REPORTING FROM WASHINGTON — John A. Boehner secured a third term as House Speaker on Tuesday, overcoming a brazen revolt by GOP conservatives to oust him but renewing questions about his hold over the chamber's often rambunctious majority.
A total of 24 rank-and-file Republicans voted against Boehner and another voted "present," making the Ohio Republican the most-challenged speaker candidate by his own party in modern House history and setting the new GOP-controlled Congress off to a rocky start. A similar protest erupted during his last election as speaker two years ago.
The drama punctuated an otherwise ceremonial day on Capitol Hill, where new members of the House and Senate - many with families and children in tow – took the oath of office. Among them will be 58 new members of the House and 13 new senators.
Vice President Joe Biden gaveled the Senate into session as the House convened on the other side of the Capitol building at noon.
After 34 elected and reelected senators took the oath of office, officially giving Republicans control of the body for the first time since 2007, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who officially began his sixth term, was formally recognized as the new majority leader.
Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.), who surrendered the majority leader title to McConnell, worked from home in DC as he recovers from injuries sustained while working out in Nevada last week. Reid's office said he had suffered a concussion and was advised by doctors to remain at home.
It represented the capstone of McConnell's long career as a Senate insider. As in the House, the Republican majority in the Senate includes a group of conservatives who could complicate the Kentuckian's plans, but he assumed the leadership smoothly.
In contrast, the message from the House, in the first votes of the new Congress, was clear: The speaker's hold over his majority remains precarious.
Boehner's troubles come as his No. 3 leader, Majority Whip Steve Scalise, is fighting for political survival after having addressed a white supremacist group 12 years ago about his budget plans in his home state of Louisiana.
Scalise, who only recently joined leadership ranks, has apologized and won backing from the GOP leadership team.