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Dec. 4, 2025, 2:37 PM ESTBy Scott Wong, Melanie Zanona and Kyle StewartWASHINGTON — Less than a year before the critical 2026 midterm elections, Speaker Mike Johnson is losing control of the House floor.The Louisiana Republican suffered a bruising defeat before Thanksgiving when Donald Trump foe, Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and a trio of GOP women defied Johnson and his top lieutenants and teamed with Democrats to force a near-unanimous vote to release the Jeffrey Epstein files to the public.Seeing Massie’s huge success in getting the Epstein bill signed into law, other Republicans are now turning to that same playbook to go over the speaker’s head.This week, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., filed a discharge petition in a bid to bypass Johnson and force a vote on a bipartisan bill that would ban members of Congress from owning or trading individual stocks. Nine other Republicans have joined Luna and signed the petition, along with six Democrats.That’s a far cry from the 218 signatures needed to go around the speaker and force a floor vote. But the signatures are notable; it was once unheard of for members of the majority to use discharge petitions against their own leadership.Moderate Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., a leader of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, is threatening to file his own discharge petition to impose “crushing” U.S. sanctions on Russia as Trump’s proposed peace deal to end the Ukraine war appears to be faltering. And he’s considering another one to extend expiring Obamacare subsidies unless leaders act before the Dec. 31 deadline.“We’re not afraid to use that option,” Fitzpatrick said. “It’s not a tool of the minority — it’s a tool of the rank and file.”House passes bill to release Epstein files04:45On Wednesday, Johnson’s team abruptly yanked the SCORE Act — which would create federal standards for compensating student athletes — off the House floor amid opposition from a bloc of conservative Republicans led by Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas. It was their most important bill of the week.On top of that, Johnson has been contending with rank-and-file members forcing votes to censure other colleagues, with Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., even targeting a fellow Republican, Rep. Cory Mills of Florida.Mace is part of a group of high-profile female lawmakers who’ve been slinging arrows at Johnson, lambasting his leadership and making life miserable for the speaker, who unexpectedly rose from obscurity to the top job two years ago after Kevin McCarthy was toppled by his own internal revolt.Many of Johnson’s headaches stem from the fact that he is presiding over one of the smallest majorities in history. Since he swore in Tennessee Republican Matt Van Epps on Thursday morning, Republicans have a 220-213 edge over the Democrats, meaning Johnson can afford only three GOP defections on any bill he brings to the floor.’A lot of anxiety and stress’Privately, senior Republicans point to a “confluence” of circumstances and events that has resulted in the flurry of discharge petitions and other rogue antics on the floor. Trump’s approval ratings continue to fall. Democratic candidates overperformed in recent elections in New Jersey, Virginia and Tennessee, a grim sign for House Republicans in next year’s midterm elections. Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” has not resulted in lower costs and curbing inflation. And Johnson’s decision to keep the House in recess for 54 days because of the shutdown meant less committee work and fewer bills being passed.“The confluence is weakened political power by Trump, the result from the elections in New Jersey, New York and Virginia, and people getting anxious about the election. There’s a lot of anxiety and stress about the election, and people looking at their own districts, saying, ‘I thought things were going to be different,’” one senior House Republican lawmaker said.“And I just think being off for 50 days, there was no continuity. Nobody was here. There was nobody like, ‘Hey, you’re doing great. Keep it up,’” the lawmaker continued. “Everyone being back in their district, there was a loneliness. A lot of members may have felt like we’re on our own.”Johnson, a bespectacled and buttoned-up constitutional attorney, rarely appears flustered or angry. While other candidates for speaker in 2023 faced vocal opposition, Johnson catapulted to speaker from the No. 7 leadership slot, in part, because he had no enemies.During the past two years in the role, that certainly has changed. But Johnson downplayed the drama on the floor and in his 220-member conference, saying that despite the variety of opinions and narrow margins, his party has been able to move “a very aggressive agenda on a very short time frame.” “Sometimes there’s friction, sometimes there’s vigorous debate. That’s all part of the process. People are going to have emotions. They’re going to get upset about things. That’s part of the process. It doesn’t deter me in any way. It doesn’t bother me,” Johnson told reporters Thursday. “But when there is a conflict or concern, I always ask all members, come to me. Don’t go to social media, call me. Come by the office.”While he has his share of detractors, Johnson, a Trump loyalist who’s been accused by Democrats of handing over too much congressional authority to the president, has an equal number of defenders.“I support Mike Johnson and what he’s been doing. I think he’s in line with the president. I think he has the ear of the president,” Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, said. “If it’s not Mike Johnson, well, then who? … Who could get enough votes to even replace him? And quite honestly, it’s probably nobody.”A flurry of discharge petitionsDischarge petitions rarely succeed. Only 4% of discharge petitions introduced from 1935 to 2022 were successful in bringing a bill to the floor, according to a review by the Brookings Institution. Johnson has repeatedly railed against the practice, saying they cede power — and control of the floor — to the opposition party. “We continue to see the norms of the House diminish over time. I think that’s unfortunate,” said GOP Rep. Dusty Johnson, who is running for South Dakota governor and is not related to the speaker. “A discharge petition, I don’t think, helps the institution. … It clearly empowers the minority in what is otherwise a majoritarian institution.”But facing fewer opportunities to secure bipartisan accomplishments, vulnerable Republicans are turning to the legislative tool to advance policy priorities they can tout back home.On Tuesday, Luna, a Democratic target whose private investments have come under scrutiny, filed her petition on a bipartisan stock trading ban for members of Congress and their immediate family members. Reps. Fitzpatrick, Mace, Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., Eli Crane, R-Ariz., Greg Steube, R-Fla., Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., and Zach Nunn, R-Iowa, have all signed on.It’s unclear, however, if backers of the bill will be able to secure the requisite 218 signatures, given that a large number of lawmakers hold and trade individual stocks, some in industries related to the committees on which they serve.“Congress is infinitely broken under either party, and the committee system bogs things down,” said Burchett, the author of the underlying stock ban legislation. “This is the only way to get the bill to the floor.”Johnson and his team were dealing with other setbacks as well this week. Leaders had to pull the SCORE Act shortly before the floor vote Wednesday after Roy, who is running for attorney general in Texas, and a handful of other Republicans remained opposed to the bill. Earlier in the week, Roy and a band of conservative allies almost blocked a procedural rule vote that would have immediately killed the sports bill. Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., and Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., were needed to twist arms and flip votes on the floor; the rule passed 210-209. Roy and Reps. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., and Scott Perry, R-Pa., all voted no.Roy said on X on Wednesday that the bill was “not ready for prime time” and questioned why Congress was even getting involved in trying to regulate college sports. “There were a whole lot of no votes. It wasn’t just me,” Roy told NBC News after the bill was pulled. “Obviously, there were three of us on the rule, but there was, like, I’m not gonna give the number … There were a lot of people who were not prepared to be on this bill today.”Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., who served as Rules Committee chairman and now is the top Democrat on the panel, said he understands Republicans who are turning to discharge petitions amid a gridlocked floor. “They get no help from their own leadership. This place doesn’t function anymore. I mean, we reported out a rule for the six bills this week — all of them are closed, no amendments made in order. Even Republican amendments were rejected,” McGovern said in an interview outside the Capitol.“For some Republicans, their priorities are not being addressed by their leadership, and so they’re kind of going around their leadership,” he added. “I don’t always agree with everything they’re doing, but I certainly share their frustration.”Scott WongScott Wong is a senior congressional reporter for NBC News. Melanie ZanonaMelanie Zanona is a Capitol Hill correspondent for NBC News.Kyle StewartKyle Stewart is a producer and off-air reporter covering Congress for NBC News, managing coverage of the House.

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Less than a year before the critical 2026 midterm elections, Speaker Mike Johnson is losing control of the House floor.



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Nov. 9, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Tyler KingkadeVAIL, Ariz. — Cienega High School Principal Kim Middleton woke up early last Saturday to urgent messages from district administrators. They told her to call immediately.A photo — in which Cienega math teachers wore matching white T-shirts on Halloween stained with red blotches and reading “Problem Solved” — was circulating rapidly online. Right-wing influencers were claiming that the educators were mocking conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination. Though the district quickly announced the shirts were a math joke and unrelated to Kirk, conservatives and some Republican officials from around the country amplified the image and portrayed it as a glorification of political violence. In the following days, the high school and its staff received more than 3,000 hateful messages, including dozens of death threats, and so many obscene calls that they disconnected the phones. Teachers stayed home. Sheriff’s deputies stepped up patrols on campus. Confused students asked if they were safe at school.“They were devastated and terrified, and my kids were scared,” Middleton said. “No matter how much I say ‘We’re safe and we’re OK, I love you, we got you’ — people outside of our community who don’t know who we are and what we do terrorized us and targeted us for clicks.”The disruption reminded Vail School District Superintendent John Carruth of a cyberattack, which the district has dealt with before. “Except instead of bots, it’s people,” he said.The deluge of threats that engulfed the district left administrators and teachers feeling helpless to stem the tide of harassment and shows how quickly social media storms can upend a small community based on a single image taken out of context and incorrectly tied to a political motive.In the eight weeks since Kirk, co-founder of the conservative youth organization Turning Point USA, was fatally shot while speaking at a college campus in Utah, conservative influencers and some Republican lawmakers have called attention to educators who make light of or justify it, leading to dozens of firings and suspensions.But in the Vail School District, no one said anything about Kirk. The only connection was an inference because the red blood-like stains were on the left side of white T-shirts that some said reminded them of how Kirk was dressed the day he was shot. “This feels like a coordinated effort, and I think people’s emotions are being weaponized,” Carruth said. The district, located in an unincorporated area of Pima County, 24 miles south of Tucson that grew rapidly in recent years, has been the target of far-right extremism before. In 2021, a group of people angry about mask mandates took over a school board meeting and declared themselves as the elected leaders. One of the people involved in the takeover was later criminally charged for threatening to zip-tie a principal in a supposed citizen’s arrest; he was convicted of disrupting an educational institution, trespassing and disorderly conduct, sent to jail for 30 days and placed on probation for three years.But those experiences hadn’t prepared them for a controversy on this scale.The Vail School District originally posted the math teachers photo on Facebook in a batch of images from Halloween festivities late Oct. 31. It appears to have first been circulated individually in local Facebook groups devoted to town gossip before getting picked up by prominent conservative influencers on X, who continued to spread inaccurate claims about it widely.Turning Point USA spokesman Andrew Kolvet tweeted at 12:06 p.m. ET Saturday that the teachers “deserve to be famous, and fired.” Kolvet has since deleted the post, but it had accrued almost 10 million views on X as of Tuesday.Middleton and her staff moved quickly. They called all the teachers, and she said each denied the shirts had anything to do with Kirk or politics; they were a joke about math teachers slaying math problems, worn in the spirit of a “zombie run” activity the student council had organized. Additionally, at least three of the teachers said they were fans of Kirk, and some had voted for Donald Trump last year. No students or parents had complained, she said.“One teacher said a kid asked him, ‘What’s the problem?’ And the teacher looked at him and went, ‘It doesn’t matter, it’s solved,’ and then the whole class laughed,” Middleton said. “And I thought, oh, my God, that’s math humor.”At 11 a.m. ET Saturday, the district posted a statement on Facebook that explained the context for the photo, but conceded that it could be misconstrued and apologized for it. School leaders hoped things would calm down, but the backlash was just getting started.After the district issued the statement explaining the photo, Kolvet posted it on X — just more than an hour after his initial comments — adding that he’d be relieved if they didn’t intend to reference Kirk, but he didn’t think everyone in the photo was innocent, and said teachers “have been among the worst offenders of mocking and celebrating Charlie’s assassination.” He did not respond to an interview request.The photo only spread from there. One conservative commentator on X posted the photo alongside the names and phone numbers of the teachers. That post has received more than 20 million views.Some Republican politicians also seized on the photo. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis posted on X that the Arizona teachers were “glorifying a murder.” He later posted the district’s statement and said people can “decide for themselves.” Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, quoted a post featuring the photo and the teachers’ names and phone numbers, adding “Anyone else think this might be the best advertisement ever for school choice and homeschooling?” A spokesperson for DeSantis referred back to his posts. Lee’s office did not respond to a request for comment. Arizona State Treasurer Kimberly Yee, a Republican, posted on X that the shirts were bad even if they didn’t intend to reference Kirk. In a statement to NBC News, she said “threats of violence against anyone” are unacceptable, but that the shirts were “deeply disturbing and should also be condemned, especially when it occurs on a taxpayer-funded school campus.”Others, like Ryan Fournier, co-founder of the national political group Students for Trump, refused to accept the district’s explanation. Fournier, who falsely accused an elementary school administrator in September of justifying Kirk’s murder, updated his post on Facebook — where he has more than 1 million followers — Saturday about the photo with the district’s statement, but said, “I do not believe this for one second.” He did not respond to a request for comment.District officials later found an email from October 2024 that included a photo of the teachers wearing the “Problem Solved” shirts at that time, and released a screenshot of it. Some on social media claimed it was created with artificial intelligence or photo editing software. Arizona state Rep. Rachel Keshel, a Republican from Tucson, continued posting about it on X, stating, “I’m not buying his BS story one bit.” She also emailed the math teachers directly asking for the original photo so she could examine the metadata, district officials said. Keshel did not respond to a request for comment.Hundreds of harassing emails, Facebook messages and phone calls poured in to district employees all weekend. Some were directed at the wrong math teachers — who hadn’t been in the photo — and others sent to random district staff, such as maintenance workers. The personal phone numbers and addresses of teachers were circulated online. Rumors spread that there would be protests and snipers at the school Monday. A guidance counselor said a steady stream of students came into her office this week asking about their safety. One of the math teachers in the photo, who asked to remain anonymous to avoid further harassment, said he didn’t know anything about Kirk until he heard Saturday that people thought he was making fun of his death. It was a stressful weekend, he said, already worried about severe weather threatening extended family abroad, and trying to calm his wife and son who were worried about the reaction to the photo. He hid in his bathroom to cry so his wife wouldn’t see.“Nowadays, everything is scary online,” he said.The math department had considered doing a group costume based on the Gen Alpha meme “6-7,” the teacher said, but decided to reuse the “Problem Solved” shirts they bought on Amazon last year because they’d won a costume contest with them and they didn’t want to spend more money. The “Problem Solved” shirt for sale on Amazon.Amazon via Vail School DistrictHe, like half of the math department, stayed home Monday. When he returned Tuesday, he said, students told him they thought he was going to quit. “I told them, ‘No, I’m not gonna leave you guys behind, you know, we’re family.’” Cienega High School is surrounded by housing developments and advertisements for people to make reservations on yet to be built houses. Cacti and palo verde trees dot the neighborhood. Students on campus are just as likely to be wearing a cowboy hat as they are to have brightly-dyed hair or intricately-designed braids.Students were well-aware of the controversy but largely sided with the teachers. There were extra sheriff’s deputies stationed on campus and patrolling nearby all week.As one student named Elijah, 15, stood feet away from an officer’s patrol car this week, he said he wished the people posting about the teachers online understood how they affected his school. “It’s making us feel uneasy and unsafe just going to school,” he said. The student leaders of the Cienega High School chapter of Turning Point USA sent a letter Tuesday to the math teachers telling them they “hold your department in high regard.”“As a chapter, we recognize that emotions and tensions have run high and we cannot express enough empathy for the massive misunderstanding it has multiplied into,” their message stated, according to a copy reviewed by NBC News. “Our goal as a club remains as it should always be, to foster respectful and healthy conversation, not to divide or harm.”A few minutes after Middleton, the principal, read the club’s message that afternoon, she received another note from the front desk. A man had continuously called the school, demanded to know the names of the women answering the phone and shouted “are you ready to motherf—–g die?” Middleton felt bad that front office staff making around $9 an hour were facing harassment for a situation they had no involvement in. The next day, she decided to send all calls to voicemail, so staff could filter and respond to parents.But the staff has also seen support. Several parents dropped off iced coffee and doughnuts Monday and Tuesday, telling them they were doing so because they felt so bad about the harassment. “This horrific loop of flinging poo and insults at others who we think disagree with us will never be broken online or via a phone call or via an email,” Carruth, the superintendent, said. “It’s only going to be broken by stepping out and meeting our neighbors.”Tyler KingkadeTyler Kingkade is a national reporter for NBC News, based in Los Angeles.
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