House Speaker Paul Ryan says he's not leaving Congress anytime soon

House Speaker Paul Ryan says he's not leaving Congress anytime soon.

The Wisconsin Republican was asked Thursday about rumors suggesting he might leave his job soon after the GOP passes a rewrite of the U.S. tax code.

Asked by a reporter if he's quitting anytime soon, Ryan chuckled and said, "I'm not. No."

Ryan spoke as Politico and HuffPost published reports speculating that Ryan would make this term his last or even quit within weeks. Ryan took the job reluctantly, after former Speaker John Boehner of Ohio stepped aside abruptly in 2015.

Ashlee Strong, spokeswoman for Ryan told CBS News the reports were "pure speculation."

"As the speaker himself said today, he's not going anywhere any time soon," Strong added.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said President Donald Trump called Ryan and the president made it clear he wouldn't be happy if Ryan quit Congress.

"The Speaker assured the president that those were not accurate reports and that they look forward to working together for a long time to come," Sanders said at Thursday's press briefing.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-California, who would be an obvious candidate to take the top GOP job if Ryan leaves, dismissed the rumors as well.

"The Speaker is not retiring," McCarthy told reporters. "He enjoys his job. He loves it."

McCarthy added of Ryan's leadership of seeing the Republican tax bill through, "rounding out a year of significant legislative victories and record-setting productivity in the House. We have an ambitious agenda ahead of us and Paul is the guy who will lead us to achieve it."

A spokesperson for Majority Whip Steve Scalise echoed that sentiment saying in a statement to CBS News, "We have a Republican leadership team that has been very successful at moving legislation through the House, and right now they're working closely together to pass historic tax reform and to protect and grow our majority. There's simply no discussion of any changes coming to this leadership team, and no reason to believe that sort of change is on the horizon."

Ryan in fact gave reporters an extensive preview of next year's GOP agenda, promising action on restraining the growth of government benefit programs. Tuesday's Senate election in Alabama, in which Democrat Doug Jones scored an upset, would bring the GOP's margin of control in the chamber to 51-49, making any action on cutting the budget a long shot.

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