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Rep.-elect Mia Love, the first black female Republican elected to the House of Representatives, told ABC’s This Week that Steve Scalise has the support of his colleagues.Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press

Republican lawmakers closed ranks Sunday behind the No. 3 House Republican leader as the party aimed to move past the controversy over his speech 12 years ago to a white supremacist group.

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana has said the speech was a mistake he now regrets, and party leaders, including House Speaker John Boehner, have backed him.

Several incoming rank-and-file lawmakers added their support Sunday, including Utah's Mia Love, the first black female Republican elected to the House of Representatives.

Ms. Love told ABC's This Week that Mr. Scalise has the support of his colleagues. "I believe he should remain in leadership," Ms. Love said. "There's one quality that he has that I think is very important in leadership, and that's humility. And he's actually shown that in this case. And he's apologized, and I think that we need to move on and get the work of the American people done."

The issue arose last week when a liberal Louisiana blogger uncovered Mr. Scalise's speech to a 2002 Louisiana convention of the European-American Unity and Rights Organization, which called itself EURO. Former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke founded the group, which the Southern Poverty Law Center has classified as a hate group.

Mr. Scalise moved quickly to distance himself from the group, saying he opposes its views and that as a state legislator at the time, he didn't have much staffing and didn't always know details of the groups he was invited to address. Party leaders backed him, and he picked up key support from Representative Cedric Richmond, a black Louisiana Democrat.

Mr. Scalise's position in leadership now appears secure, and party leaders don't anticipate the issue becoming a distraction as they convene the new Republican-controlled Congress on Tuesday.

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