Close but no cigarClose but no cigar

Eric Cantor almost became first Jewish Speaker

Former Republican House Majority leader would have replaced Boehner if he hadn’t lost 2014 Virginia primary, aide reveals

US House of Representatives Majority Leader Eric Cantor (CC BY/Gage Skidmore/Flickr/File)
US House of Representatives Majority Leader Eric Cantor (CC BY/Gage Skidmore/Flickr/File)

Former Rep. Eric Cantor apparently just missed becoming the first Jewish Speaker of the US House of Representatives — second in line to the presidency after the vice-president.

An aide to Boehner, the Republican House speaker who announced he will resign next month, dropped the bombshell Friday: Boehner had wanted to step down last year but Majority “Leader [Eric] Cantor’s loss in his primary changed that calculation.”

So reported the Huffington Post’s Sam Stein and Ryan Grim, who do not name the aide.

As majority leader, Cantor was already the highest ranking Jewish legislator in US history. Some say he was the highest-ranking Jewish government official, but it’s not clear majority leader bests secretary of state, a post held by Henry Kissinger in the 1970s.

Cantor was felled last year in his Virginia primary by Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va. If Cantor had managed to stick around another year, he likely would have become speaker, with Boehner’s backing.

Cantor, of course, would have to have been elected by the GOP caucus in the House — but as the report suggested, there’s little doubt he would have won. Among other reasons for Cantor’s popularity among his peers, he was a prodigious fundraiser and lent that particular talent to many Republicans in the House.

Boehner denied any intention to step down two years ago, the report noted, but perhaps because he didn’t want to muddy waters before clearing the way for Cantor to become speaker.

Both Boehner and Cantor went down to the same forces — Tea Party conservatives who believed the leaders were not putting up enough of a fight against the Obama administration.

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