Groundhog day in US politics as 11 votes fail to elect a Speaker
Groundhog Day came to the US Congress a month early.
Each round is the same: Candidates are announced, speeches are made, votes are taken, a long count ensues and then comes the clerk's seemingly inevitable announcement: "A speaker has not been elected."
The repetitive loop has been playing on the floor of the House of Representatives since Tuesday, as the body grapples to elect its next leader but only slips further into chaos with each attempt.
There are no windows in the cavernous chamber and time floats between votes in what begins to feel like one long, never-ending day.
Impatience
Sitting towards the back under a clock that seems to mock the lawmakers' progress, a group of some 20 Republican rebels who are responsible for the stalled vote has gathered.
Many are members of the House Freedom Caucus, a collection of some of the most staunchly right-wing Republicans in the lower chamber of Congress. They are the epitome of former president Donald Trump's loyalists.
The group has promised to do everything in its power to prevent party favorite Kevin McCarthy's bid to become speaker, effectively paralyzing the entire process.
Outside, in the galleries that surround the chamber,...