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Two more GOP groups back Ryan, opening door to a new speaker

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WASHINGTON (AP) — All three House Republican groups that Rep. Paul Ryan said must support him before he runs for speaker finished lining up behind him Thursday, making it all but certain that he will soon take the helm of a chamber that has been rudderless and buffeted by GOP infighting for a month.

The huge Republican Study Committee — which represents mainstream House conservatives and claims over 170 members — said Thursday that Ryan has "the policy expertise, conservative principles and strong values we need in our next speaker."

Minutes earlier, the Tuesday Group — which represents 55 more moderate GOP lawmakers — formally announced their endorsement. They praised him as a thoughtful leader who is "willing and able to work across the aisle to achieve results for the American people."

Both group's support had been expected. Ryan, who was lobbied by establishment Republicans to seek the post, cleared his most serious hurdle late Wednesday when most members of the hardline conservative House Freedom Caucus voted to support him.

Ryan has said he wants to complete his decision-making process by Friday. The chamber is scheduled to choose a new speaker next week.

His ascension would be a relief for Republicans hoping he can halt the political fratricide between the party's pragmatists and hard-right conservatives that helped force last month's startling resignation by Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. That conflict has also colored the GOP's 2016 presidential contest, where leading candidates Donald Trump and Ben Carson have positioned themselves as outsiders and reveled in attacking establishment Republicans as relics of an outmoded era.

In a statement released before the Study Group announced its support, Ryan expressed gratitude to the Tuesday Group and said, "This is one more step toward building a united, Republican team."

Around two-thirds of the Freedom Caucus' three dozen members voted to back Ryan to lead the House, caucus members said. The group's vote essentially meant the speaker's post is his for the taking when the House formally chooses a new leader next week.

The Freedom Caucus' vote fell short of the 80 percent margin the group requires for an official endorsement, which Ryan had earlier demanded as a condition of seeking the post. But in a written statement afterward, Ryan erased any doubt that he considered their vote a green light to run.

"I believe this is a positive step toward a unified Republican team," Ryan said.

In their own statement, the Freedom Caucus praised Ryan as "a policy entrepreneur who has developed conservative reforms dealing with a wide variety of subjects." They said that they had not reached agreement with Ryan over conditions he set for serving — including curbing lawmakers' ability to call snap votes to remove a speaker — but said those differences could be resolved "in due time."

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters Thursday that Ryan is someone "who knows the territory, knows the issues, so that's helpful." But she noted that as chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan produced fiscal plans that reshaped Medicare with voucher-like payments, warning, "So seniors should be watching the Ryan priorities carefully."

The Freedom Caucus tilted toward Ryan even as many Republicans suggested the group would face dire consequences if it derailed him. The 45-year-old is widely viewed within the GOP as an articulate, telegenic leader, an undisputed conservative and the only lawmaker who could unite a party divided since the 2010 tea party wave brought rebels to Congress who have shown little inclination to compromise.

"This is one of the most principled conservatives on the entire political landscape in the Republican Party," said Peter Wehner, an adviser to President George W. Bush and the Mitt Romney-Ryan presidential campaign. "If they can't find a way to support him, then they're really lost."

Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, a leading member of the Freedom Caucus, said the group's vote showed that Ryan would prevail when the 247 House Republicans pick their nominee for speaker next Wednesday and when the full chamber votes the following day. The winner will need a majority of the chamber's 435 members, or 218 votes.

"I think he's a good man," said Labrador, who said he voted for Ryan in the Freedom Conference meeting. "I think he's somebody who could bring the Republican Party together, he's obviously a good spokesman for the party."

Even so, the Freedom Caucus offered no known guarantees that its rebellious members would not make Ryan's life as difficult as they'd made Boehner's, and conservative support for Ryan was not universal.

Some tea party groups and conservative commentators have pilloried his past support for easing immigration curbs and the bailout of financial institutions as the Great Recession took hold. And some lawmakers took issue with his suggested changes to congressional rules and even his desire to balance family life with the demands of the job by limiting the time he'd spend on weekends raising money for GOP candidates.

"No other speaker candidate came in and said, 'Here's the list of my demands, either meet those or I'm not going to do this,' " said Rep. Tim Huelskamp of Kansas, a member of the hardline caucus. "Speaker's a big job. And it's not a 9-to-5 job. So there are a lot of questions to be answered."