Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) is getting a seat back at the House GOP leadership table and her spots back on House committees as she returns to the lower chamber after President Trump withdrew her nomination to be U.N. ambassador over concerns about the slim GOP majority.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) is appointing Stefanik to be chairwoman of House Republican Leadership, according to a release from her office — a Speaker-appointed position that is outlined in the conference’s rules, but is often vacant.
A release from her office described it as “a senior leadership appointed position focused on strategy, communications, and executing on the mandate from the American people to pass President Trump’s agenda.”
“I am honored to be appointed Chairwoman of House Republican Leadership to lead House Republicans in implementing President Donald Trump’s mandate from the American people for an America First agenda that includes securing our borders, strengthening our national security, growing our economy, and combating the scourge of antisemitism across our country,” Stefanik said in a statement.
The move ends two weeks of uncertainty about how Stefanik would return to House GOP leadership, as Trump had said she would in his Truth Social post announcing that her nomination would be withdrawn. The New York congresswoman had relinquished her No. 4 leadership slot as House Republican Conference Chair since she had been named Trump’s UN pick, and Rep. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) was elected in her place.
Stefanik will also return to be a senior member of the House Intelligence Committee, as well as have her seats on the Armed Services Committee and Education and Workforce Committee, she said in a statement.
The chair of the Elected Leadership Committee position was last filled by former Rep. Garret Graves (R-La.), after former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) revived the position for his close ally. But Johnson dismissed Graves from the position after he became Speaker. Her office said it has also been used “at critical moments to deliver for the American people.”
This time, Stefanik is set to have a “budget, staff, and expansive strategy, legislative, and communications portfolio,” according to the release.
In explaining the nomination withdrawal, both Trump and Stefanik had cited concerns about the House’s razor-thin majority, which gives leaders almost no room for error as they aim to advance Trump’s ambitious legislative agenda on tax cuts, energy and border policy on party lines. Just a handful of defections can sink a key vote.
Stefanik demonstrated how valuable her vote could be in the first vote she took upon returning to the House since the announcement of her nomination withdrawal.
A procedural vote to tee up the budget resolution framework for Trump’s agenda passed 216-215, with three Republican defections and one Republican not voting. Had Stefanik not been there to vote, and the one other Republican still not voted, it would have failed.
Having Stefanik in the House will slightly increase GOP leadership’s breathing room: Instead of being able to spare two GOP defections, with Stefanik, they can spare three.