New Congress live updates: What's next after Kevin McCarthy's speakership win

McCarthy finally won the speaker's gavel after historic 15 rounds of voting.

The House Republican leadership standoff ended early Saturday morning with Kevin McCarthy winning the speaker's gavel on a historic 15th vote.

It was the longest such election since 1859.

The drama stretched into a fourth day Friday with three more failed votes to decide on a speaker after 11 others over Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday -- the last one ending in a heated one-vote loss at the hands of holdout Matt Gaetz.

McCarthy had been stymied by a small group of hardliners demanding concessions to reshape how the House is run and legislation it prioritizes.


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McCarthy tells Republicans 'I earned this job': Source

In a closed-door meeting with House Republicans, Kevin McCarthy made a last-ditch case for speaker.

"I'm not going to go away. I'm going to stand until the last four friends stand with me," he told the GOP members, according to a source in the room.

"I earned this job," McCarthy said. "We earned this majority, and goddammit we are going to win it today."

Sources said he received a standing ovation from most members in the room, but it may not have been enough to win over Republicans who are on the fence. Other sources indicated that conservative members were "livid" at McCarthy's response.

-ABC News' Rachel Scott


Rep.-elect George Santos arrives near House office

Rep.-elect George Santos, who has faced controversy and national attention for lying about or embellishing details of his background, was spotted by reporters in Congress Tuesday morning.

Santos was walking toward his office in the Longworth House Office Building, accompanied by a staffer, when he stopped and turned the other way once he saw reporters.

He declined to answer most questions, but told ABC News’ Lalee Ibssa he will vote for Kevin McCarthy for speaker.

Santos faced calls for accountability from some Republicans, but not from current Republican House leadership. He has said he will serve out his term in the House.

New members of the House will not be sworn in until a speaker is elected.

-ABC News’ Hannah Demissie, Lalee Ibssa, and Oren Oppenheim


McCarthy ready to battle for speaker’s gavel, sources say

As Republicans met behind closed doors ahead of the speaker vote, it appeared Kevin McCarthy still did not have the votes needed to be elected.

Sources close to the Republican leader say he's ready to battle it out. It could go into multiple rounds of votes -- something that hasn't happened in 100 years -- and the floor fight could drag on for hours, if not days. The longest battle for speaker was in 1856, and it took two months and 133 votes to resolve.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, who opposes McCarthy's bid, has warned, "We may see the cherry blossoms bloom in Washington, D.C. before a speaker is elected."

All of this overshadows the start of the new Congress where Republicans have a majority in the House for the first time since 2018.

-ABC News' Rachel Scott


McCarthy arrives for GOP meeting: 'We are going to have a good day'

Rep. McCarthy has arrived for a closed-door meeting with his fellow Republicans.

"We are going to have a good day today," McCarthy said as he walked by reporters, who asked if he had the votes for speaker.

The California congressman then laughed as a reporter asked if he'd support Rep. Steve Scalise for speaker should he fail to get enough votes.