Steve Scalise
- In full:
- Stephen Joseph Scalise
- Born:
- October 6, 1965, New Orleans, Louisiana
- Title / Office:
- House of Representatives (2008-), United States
- Political Affiliation:
- Republican Party
News •
Steve Scalise (born October 6, 1965, New Orleans, Louisiana) is an American Republican politician and member of the U.S. House of Representatives (2008– ) who served as majority whip (2014–18), minority whip (2019–22), and majority leader (2023– ). In 2024 Scalise won reelection against Democratic challenger Mel Manuel and two other candidates.
Early life
A native of Jefferson parish, in the greater New Orleans region, Scalise is one of three children of a homemaker mother and a real estate broker father. His Sicilian great-grandparents had immigrated to New Orleans and opened a grocery store near the site now occupied by the Superdome. After graduating from Archbishop Rummel High School in Metairie, Louisiana, Scalise matriculated at Louisiana State University (LSU), where he earned a B.S. degree in computer science with a minor in political science. Having registered as a Republican at age 18, Scalise became involved with the College Republicans and volunteered for George H.W. Bush’s 1988 presidential campaign. At LSU he also participated in student government—serving twice as the speaker of the student government association. But his interest in politics had much deeper roots: as a boy, Scalise had decorated his bicycle with red, white, and blue and had ridden it around his neighborhood at election time, trying to persuade passersby to cast their vote.
Personal life
Scalise is a practicing Roman Catholic. In March 2005 he married Jennifer Ann Letulle, a Louisiana native and a onetime English teacher. They have a son and a daughter. Scalise is a longtime fan of the New Orleans Saints professional football team and of LSU’s sports teams.
Political career
Following his college graduation, Scalise pursued a career as a software engineer and later became a marketing executive for a technology company. In the mid-1990s he became involved in Louisiana politics and served as a member of the state’s House of Representatives from 1996 to 2008. He then served briefly in the state’s Senate before winning a special election in 2008 for the seat in the U.S. House of Representatives that Bobby Jindal had vacated to become the governor of Louisiana. Since then Scalise has been easily reelected to that seat, representing Louisiana’s 1st congressional district, which stretches from the Mississippi River delta through New Orleans suburbs to Lake Pontchartrain’s northern shore.
Scalise’s stature in the House of Representatives was significantly enhanced in 2012 when he was elected to steer the Republican Study Committee, a group of about 160 of the House Republican Conference’s more conservative members. After securing the post, Scalise told the press that he would try to shift Republican leadership “as far to the right” as possible. He used the position as a pulpit from which to decry Democratic Pres. Barack Obama’s support for what Scalise characterized as a “radical” left-wing agenda. In 2014, in the leadership shuffle that followed the primary defeat of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Scalise defeated Peter Roskam of Illinois and Marlin Stutzman of Indiana to become majority whip after Kevin McCarthy left that position to replace Cantor. (A whip makes sure that all of a party’s legislators vote the same way on specific legislation.) Scalise’s elevation to the party leadership was complicated by the revelation that in 2002 he had given a speech to the European-American Unity and Rights Organization, a white supremacist group founded by former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard David Duke. Scalise survived the resulting scandal, in part by apologizing for speaking to the group and by saying, “I emphatically oppose the divisive racial and religious views groups like these hold.”
In June 2017 Scalise entered the national limelight when, while practicing for the annual Congressional Baseball Game, he was among five individuals wounded by a gunman who opened fire on an Alexandria, Virginia, baseball diamond. The politically motivated shooting was carried out by a left-wing extremist angered at Republican Pres. Donald Trump.The critical wound to Scalise’s hip required several surgeries and led to a lengthy recovery. He was not able to return to the House until September 28, when his presence was greeted with a standing ovation.
Throughout his long tenure in Congress, Scalise has earned a reputation as a deeply committed conservative who has championed fiscal restraint, lower taxes, and repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. He has also staked out an antiabortion position and earned an A+ rating from the National Rifle Association for his advocacy of the rights of gun owners. Moreover, Scalise has been a watchdog for the interests of the energy industry, which plays an important role in Louisiana’s economy.
Although the Republicans regained control of the House of Representatives in the 2022 midterm elections, their majority of 222–213 was much slimmer than had been expected. Despite the GOP’s disappointing showing, Kevin McCarthy appeared poised to become speaker of the House of Representatives when the 118th Congress convened on January 3, 2023. In a vote in November following the midterm elections, Republican representatives had chosen Scalise as majority leader. Weeks of negotiations, however, failed to win the support of a group of hard-line conservative Republicans that was necessary for McCarthy to become speaker. He came up short not only on the first ballot (the first time since 1923 that a speaker had not been elected in the first round of voting) but also in subsequent rounds of voting on successive days. The small group of right-wing representatives held firm in their opposition to McCarthy’s candidacy despite a raft of concessions that he granted them. Even as the situation, a great embarrassment to the Republican leadership, stagnated, Scalise remained steadfast in his support of McCarthy. On the 15th ballot McCarthy was finally elected speaker.
His tenure as speaker proved to be short. After McCarthy sought to prevent a shutdown of the federal government by forging a short-term agreement in late September 2023 with Democrats that provided stopgap funding, a group of right-wing Republican House members forced his ouster with the first vote in U.S. congressional history to successfully remove a speaker from office. Scalise and Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and a staunch ally of Trump, stepped forward as candidates to replace McCarthy. On October 11 the House Republican Conference voted 113 to 99 (with a handful of representatives opting not to participate in the secret vote) in favor of Scalise’s candidacy. Although Jordan then endorsed Scalise, the stage was set for a round of negotiating to garner Scalise the broad support within the conference (particularly from those on the far right) necessary to lift him to the speakership. When that support failed to develop, Scalise abruptly removed himself from consideration.