House to vote Tuesday on motion to oust Kevin McCarthy as speaker

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said he will bring Rep. Matt Gaetz's motion to oust him as speaker up for a vote Tuesday.

"I am going to bring up the motion to vacate today during the first series and move through this," McCarthy told reporters after meeting behind closed doors with the Republican conference.

The House has first votes at approximately 1:30 p.m. ET.

"If I counted how many times someone wanted to knock me out, I would've been gone a long time ago," McCarthy added.

MORE: Matt Gaetz moves to oust Kevin McCarthy as speaker, setting up dramatic vote

Gaetz, a Republican hard-liner, has criticized how McCarthy handled spending and budget fights, especially the short-term funding deal reached over the weekend to avert a government shutdown.

McCarthy, who received a standing ovation during the GOP conference meeting, defended working with Democrats to keep government funded, sources said.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, left, and Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, right. Reuters, AFP via Getty Images

McCarthy also told members he's disappointed he didn't have another option, and insisted they can continue to work to bring up individual spending bills to keep the government funded past Nov. 17.

"At the end of the day, if you throw a speaker out that has 99% of their conference that kept government open and paid the troops, I think we're in a really bad place for how we're going to run Congress," McCarthy told reporters.

At least five Republicans have signaled they want McCarthy out, and if they did vote against him, McCarthy would need Democrats to step in to save him. McCarthy said Tuesday he wasn't expecting Democrats to back him up.

"If five Republicans go with Democrats, then I'm out," McCarthy said.

MORE: Gaetz threatens historic vote to try and remove Speaker Kevin McCarthy: What happens next

Sources told ABC News McCarthy called House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries on Monday night as he fights to remain in leadership.

Jeffries, walking into a closed-door meeting with House Democrats, told reporters: "This morning we're gonna continue to put people over politics. It's my hope that Republicans will finally decide to do the same."

The Republicans who say they want McCarthy removed are Gaetz, Rep. Bob Good of Virginia, Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, Rep. Eli Crane of Arizona and Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee.

Others have indicated they're on the fence, including South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace.

"I understand the frustration," Mace said. "I'm equally frustrated about it. Kevin's got my number, and I hope he'll call before the vote."

MORE: Vote to remove McCarthy over gov't funding would be 'destructive,' moderate rep says

Still, a majority of the conference backs McCarthy.

Sources tell ABC News that a tense moment occurred in the GOP meeting when Florida Rep. Carlos Gimenez asked for a show of hands of who would support McCarthy. Most of the room raised their hands.

Gimenez responded: "That's your answer, Matt," sources said.

ABC News previously pressed Gaetz on why he was pushing forward if he didn't have the support of most of the conference.

"Well, he doesn't have my support anymore, and he doesn't have the support of a requisite number of Republicans to continue as the Republican speaker," Gaetz replied. "Now, he may continue as the House speaker, and he may continue as the speaker of the Democrats and some sort of uni-party coalition, but he is not going to be a speaker in power as a consequence of Republican votes."

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