WASHINGTON — Members of the U.S. House of Representatives will elect the chamber’s next speaker Oct. 29, House Speaker John Boehner, who is retiring, announced Monday.

On Thursday, House Republicans will meet to choose their party’s nominee for the post, but the speaker is elected by the entire House.

In a statement, Boehner also said he was delaying elections for the rest of the Republican Party leadership team. Those had been scheduled to take place Thursday alongside the party’s voting for speaker.

The date for the other leadership elections will be set by the new speaker, Boehner said. The party is expected to choose a new House majority leader, who makes up the floor schedule, as well as a new majority whip, who tries to ensure party members vote according to party policy.

Boehner on Sept. 25 said he would retire effective Oct. 30 after years of squabbles with conservative hardliners. That step prevented a U.S. government shutdown by allowing him to work with Democrats to keep agencies funded through Dec. 11 and put off a showdown over taxpayer support for women’s health care group Planned Parenthood.

His plan to retire also set off an internal party power struggle. On Sunday, Jason Chaffetz, chairman of the House Oversight committee, joined the contest for speaker, challenging Boehner’s closest lieutenant and presumed successor Kevin McCarthy, the current majority leader.

The other contender for the House speaker’s post, Rep. Daniel Webster, is a former speaker of the Florida Legislature.

The declared candidates to be the next majority leader are House Budget Committee Chairman Tom Price and the current whip, Rep. Steve Scalise. The candidates for whip are House Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions; chief deputy whip, Rep. Patrick McHenry; and conservative Rep. Dennis Ross.

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