REPUBLICAN LEADERS’ PRIMARY PROBLEMS Conservative anti-abortion activist Mark Houck says a member of House GOP leadership was among the lawmakers encouraging him to primary Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick. That same leader wants nothing to do with Houck’s candidacy. Paging the group chat: Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) — one of four lawmakers Houck named as supporting his run and the conference vice chair — quickly moved to shut down that suggestion by sending an urgent text message to Speaker Kevin McCarthy, other House GOP leaders and Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), according to two Republicans with knowledge of the conversation. In it, Johnson clarified that he did not encourage Houck to run, adding that their only interaction was a greeting and handshake after Houck testified before a House subcommittee. That text chain then became an informal strategy discussion centered on defending Fitzpatrick, a battleground incumbent, against Houck, who has come under scrutiny for controversial comments about pornography and gender roles. The incident illustrates that House Republican leaders are painfully aware of their slim margin for error come 2024. With only a five-seat majority, they’ll win or lose the gavel in purple districts like Fitzpatrick’s — with many in the GOP strongly believing that only he can hold onto the seat that President Joe Biden won by about 5 points in 2020. In the chat, Rep. Richard Hudson (R-N.C.), chair of House Republicans’ campaign arm, raised the idea of Johnson endorsing Fitzpatrick — but the Pennsylvania incumbent dismissed the idea, the two Republicans said. But it’s not just Johnson. Houck has named three Freedom Caucus members as people who had “influence” over his decision to run. “I didn’t want to run for Congress. People have been encouraging me … to consider it. I eventually could not refuse it thankfully for the influence of Reps. Jim Jordan, Chip Roy, Scott Perry, and Mike Johnson,” Houck told the Vortex. What Roy, Perry and Jordan have said: Johnson might have taken the clearest private step towards clarifying his stance against Houck, but the member of Republican leadership may not be alone in distancing himself. “I am always happy to talk to friends, like Mark, who stood athwart the tyrannical FBI, but I have not pushed anyone to run or not run. It’s not my job. It’s the voters of PA,” Roy (R-Texas) texted us this week. And while a spokesperson for Perry (R-Pa.) did not respond to a request for comment, one Republican familiar with the matter says they believe Houck “misconstrued” the words of the House Freedom Caucus chair as encouragement for him to run. A spokesperson for Jordan, who heads the so-called government weaponization subcommittee where Houck testified, did not respond to questions about whether the Ohio conservative encouraged Houck to run. — Olivia Beavers
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