ARTICLE AD BOX
With Republicans inching closer to retaking the House of Representatives majority, Kevin McCarthy has won his party's nomination to be speaker in the new Congress.
In a closed-door vote on Tuesday, he secured 188 votes in his bid for leadership of the House.
Mr McCarthy must win a majority vote of the full House - 218 votes - in January to secure the role.
If he wins, he would replace Democrat Nancy Pelosi as Speaker of the House.
A native of California, he has represented a heavily Republican part of the state in the House since 2007.
He officially declared his candidacy for speaker last week in a letter to House Republicans that urged them to "stick together and maintain our mission."
With votes still being counted in some key races, Republicans appear to be on the verge of securing a razor-thin House majority but they are far short of the "red wave" some had predicted.
Mr McCarthy had previously vied for the role of Speaker in 2015 but was forced to withdraw in the face of conservative opposition.
His bid failed after he said on the US Fox News network that a Republican-led congressional investigation into the 2012 attack on a US diplomatic compound in Libya was designed to hurt Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.
He then became House minority leader after Republicans lost control of the House in the 2018 US midterm elections - during which Mr McCarthy developed a close relationship with former president Donald Trump.
During the 6 January 2021 Capitol riots, Mr McCarthy reportedly asked Mr Trump to ask protesters to go home during a heated phone call.
But days later, he visited the ex-president at his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida and appeared to make peace.
On Tuesday, Mr McCarthy easily defeated representative Andy Biggs from Arizona, a right-wing populist, for the Speaker nomination, with 188 votes for and 31 against.
But Mr McCarthy must now win over the colleagues that voted for Mr Biggs in order to become Speaker in January.
Republican leadership in the Senate may also face hurdles, after Florida senator Rick Scott informed colleagues at a lunch on Tuesday of his intention to challenge current minority leader Mitch McConnell, according to a report in US news outlet Politico.
It would mark the first opposition that Mr McConnell has faced in 15 years at the helm, signalling a rift within the Republican party following disappointing results in the US midterm elections.