move it on to the next.
So I'm excited.
Congratulations to everybody on the leadership team.
Looking forward to a full term as vice chair as I came in mid-cycle and excited to introduce our new policy director, policy chair, Mr. Kevin Hearn.
Thanks, Blake.
It's really an honor to serve as the policy committee chair going forward.
You know, as we look at the policy that's been put forth on the campaign trail of President Trump, the mandate has been set, 312 electoral votes, over 5 million popular vote.
It is pretty clear what the American people want.
We're going to work hard together.
We have a great team.
We're going to work hard with the leadership team to put that policy forward, move it with the Senate, take the relationships we built on the RSC, and work together to make sure that we get America back on track, put the America first, the Make America Great agenda back in play.
And look forward to doing it.
I'm so excited for the great opportunity.
And with that, I want to introduce our current NRCC chair and returning NRCC chair, the great Richard Hudson.
Thank you.
Well, thank you.
I want to welcome the new members of this leadership team.
I'm proud to serve alongside each one of you.
They bring unique talents and backgrounds and will strengthen our team going forward.
Listen, we ran our last campaigns based on the issues that matter to the American people.
The Democrats, under the extreme leadership of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, and Hakeem Jeffries in the House, made every American less prosperous and less safe.
And so our candidates went out and talked about those issues.
We talked about energy.
We talked about inflation.
We talked about the border.
We talked about the crime and fentanyl that come from that.
And we told the American people our idea is to fix it.
And they gave us a mandate.
And so together with President Trump and a Republican Senate, we're going to start delivering on that on day one.
Thank you.
I'll now bring up our great whip, Mr. Tom Emmer.
Thank you, brother.
Thanks, yeah.
Thanks, Richard.
I first want to say thank you to my House Republican colleagues for electing me to serve as their majority whip once again.
It's a privilege and a responsibility I do not take lightly.
We treat the WIP office like a customer service office.
We are here to serve our members and the people they represent.
We don't take anyone or any vote for granted, and we will continue building a culture of teamwork, communication, and respect to deliver more wins on behalf of the American people.
Now that we have our leadership team in place, it's time to suit up and get to work.
President Trump delivered the greatest political comeback in American history based on his proven record and promise to make this country great again.
Voters also gave him a Republican Senate and a Republican House to help him do it.
So now it's our turn.
It's our turn to make good on the priorities we've been campaigning on for the last two years by passing legislation to make life more affordable for all Americans, secure our borders, unleash American energy, restore our dominance on the world stage, and lower taxes for hardworking families.
We've got the team, the work ethic, and the plan to do it.
Now, with the trifecta in hand, we stand ready and united behind President Trump to deliver on his American first agenda once and for all.
As the 118th Congress proved, it may not always be smooth sailing, and we may have some disagreements along the way, but I've always been a firm believer that there's more that unites us than divides us.
And so long as we work together as a team, I have no doubt we will seize the opportunity in front of us and put our country on a better path for generations to come.
With that, I'll turn it over to our great majority leader, Steve Scalise.
Thank you, Whip.
And I too want to thank our new members of this really strong unified leadership team, and Kevin Hearn and Aaron Houchin, and our new conference chair, Lisa McLean.
We're really excited about the selections that our conference made today.
We are going to miss Elise Stefanik, and she served our conference so well for so many years as our conference chair.
But there are bigger things ahead for Elise.
And we know that President Trump is going to benefit tremendously from Elise being the U.N. ambassador.
The world is going to see what we've all known is she's a strong leader and is going to, I think, really do a great job of representing America's values and views and Trump's foreign policy at the United Nations, where it is so desperately needed.
If you think about how we started this morning, we had President Trump come talk to us about what is ahead in this unified government.
You know, we went all around the country and I was in every swing district and got to campaign with President Trump himself.
And you could see the energy around the country.
You know, when President Trump talked about the things he would do to make America great again, it's not just a tagline on a hat.
It's what we're going to do to secure America's border.
It's how we're going to lower food costs and energy costs for those families who are struggling across this country, who have been clamoring for somebody to hear their plight, and President Trump did.
And he did it in every corner of the nation.
He won every swing state because he had a message that was focused on those hardworking families who are struggling.
And they responded by giving us this overwhelming mandate.
And we are already working to deliver on that promise.
We're excited about this opportunity for the American people to go and fight to get those policies put in place now that will lower their food costs and lower their energy costs and secure the border, working with President Trump to deliver a better America.
And I am proud to say that the leader of that effort here in this new Republican majority, who was elected today unanimously by our members to be the Speaker of the House again, marshaling through this effort, is our Speaker today and our Speaker tomorrow, Mike Johnson.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well, thank you all for being here again.
It is a new day in America.
Yesterday morning, we began on the steps of the House as everyone was flying in to begin work again as we complete the 118th Congress.
And we celebrated what is a new beginning, really, a new morning in America, a new day in America.
And so today we began this morning, as Steve Scalise just told you, our majority leader, that we began with President Trump.
And he came to visit us.
It was a bit of a pep rally.
Everybody feels very confident, very encouraged about the days ahead.
And he gave us a very inspirational message.
And he talked about the importance of maintaining unity and standing with this leadership team to go forward.
It was very well received, and that set the tone for our day.
And we had a very productive day together as a Republican conference.
And the theme that you'll hear over and over from all of our members across the conference is that we are unified and energized and ready to go.
We have to deliver for the American people beginning on day one in the new Congress.
And we will be ready for that.
I want to congratulate these new leaders that have been duly elected to help serve the conference.
This is an extraordinary leadership team, and those who have been re-elected, who have earned those positions well, this was a group and a body today that worked together and did some really extraordinary things, putting together a leadership team and deciding upon our conference rules.
I want to again tip my hat to the chairs of two of our most important and active caucuses within the Republican conference, the House Freedom Caucus, Dr. Andy Harris, Congressman Harris, and Congressman Dusty Johnson of the Main Street Caucus, who worked together with a subgroup of members to work through a very deliberate process to come up with the rules.
So we come out of this excited to deliver the America First Agenda for the American people.
Like the majority leader said, we traveled all around the country, all of us did.
We all campaigned for our colleagues throughout the year, and we felt the energy on the ground, as Steve said, and we took the temperature of the American people.
We heard their concerns.
We heard that no matter where you are in the country, north, south, east, west, the number one concerns were the cost of living, the wide open border, the instability on the world stage, the weakness that has gotten us into the most dangerous situation since World War II.
They were worried about instability and insecurity, the radical progressive woke agenda.
People have had enough of all that.
And so we're going to deliver solutions to all those great challenges facing the country, and we're excited to do it.
I know you're all tired of hearing my football metaphors, but we have a very well-designed playbook.
We will begin to execute those plays with precision on day one.
And so our new and incoming members, we're here for new member orientation, they were a part of all of this today.
And we're preparing the players now to take that field beginning early in January when all this all begins again on January 3rd.
So we will wrap up the work of the 118th.
We will get that work done and we'll move into the new Congress with excitement and delivering on the promises that we have made to the American people.
We're grateful to be working hand in hand with President Trump and to take this energy into the new year.
So we'll take a few questions.
I know you have several.
Yes, sir.
Mr. Speaker, thank you very much.
While you were insiding your meeting, President Trump announced that he would nominate your colleague Matt Yates to be the next Attorney General of the United States.
What do you make of that nomination and how do you feel about his impending departure from the House?
Well, I talked with Matt immediately after that nomination was made.
In fact, President Trump told me this morning when he walked in, we were behind the curtains.
He tipped me off that that would be happening.
Matt and I were classmates.
We came to Congress at the same time in the 115th Congress in January 2017.
And alphabetically, we're seated right next to one another in the Judiciary Committee.
We served there together for seven years.
Some of y'all who cover judiciary know those are long meetings.
So I got to know Matt very well.
Look, I'll say this.
Everyone who served with him will tell you he's one of the most intelligent members of Congress.
He's an accomplished attorney.
He's very concerned about the lawfare that has been occurring in the Department of Justice under the Biden administration and the fact that the American people have lost their faith in our institutions of justice because of everything that we've seen.
He's a reformer in his mind and heart, and I think that he'll bring a lot to the table on that.
I think out of deference to us, he issued his resignation letter effective immediately of Congress.
That caught us by surprise a little bit, but I asked him what the reasoning was, and he said, well, you can't have too many absences.
So under Florida state law, there's about an eight-week period to select and fill a vacant seat.
And so by doing so today, that allows me, I've already placed a call to Governor DeSantis in Florida and said, let's start the clock.
He's in Italy at the moment, and so we're going to talk first thing in the morning about this.
And if we start the clock now, if you do the math, we may be able to fill that seat as early as January 3rd when we take the new oath of office for the new Congress.
So Matt would have done us a great service by making that decision as he did on the fly.
And so we're grateful for that.
So we move forward.
Look, I'll say this about people have asked me all day long, President Trump is poaching all of your talent.
Yes, we have an embarrassment of riches here.
The Republican Conference is full of talented people who are extraordinary leaders and have great expertise.
And everyone in this Congress, in this conference, could serve in a leadership position in the administration.
But I have begged and pleaded with the new president enough already.
But because our numbers are small, we are going to have the majority.
We are celebrating that.
I think it could be as high as a five-seat margin, but we'll have some of these vacancies open as we begin the year.
We'll fill them as quickly as possible.
But we're excited for our colleagues to have these new career opportunities and new opportunities to serve the country.
So we move forward.
Yes, ma'am.
Thank you.
You now have this big end, Patrick Facta.
How are you going to assure American people that you're going to use this power responsibly and not misuse it?
Yeah.
I'm glad you said the question was about the mandate that the American people have delivered us.
It was an historic election.
President Trump won the popular vote and the Electoral College by a very wide, decisive margin.
And the House Republicans received as many votes.
I think it's been many decades since House Republicans received as many collective votes over Democrats nationwide.
So we do have the mandate.
We take the responsibility seriously.
You can make an argument that we're facing collectively as a nation the greatest collection of challenges that we've had probably since World War II, maybe the Civil War, some people say.
So serious times call for serious leadership.
It's going to be a policy agenda-driven administration and a Congress.
And you've heard us say many times that it could be, I believe it will be, the most consequential Congress in the modern era, most consequential administration in the modern era, because frankly, we have to fix almost every area of public policy.
So, what it will be required of us is to plan deliberately and execute with precision, and that's what we're working on right now.
We're going to deliver from the American people.
We're going to bring down the cost of living.
We are going to turn American energy dominance back on.
We are going to secure the border.
We are going to take care of our stature on the world stage to restore peace through strength again.
And all of the things that are concerning people, from woke ideologies in the schools and a business place, to all the other chaos that we've ensued with the rising crime rates and everything around the country, we have solutions for all that.
And we had a demographic shift in this election.
We had large groups of voters in different demographics that came into the Republican Party who had never been there traditionally in large numbers before.
Our opportunity now is to embrace all those new folks who have come in and demonstrate for them that it is our policies that lead to human flourishing.
These are the best policies for their individual benefit, their liberty, opportunity, and security for their families, their communities, states, and our nation as a whole.
So, we are excited about that.
We are excited to begin delivering, and you'll see a lot of action early in the Congress.
Yes, ma'am.
Since you just broke the news that he resigned immediately, that means that any the House Ethics Committee investigations in does not have jurisdiction since he's no longer a member of Congress.
Are you concerned about what they were finishing up their work?
There was going to be a report.
Is that a concern to you that that will now never see the lung day?
Well, it is true that a former member of Congress, the House Ethics Committee, would have no further jurisdiction over that person, no further authority over them.
So, that would not be unprecedented.
But as far as the timing of a release or report or something, I don't know.
The Speaker of the House is not involved in that, can't be involved in that.
So, I'm not really the person probably to answer that question.
So, yes, ma'am.
Is President-elect Trump considering the Swim House majority when making these decisions about his cabinet?
Is he listening to your concerns about that?
And do you feel comfortable allowing the majority to go somewhere?
No, I'm not comfortable with that.
No, look, President Trump and I have talked many times a day, every day, and with his transition team.
I've spent a lot of time with Howard Ludnick, who is the co-chair of the transition team with Linda McMahon and everyone involved.
He is at Mar-a-Lago making lots of very consequential decisions, and I'm trying to be involved as many as I can while I'm also trying to manage this Congress and plan for the next.
I'm going to make a trip down there tomorrow evening for Gala for the American First Policy Institute, spend some time with him there.
And then I've changed my plans to go down to Mar-a-Lago for the weekend so that I can be there while more of these decisions are being made.
He's very aware of the margin, the size of the margin, but he has an administration to fill, a cabinet to fill, and he's keeping all this in mind at the same time.
So, we're both very aware of the margins and the size.
Everyone in this room is keenly aware of it as well.
And that's why we're emphasizing unity right now.
And I'm very hopeful about that.
I think we can walk and chew gum at the same time.
And I think we'll get these seats filled by these are reliable Republican seats.
We'll have very strong candidates presented who will win those elections in short order.
And by early spring, we'll have these seats filled and we'll keep moving forward.
So, this is the last question, you guys.
Mr. Speaker, you just mentioned that Congressman Gates is resigning early.
That will allow Florida to have a special election sooner.
Congressman Waltz is also from Florida.
Have you talked to him about doing something similar?
Because that would apply to his seat as well.
Yeah, he's got to make his own determination on that.
But of course, for the position that Congressman Waltz has been chosen for, he doesn't need Senate confirmation.
So I assume that he'll be making that decision.
I'll talk with him, of course, tonight and tomorrow about that to figure out the best timing.
He's a team player as well, and he wants to do what's right for the conference and for the country, and I'm confident he will.
He's going to do an extraordinary job in his position, as is Elise Stefanik, and I'm sure Matt Gates.
I believe they'll all do very well.
Now, there are others here who President Trump has interest in serving in other positions, and I said, please, sir, no.
We have great talent here.
We're excited to work for that.
Excited for this leadership team.
This is a great group of people who are here to serve the country, and they're going to perform well for their constituents and for America.
We're going to turn this country around, and we can't wait.
Thank you so much for being here today.
Bless you.
President-elect Trump has announced more selections for his cabinet and administration.
Florida Republican Congressman Matt Gates will be the nominee to be the next Attorney General.
In response, the representative from Florida's 1st District posted, it will be an honor to serve as President Trump's Attorney General.
And former Democratic Representative Tulsi Gabbert has been tabbed to be the Director of National Intelligence.
In a statement, the President-elect writes, I know Tulsi will bring the fearless spirit that has defined her illustrious career to our intelligence community, championing our constituents and securing peace through strength.
Tulsi will make us all proud.
Another appointee, Florida Senator Marco Rubio, reacted to news that he's been selected to be the nominee for Secretary of State for the incoming Trump administration.
In a post, he said, Leading the U.S. Department of State is a tremendous responsibility, and I'm honored by the trust President Trump has placed in me.
Under the leadership of President Trump, we will deliver peace through strength and always put the interests of Americans in America above all else.
I look forward to earning the support of my colleagues in the U.S. Senate so the president has his national security and foreign policy team in place when he takes office on January 20th.
C-SPAN's Washington Journal, our live forum involving you to discuss the latest issues in government, politics, and public policy from Washington and across the country.
Coming up Thursday morning, Georgia Republican Congressman Buddy Carter discusses the incoming agenda of the Trump administration and House Republican priorities.
Then, Connecticut Democratic Congressman John Larson gives his take on the new administration, Social Security, and tax policy.
Also, the Wall Street Journal's Jess Braven discusses potential Supreme Court vacancies and how President Trump's second term could shape the high court.
C-SPAN's Washington Journal.
Join in the conversation live at 7 Eastern Thursday morning on C-SPAN, C-SPAN Now, or online at c-SPAN.org.
On Thursday, senior officials with the CDC, the National Institutes of Health, and the FDA testify on lessons from the pandemic and strategies to plan for the next outbreak.
Watch the House Oversight and Accountability Subcommittee hearing live at 11:30 a.m. Eastern on C-SPAN 3.
C-SPAN Now, our free mobile video app, or online at c-SPAN.org.
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White House Press Secretary Corrine Jean-Pierre and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan spoke to reporters during a briefing at the White House.
This is about 50 minutes.
Good afternoon, everyone.
Oh, okay.
I'm excited to see you all too.
Okay, so today, President Biden met with President-elect Trump for approximately two hours in the Oval Office.
White House Chief of Staff Jeff Seinz and incoming Chief of Staff Susie Wiles joined the meeting.