Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is floating Elon Musk to be Speaker of the House after the powerful, billionaire tech businessman helped torpedo a bipartisan agreement on a short-term spending bill.

Why it matters: He’s the first GOP lawmaker to explicitly suggest Musk should be Speaker, and his comments come as Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) bid to keep his job is under serious threat.

Musk has already emerged as one of the most powerful voices in politics, and has become one of President-elect Trump’s closest confidants.

What he’s saying: “Nothing would disrupt the swamp more than electing Elon Musk,” Paul posted on X on Thursday morning. “[T]hink about it . . . nothing’s impossible. (not to mention the joy at seeing the collective establishment, aka ‘uniparty,’ lose their ever-lovin’ minds)”

Between the lines: The Constitution does not specify that the Speaker of the House has to be a member of the chamber — though they always have been.

non-representative names have been floated over the years during Speaker elections. paul has long been an advocate for slashing government spending, though he is in the wrong chamber to have much say over who will win the Speakers’ gavel in January’s floor vote. Trump, meanwhile, told Fox News Digital on Thursday morning that Johnson will “easily remain speaker” if he “acts decisively and tough” and eliminates “all of the traps being set by Democrats” in the spending package.

  • edge [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 day ago

    The US Speaker of the House is as democratically elected as any Prime Minister.

    but there is nothing to stipulate the nominee has to be a representative. That has just been the precedent so far.

    The same is true for the British PM and I would guess many other PMs.