
- James Buck
- Rep.-elect Becca Balint (D-Vt.), left, chatting with Rep.-elect Andrea Salinas (D-Ore.) on Tuesday
It was the first time in a century that a candidate for House speaker — in this case, Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) — didn't earn enough votes to secure victory on the first ballot.
"As a historian, I find it fascinating," Balint told Seven Days after the House adjourned for the evening. "As an American, it's really disappointing. It's rule No. 1 in leadership that you don't bring something to the floor if you don't have the votes. McCarthy has known for weeks that he doesn't have the votes, so that was a colossal waste of time."
She noted that she and her fellow members of Congress won't start collecting a paycheck until the House is officially sworn in.
Before the chaotic proceedings began on the House floor at noon, Balint spent a few harried moments with her family, including her parents; her wife, Elizabeth Wohl; and their two children, at her new office in the Longworth House Office Building. (Balint noted that Vermont’s "Freedom and Unity" seal, emblazoned on the plaque outside her door, was slightly askew.)
She’d been too anxious to sleep the night before, she told Seven Days, which dispatched a reporter and a photographer to document her first week in Congress.
“I’d be nervous anyway, starting a new job, but this is next-level,” Balint explained. “It feels like when my kids were born or when I got married.”

- James Buck
- Becca Balint on the House floor on Tuesday
“He should step down,” Balint said. “He has no self-dignity. He clearly has no integrity. And it’s just not fair for his constituents in New York.”
Even amid the tumultuous backdrop of the unresolved Speaker vote, Balint on Tuesday stuck to the pragmatic refrain of seeking common ground with Republicans that she honed on the campaign trail. One of her first legislative priorities, she told WPTZ-TV during a morning interview blitz at the Capitol, will be addressing the country’s mental health crisis.
“If I can work across the aisle and find some connection with Republicans on the issue of mental health, that’s a victory,” she said. “That seems like an issue that is not partisan and where we ought to be able to make some investments.”
Earlier in the day, Balint said, the staffers of a fellow first-time member of Congress, a Republican, dropped by her office to welcome her.
“Does that mean we're going to be able to make legislation together? I don't know,” she told WPTZ. “But it's certainly a first step. That is who I've been as a state legislator, and I'm not going to lose that.”
There was more history on Tuesday in the Capitol's other chamber as retiring senator Patrick Leahy stood by and watched as U.S. Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) was sworn in. Welch, a former member of the House, won election in November to replace Leahy, a Democrat who served Vermont for 48 years.
I am honored to represent the people of Vermont in the United States Senate. pic.twitter.com/QUglnYik2n
— Senator Peter Welch (@PeterWelch) January 3, 2023
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