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It may come as a surprise to many Americans to learn that the Constitution does not require the House speaker to be a member of the House. The Constitution provides for election of a speaker but does not require House membership to serve in that position. That's because the office was not conceived as a partisan agent, but rather as one serving the whole House and, in that role, the entire nation. The Constitution anticipated a leader respected across the broadest possible spectrum of the American people, much as George Washington had presided over the convention that drafted our governing charter in 1787.
The time has come to exercise that constitutional flexibility and choose a House speaker from outside the House.
Though this route might seem extreme or fanciful, it makes sense for the incoming 118th Congress. The severe partisan divisions within the next House of Representatives make it impossible to choose a member who could genuinely serve the general interest of the nation. The slim Republican majority has produced a caucus so fractious that dozens of its members opposed the election of Rep. Kevin McCarthy as Republican leader in the House.
Even if McCarthy can corral those opponents and muster the required majority in the full House to choose him as speaker — that vote is to take place on Tuesday — he will be captive to a GOP fringe similar to the one that hampered the speakerships of Paul Ryan and John Boehner. Moreover, McCarthy's animus and hostility to cooperating with Democrats doom the prospect of meaningful bipartisanship.
The incoming Democratic House minority of course lacks the votes to elect one of its own as speaker. The Democrats could, however, offer motions to open the possibility of selecting a speaker capable of working across the aisle. Nominating an experienced, respected Republican from outside the House could trigger a contested ballot leading to a speaker in the mold of the original constitutional conception.
There have been such contested elections, sometimes producing speakers with multiparty support. Most of those contests took place in the 19th century, with one of them running to 133 ballots. (A contest goes to multiple ballots if no one gets a majority the first time.) In the 20th century it took nine ballots to elect Frederick Gillett as speaker of the 68th Congress.