The
announcement, which came shortly after late midterm results had officially
flipped House control to the Republicans, sent shockwaves across Capitol Hill,
as lawmakers in both parties grappled with the thought of a Democratic House
without Pelosi at the helm.
Yet the
departure is only partial, Pelosi may cede her formal leadership seat, but will
remain in Congress indefinitely, where she’s aiming to assume a mentorship role
and grease the transition for whichever new leader fills the mantle. Such a
role would be unprecedented in modern memory — most leaders who step down
quickly leave Congress — but Pelosi is not one to do things by the book.
The House chamber during Pelosi’s speech was a study of
partisan contrasts. While her Democratic allies packed into their side of the
chamber, filling almost every seat, the Republican side of the chamber was
virtually empty — a sign of just how polarized Congress has become in recent
years.
Only a handful of GOP lawmakers were on hand for the
speech, including Joe Wilson, Tim Burchett, Doug LaMalfa and Young Kim.
But a vast majority of Republicans skipped the event, including House
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. Only one member of the GOP leadership team was
on hand, Steve Scalise, the Republican whip, who gave Pelosi a standing ovation
at the end. Burchett and LaMalfa later hugged Pelosi.
Her
announcement ends the perennial speculation game surrounding the
future of Capitol Hill’s single most powerful lawmaker, and she kept them
guessing to the very last.
After Democrats had staved off a red wave in this year’s
elections, there was plenty of talk that Pelosi could remain in power, if
she chose, even despite a previous pledge to step out of leadership at the end
of this term.
In the
end, Pelosi suggested her decision to exit hinged more on the recent assault on
her husband, Paul Pelosi, who was bludgeoned with a hammer last month at the
family’s San Francisco home by an intruder whose intended target, police said,
was the Speaker.
By remaining in Congress outside of leadership, Pelosi can
remain influential as an adviser, fundraiser and vote getting whip while taking
a foot off the gas of her famously frenetic schedule — a hybrid role that will
allow her to spend more time with her recuperating husband.
Pelosi
has led the House Democrats since 2003, marking the longest leadership run in
either party since the legendary tenure of Sam Rayburn, a Texas Democrat, who
died in office in 1961. Over those 20 years, she oversaw passage of some of the
most significant legislative accomplishments of the last half-century; raised
more than US$1.2 billion for the party; and shattered the glass ceiling in
2007, when she became the first woman ever to ascend to the House Speakership —
a feat she repeated in 2019.
“She’s a tough, effective, focused, disciplined woman. I
wasn’t always on the same side as her — and it’s not pleasant being on the
other side of her — but she knew how to bring a disparate group of people
together to get the job done,” Rep. Debbie Dingell, a close Pelosi ally, said
Thursday morning as Democrats waited anxiously for the Speaker’s
announcement.
Pelosi
helped steer the congressional response to the Great Recession; guided the
passage of ObamaCare; secured trillions of dollars in emergency relief
through the COVID-19 pandemic; and made the decision to impeach former President
Trump, not once but twice.
Pelosi also launched the special investigation into the Jan.
6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, the results of which could reverberate through
the legal and political world for many years to come.
“I’m not a House historian, but what I hear from House
historians is that she is probably the strongest Speaker of the House we have
seen in many, many, many years,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro, another close
Pelosi ally.
“It values, her strategic ability, her knowledge of the
system, how to negotiate — all of those really melded into one person, which
have forged an unbelievable legislative legacy,” she continued. “And that’s
wherein lies her strength . … Someone who knows how to get from A to B, with a
very diverse caucus.”
Part of
that legacy will be this year’s midterm elections. Heading into the polls last
week, Republicans were expecting a rout, one that would lend them a
considerable majority to do battle with President Biden through the last two
years of his first term. Instead, Democrats were able to cling to dozens of
toss-up seats in battleground districts, limiting the Republican gains and
making it harder for GOP leaders to govern next year.
“This really solidifies her legacy as the most accomplished
Speaker in U.S. history, by all measures — all measures,” Ashley Etienne,
Pelosi’s former communications director, said of Pelosi’s role in the
Democrats’ midterm performance. “There’s no question.”
Pelosi’s decision will clear the bottleneck that’s existed
at the very top of the Democratic Caucus since 2003, when she and her top deputy,
Steny Hoyer, assumed the leading spots. James Clyburn would join them in 2006
in the No. 3 slot, where he has remained ever since.
Neither Hoyer nor Clyburn have ruled out bids to remain in
power in the next Congress. But a younger group of up-and-coming Democrats is
eager to climb the leadership ladder, or just get into the ranks.
Three current members of leadership — Hakeem Jeffries, Katherine
Clark and Pete Aguilar — are expected to launch bids for higher spots at the
first opportunity.
Jeffries, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, is
widely viewed as the favorite to replace Pelosi and Joyce Beatty, who heads the
Black Caucus, predicted Thursday that every member of that group would back
Jeffries.
But Hoyer, after almost 20 years right behind Pelosi, has
raised tens of millions of dollars for the party over the years, building his
own loyal following along the way.
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