Newly minted Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) wasn't the only Washington figure to draw attention in the first week of the new Congress.
Several House members saw their profiles rise as a result of the four-day, 15-round Speakership election.
Here are five key figures who garnered attention during the Speaker battle:
Matt Gaetz
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) showed a unique ability to command attention during the prolonged Speaker battle.
Gaetz, one of the last anti-McCarthy members to change his vote, helped lead a prominent bloc of GOP members who resisted the California Republican's bid.
At one point, Gaetz remarked on Fox News, "We're at the stage right now where I'm running out of stuff to ask for."
On the 14th round of voting, Gaetz voted "present" — leaving McCarthy one vote short of the Speakership and requiring a 15th round.
Between the final rounds of voting, Gaetz had a tense exchange with Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.), during which Rep. Richard Hudson (R-N.C.) held Rogers back.
Gaetz also garnered attention last week for casting a vote for former President Trump for Speaker and making an impassioned speech nominating Rep. Jim Jordan (Ohio) — after Jordan nominated McCarthy. Jordan, who received several Speaker votes from McCarthy's opponents, voted for McCarthy each round.
Reps. Lauren Boebert (Colo.), Paul Gosar (Ariz.), Scott Perry (Pa.) and Chip Roy (Texas) were also among the group of around 20 GOP members who repeatedly voted against McCarthy throughout the week.
Patrick McHenry
The North Carolina GOP congressman featured prominently in coverage leading up to the vote surrounding potential Speaker alternatives should McCarthy's bid fail.
McHenry, a top McCarthy ally, supported the California Republican each round and was a central figure in the final rounds of voting Friday, nominating McCarthy on the penultimate round and sitting and talking with Gaetz during the roll call.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (La.), another frequently discussed potential Speaker alternative, also supported McCarthy each round.
McHenry is the new chair of the House Financial Services Committee and a regional representative on the Steering Committee.
Hakeem Jeffries
Democrats were unanimous in their Speaker votes for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) on all 15 ballots. He received 212 votes on 14 of 15 ballots, with only Rep. David Trone (D-Md.) absent from the 12th vote due to a surgery. Democrats haven't all voted the same way for Speaker since 2009.
Jeffries has used the event to frame Democrats as unified and Republicans as divided. (He also took the opportunity to deliver an astonishingly alliterative alphabetical speech.)
Some other Democrats deserving mention: Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) practiced the subtle art of catching up on some reading in the chamber with a not-so-subtly-titled book. And Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) was seen talking with Gosar, with whom she's had a contentious relationship.
Marjorie Taylor Greene
A well-known member already, the Georgia Republican's profile took on another dimension amid the Speaker fight as she repeatedly pitched McCarthy's bid to her colleagues (she also snapped a selfie with him as he clinched the Speakership).
A widely circulated photo shows Greene trying to hand her phone with a call from "DT" to Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.), one of the last to change his anti-McCarthy vote to "present" to pave his path. Greene told The Hill that the call was from Trump.
The Hill's Emily Brooks reported on the budding cooperative relationship between McCarthy and Greene last September.
Byron Donalds
Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), first elected in 2020, initially got attention last week after switching his vote away from McCarthy on the third round. On the fourth round, 20 Republicans (including Donalds) voted for the Florida Republican for Speaker.
Donalds challenged Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) for conference chair in November, losing 144-74.
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