Two top House Republicans dodged a question about the far-fetched scenario of former President Donald Trump becoming speaker of the House should Republicans win the majority in 2022.

“We are not measuring drapes or figuring out who's going to have which titles. We're working to get the House back,” House Minority Whip Steve Scalise said in a press conference on Wednesday. “Anybody who starts trying to measure the drapes or figure out where they're going to put the trophy usually doesn't get it because they're not focused on the right thing.”

New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, the third-ranking Republican in the House echoed that sentiment and threw her support behind Scalise and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

“We are working to earn a historic majority from the American people,” Stefanik said. “It's been an honor to work beside Leader McCarthy and Whip Scalise, and I fully support their leadership if and when we earn back the majority.”

NUNES EXIT STARTS REPUBLICAN JOCKEYING FOR TOP SPOT ON HOUSE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE

On Tuesday, firebrand Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz restated his support for Trump taking House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s gavel.

“I would,” Gaetz said when asked if he would support Trump as speaker in 2023, adding that he had talked to the former president about the possibility.

While the possibility of Trump as speaker gains buzz every few months, prompting fearmongering fundraising appeals from House Democrats’ campaign arm, it is a highly unlikely scenario.

McCarthy, who is vying to be speaker if he can lead the House Republican Conference to a majority, has previously shut down the possibility of Trump becoming the head of the House.

"You know, I've talked to President Trump many times. He tells me he wants me to be speaker, and I think he should be president," McCarthy told Fox News in June.

Also in June, a spokesperson for Trump said he has “zero desire” to be speaker.

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The speaker of the House is not required to be an elected member of the chamber, but every speaker has been.

Members not in the House sometimes receive votes during speakership elections. In January, Democratic Rep. Jared Golden of Maine voted for Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth to be speaker. In 2019, Duckworth, former Democratic Georgia gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams, and now-President Joe Biden received votes to be speaker.