WASHINGTON — It was Donald Trump who bestowed the ''MAGA Mike Johnson'' nickname on the House speaker the day he won the gavel.
It is the Republican speaker himself who is proving whether it sticks.
Johnson survived an ouster vote this week by one of Trump's biggest supporters in Congress, far-right Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, his job secured only after House Democrats turned out in force to put an end to the GOP chaos, for now.
But the oversized role Trump played in propping up Johnson cannot be understated — or relied upon to save the speaker again.
In fact, the indicted former president who has been known to flip his friends into foes warned that while Republicans shouldn't be voting to remove Johnson, ''At some point, we may very well be, but this is not the time.''
The outcome puts on display the fragility of the unexpected but strategically beneficial alliance that Trump and Johnson have formed ahead of the November election when both hope to be returned to power — the Republican president in the White House and the loyal foot soldier in Congress.
''Seems like they're on the same page, and I think that's great,'' said lawyer Cleta Mitchell, who was a key figure in Trump's efforts to challenge the 2020 election.
Johnson has worked diligently to align himself with the former president, the conservative Christian setting aside his once critical views of the presidential contender to present himself as a chief implementer of the Trump Republican Party's Make America Great Again agenda on Capitol Hill.