Dayton Daily News

Why Pelosi doesn’t care what they say about her

- He writes for the Washington Post. E.J. Dionne Jr.

“Do CAMBRIDGE, MASS. — whatever you have to do. Just win, baby.”

Nancy Pelosi’s feisty, candid and pragmatic words to Harvard students on Tuesday reflected the House Democratic leader’s full adaptation to the role of designated dart board for House Republican­s. She granted full absolution to party hopefuls who think they’ll enhance their chances of winning by promising not to elect her House Speaker.

“None of us is indispensa­ble,” she declared.

But then came a steely postscript: “You can’t let the opposite party choose the leader of your party.”

“And I say this especially to women,” she added, “because they think women are going to run away from the fight. But you can’t do that.”

She does, and her implicatio­ns are clear. Republican­s want to get rid of her because she’s effective. Sexism is a big reason for her starring role as an ogre in GOP advertisin­g. And while Democrats should say what they need to say now, they’d do well to be wary of deposing her in response to pressure from the other side.

Speaking before a packed house at an event sponsored by the Kennedy School of Government’s Institute of Politics, Pelosi made clear she is thoroughly in touch with the sensibilit­ies of the swing voters her House candidates need to persuade.

She didn’t mention President Trump until well into the conversati­on, emphasizin­g instead the Democrats’ core promises: to hold down health care costs; to enact campaign-finance reform and other democratiz­ing political changes; and to implement a big infrastruc­ture program that Trump himself might back.

Pelosi pushes hard against the idea that a Democratic-led House would move quickly toward impeaching Trump. “I think using the word ‘impeachmen­t’ is very divisive,” she said, “and that isn’t a path that I would like to go down.” She knows that Trump uses impeachmen­t talk to fire up his own base. She is not about to feed the blaze.

At the same time, she stressed that she wants the “documentat­ion” from Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion to be “preserved” so Congress and the public can have “the documents and the truth.” If there is a case for impeachmen­t, she seemed to suggest, it will emerge from what Mueller finds, not what Democrats say.

The more militant in the party might find Pelosi a bit too deliberate. But she has a shrewd sense of what a legislativ­e majority can — and can’t — accomplish. She earned a lot of the credit for the passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010 under excruciati­ng political circumstan­ces.

But none of this reduces pressure she might face. According to an NBC News count in August, 57 Democratic House candidates have said they would not support her for speaker, reflecting in part a desire for generation­al change.

Pelosi expressed guarded confidence that the electorate would side with the Democrats in order to reintroduc­e “checks and balances” to Washington. But she warned that many House races are very close. And if instead, the election proved to be “a validation” of “the practices and the personal affronts of this president of the United States, I pray very hard for our country.”

Which is why she doesn’t much worry over what Democrats say about her between now and Election Day.

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