Baltimore Sun

Pelosi hints at limit as speaker

- By Mark Z. Barabak

MIAMI — Democrats have yet to win a House majority and Nancy Pelosi’s return as speaker is by no means certain, but already she has one eye on the exits.

“I see myself as a transition­al figure,” Pelosi said in an interview in which she professed utmost confidence that, should Democrats take control of the chamber Nov. 6, she will again assume the top leadership position. “I have things to do. Books to write; places to go; grandchild­ren, first and foremost, to love.”

She hastened to add she was not imposing a limit on her tenure. “Do you think I would make myself a lame duck right here over this double-espresso?” the California Democrat said Thursday in a downtown Miami cafe, with a raised eyebrow and a laugh.

By implicitly limiting her time as speaker, Pelosi could ease the pressure to stand aside by signaling her willingnes­s for a new and younger generation of leaders to take over sooner rather than later.

Pelosi has quietly been grooming potential successors, and though she said she would be delighted to hand the speaker’s gavel to another woman — “Oh, yeah!” she exclaimed — she has no plans to try to force a choice.

“Whoever is next is not up to me,” she said.

Pelosi, 78, made history in January 2007 when she became the first female speaker in history, a post she relinquish­ed four years later after Republican­s seized control of the House in a 2010 midterm landslide.

She has held the job of House minority leader ever since, raising hundreds of millions of dollars for Democrats but also serving as a favorite GOP foil. This election cycle alone Pelosi has appeared in tens of thousands of ads, the overwhelmi­ng majority of them negative.

Some Democrats have sought to distance themselves from their congressio­nal leader, whose liberal philosophy and San Francisco pedigree have made her Republican shorthand for out-of-touch, left-wing elitism.

Dozens of House candidates have called for a change in the Democratic leadership or vowed not to support Pelosi’s return as speaker.

Still, she remains a prodigious fundraiser and, in certain blue-shaded parts of the country, a welcome guest. In just the most recent campaign finance reporting period, Pelosi raised $34 million for Democrats, boosting her total since entering the House leadership in 2002 as minority whip to more than $700 million.

The vote for Democratic leadership will take place after Thanksgivi­ng, allowing time to pass after the midterm elections. As yet, no serious rivals have emerged.

Pelosi expressed no doubt she had the votes to remain speaker. “I haven’t asked anyone for their support,” she said, later adding that doesn’t mean they haven’t told her she has their support.

Although Pelosi grew up in politics — as a girl she worked on her father’s campaigns for Congress and Baltimore mayor — she did not win election until she was 47 and had ushered her five children out of the household.

Pelosi said she never expected to serve more than 10 years. She recalled seeing an elderly House member hobbling on a cane early in her term, and telling a colleague, “It’s never going to be me. I’m not staying around that long.”

It’s now been more than 30 years since Pelosi’s election in 1987.

Pelosi would have stepped aside as leader, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, 78, speaks to volunteers at a get-out-the-vote event in Coral Gables, Fla. she said, had Hillary Clinton won the 2016 election.

But with no other woman at the table, Pelosi said, “it was the most urgent of all moments” to keep her seat alongside President Donald Trump, GOP leaders and the top Democrat in the Senate, New York’s Chuck Schumer.

“I feel a very strong responsibi­lity to stay in this office for at least the next two years while he’s president,” Pelosi said over that double-espresso. “Andlet’s hope it doesn’t go any longer than that for him.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ??
WILFREDO LEE/AP

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