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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mike Pence won’t say whether Paul Ryan should be House speaker

Republican vice presidential candidate Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, right, accompanied by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, left, and House Speaker Paul Ryan, speaks during a news conference the Republican National Headquarters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2016. (Cliff Owen / Associated Press)
By Erica Werner Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence declined to say whether Paul Ryan should be re-elected as speaker of the House, withholding support from a close friend and ally in the heated final days of the presidential campaign.

Pence’s comments in an interview published Thursday in the National Review were startling because Pence and Ryan served together in the House and have been seen as ideological soul mates. Ryan heaped praise on the Indiana governor when Donald Trump selected him as his running mate, saying “I can think of no better choice.”

And in August, when Trump briefly withheld his endorsement from Ryan in the speaker’s Wisconsin House primary, Pence was quick to publicly declare his own backing of Ryan.

But as the chaotic 2016 election draws to a close, Ryan faces rumblings of a leadership challenge from House conservatives frustrated with his declaration last month that he would no longer defend or campaign for Trump. That followed release of the “Access Hollywood” tape with Trump boasting of groping women and saying he could get away with it because he’s a star.

And now Pence appears unwilling to offer a full-throated endorsement of Ryan.

The National Review story said that Pence declined three times to answer whether Ryan should be re-elected as speaker presuming Republicans maintain their control of the House. Pence said “my respect for Paul Ryan is boundless” but also said, “I’m not a member of the House Republican conference anymore. I wouldn’t presume upon what the members of the conference choose.”

A Pence spokesman, Marc Short, insisted in a phone interview with The Associated Press that Pence does actually support Ryan being re-elected speaker, attributing other interpretations to people trying to “sow divisions” as the Republican Party comes together in the waning days of the campaign.

“He’s 100 percent supportive of him being speaker of the House,” Short said.

Ryan’s aides declined comment, directing inquiries to Short.

During a campaign stop in Iowa on Thursday, Pence told a rally of more than 300 people: “When we re-elect majorities led by Mitch McConnell in the United States Senate and Paul Ryan in the United States House, we’re going to cut taxes across the board.”

If Democrat Hillary Clinton wins, both Ryan and Pence have been mentioned as potential presidential candidates in 2020, and Pence’s unwillingness to endorse Ryan as speaker could be the early maneuverings of two likely White House rivals.

Ryan, who himself served as the GOP vice presidential nominee four years ago, has been House speaker since getting drafted into the job just over a year ago. That happened when the previous speaker, John Boehner of Ohio, stepped down under pressure from the conservative Freedom Caucus.

Now Ryan is facing his own problems with the group. A couple of lawmakers have suggested publicly that Ryan’s refusal to strongly back Trump makes it hard for them to support him. That issue will come to a head the week after the election when House Republicans will meet to select their nominee for speaker.

Ryan did publicly reaffirm his support for Trump this week and said he had voted for him in early voting in Wisconsin.