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Report Says Trump Has Become De Facto Power Broker for House Republicans

A slim GOP majority and the speaker's reliance on the president have given Trump outsized influence over House votes.

Overview

  • A NOTUS report and interviews with unnamed House Republicans say President Trump has repeatedly pressured lawmakers, including calling members while votes were happening, to secure GOP margins.
  • The coverage quotes examples of Trump joking that he holds 'two jobs' and of closed-door moments that Republican sources describe as humiliating to Speaker Mike Johnson.
  • Reporters describe specific episodes such as a budget-floor push that left Representative Victoria Spartz upset during a call with the president and earlier efforts in which Trump phoned members to flip their votes.
  • Johnson's office has not denied the accounts and called the relationship with the president 'strong and productive,' framing reported tensions as normal interaction between branches.
  • The pattern reporters describe stretches over roughly two years and raises questions about House leadership autonomy, member morale, and executive influence, but the claims rely mainly on unnamed sources and have not been independently corroborated in public records.