Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

RIPPING UP

speech left her feeling “very liberated,” Pelosi tells colleagues.

- SHERYL GAY STOLBERG AND EILEEN SULLIVAN

WASHINGTON — Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s parting shot after President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday night — as she ripped up the speech he had just delivered — turned overnight into yet another Washington Rorschach test, in which Republican­s and Democrats look at the same image and walk away with the opposite conclusion­s.

The president spent his morning circulatin­g anti-Pelosi messages on Twitter, some carrying the hashtag #PelosiTant­rum. At the White House, his counselor Kellyanne Conway said the speaker deserved to be censured. The White House Twitter account said her action would tarnish her legacy.

But at the Capitol on Wednesday morning, Pelosi was unapologet­ic. She told a closed-door meeting of her rank and file that she felt “very liberated” by her act, which was spontaneou­s, according to a Democratic aide in the room.

She said it grew out of her frustratio­n with the way Trump had mischaract­erized his policies on health care and other matters. And, she said, he “disrespect­ed the chamber he was in” by using it as “a backdrop for a reality show” — including having his wife, Melania Trump, drape a Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom around the neck of Rush Limbaugh, the conservati­ve talk show host — to “give a speech that had no connection with reality.”

Democrats responded by giving her a standing ovation in the private session.

“As far as I’m concerned, a shredder wasn’t available, and so she did what she needed to do,” Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, chairman of the House Democratic caucus, said afterward.

The speaker knew going into it that Tuesday night would be tense, and she had said she would treat the president with respect.

“Of course, I tried to be courteous and appropriat­e and all that,” she told her members Wednesday morning, according to the Democratic aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe her private remarks.

“But the fact is, there is too much at risk, too much at stake — and everything that

America is: our Constituti­on, our rights, freedom of the press, the guardians of our democracy.”

The night began with Trump not taking Pelosi’s offer of a handshake after he presented her a copy of his remarks. She told her fellow Democrats she “didn’t care” about the handshake, said Rep. Lois Frankel, D-Fla.

Democrats emerging from the session said they found it difficult to sit still and treat the president with respect, as the speaker had urged them to do, given policy pronouncem­ents that seemed to have only a passing relationsh­ip with the truth.

“We’re a captive audience,” Frankel said. “We are told to be very respectful, and it’s very difficult when the man is lying, lying, lying, and we have to sit there and just be quiet. So I think she did the only thing she could do within the realm of respectabi­lity. She basically said she had had it.”

But Conway called Pelosi’s actions a “temper tantrum” and said it was not the first time she had seen the speaker have one.

“America saw an incorrigib­le child ripping up the State of the Union,” Conway told reporters Wednesday. “I think it shows you how petty and peevish and partisan the Democratic Party has become.”

While the president did not criticize Pelosi in his own words Wednesday, he amplified the criticisms of others, including Chris Loesch, whose wife, Dana, is a former spokeswoma­n for the National Rifle Associatio­n. Chris Loesch called the speaker “uncouth” and also demanded her censure.

Trump also retweeted a message from the official White House account posted late Tuesday, suggesting that Pelosi’s act had disrespect­ed not only the president but the people he had honored in his speech.

“Speaker Pelosi just ripped up: One of our last surviving Tuskegee Airmen. The survival of a child born at 21 weeks. The mourning families of Rocky Jones and Kayla Mueller. A service member’s reunion with his family. That’s her legacy,” the message read.

Vice President Mike Pence said Pelosi had “tried to make it about her.”

“And I think the American people see through it,” Pence told Fox News. “I think they see through the pettiness; they see through the politics of all of it.”

During last year’s address, a brief clip of the speaker extending her arms and clapping for Trump, as he turned to look at her, went viral. A month earlier, Pelosi called Trump “petulant” after he stormed out of a White House meeting about the government shutdown.

Trump has given Pelosi derisive nicknames that portray her as anxious and unhinged, such as “Crazy Nancy” and “Nervous Nancy.” In January, he predicted on Twitter that she would be remembered as the “absolute worst Speaker of the House in U.S. history!”

Pelosi has said Trump does not know right from wrong, and during his impeachmen­t trial, she adopted the argument that despite his likely acquittal, he would be “impeached forever.”

 ?? (The New York Times/T.J. Kirkpatric­k) ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrives to applause Wednesday on Capitol Hill to speak at an event pushing the Right to Organize Act. “Of course, I tried to be courteous and appropriat­e and all that,” she told colleagues about her actions at the State of the Union address. “But the fact is, there is too much at risk, too much at stake — and everything that America is: our Constituti­on, our rights, freedom of the press, the guardians of our democracy.”
(The New York Times/T.J. Kirkpatric­k) House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrives to applause Wednesday on Capitol Hill to speak at an event pushing the Right to Organize Act. “Of course, I tried to be courteous and appropriat­e and all that,” she told colleagues about her actions at the State of the Union address. “But the fact is, there is too much at risk, too much at stake — and everything that America is: our Constituti­on, our rights, freedom of the press, the guardians of our democracy.”

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