House reelects Pelosi as new Congress begins
Narrow victory underscores challenge facing Dems to push Biden’s agenda, prepare for midterm races
WASHINGTON — House Democrats returned Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California to the speakership Sunday for what may be her final term, handing a tested leader control of the slimmest House majority either party has faced in two decades.
Pelosi secured 216 votes, narrowly topping the 209 of Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the House Republicans’ leader. She managed to keep defections to just a handful, winning over several Democrats who had opposed her two years ago when the party had a more comfortable majority.
The nearly party-line vote punctuated an opening day marked more by precaution than pomp, as the 117th Congress convened for the first time under the threat of a deadly coronavirus pandemic that has rattled its ranks and the country. Several House members sick with COVID-19 missed the session altogether and others cast their vote from behind a Plexiglas enclosure specially constructed in a gallery overlooking the chamber.
After two years as President Donald Trump’s most outspoken Democratic antagonist, Pelosi will now be responsible for trying to shepherd through Congress as much of President-elect Joe Biden’s agenda as possible, while maintaining her party’s majority before next year’s midterm elections.
It will be no easy task. With her party in control of just 222 of 435 seats, Pelosi can afford to lose only a handful of Democrats on any given vote and faces a Republican opposition empowered by a better than expected showing in Novem
ber’s election. She will also have to contend with a health crisis that can sideline lawmakers at any moment.
“Scripture tells us that to everything, there is a season: a time for every purpose under the heavens; a time to build, a time to sow, a time to heal,” Pelosi said after accepting the gavel. “Now is certainly a time for our nation to heal. Our most urgent priority will continue to be defeating the coronavirus. And defeat it, we will.”
On the other side of the Capitol, the Senate convened a more subdued opening day as both parties await a pair of runoff elections in Georgia on Tuesday that will determine which of them begins the year in control. The outcome could determine the fate of Biden’s legislative goals on climate change, taxes and health care; his response to the coronavirus pandemic; and his ability to fill his Cabinet and influential federal judgeships.
Republicans currently have an edge, with 51 seats to Democrats’ 48. Democrats would have to sweep both races to draw the chamber to a tie and effectively take control when Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, who would cast tiebreaking votes when needed, is sworn in with Biden on Jan. 20.
With the coronavirus circulating rampantly, members-elect expected little of the pomp that usually accompanies Congress’ initial convening. Lawmakers took the oath of office and voted for speaker in small groups, rather than all together in the normally boisterous hall of the House. The architect of the Capitol had even constructed a small Plexiglas enclosure in one of the galleries overlooking the chamber so that three lawmakers in a protective quarantine could vote in person but not mingle on the House floor.
Nor was there much promise that the partisan warfare that has seized the capital in recent years would soon subside with the new session. After they are sworn in, a growing cohort of Republican senators and House members plan to initiate a long-shot attempt Wednesday to try to overturn Biden’s victory and deliver a second term to Trump. The attempt will fail, but only after it cleaves the Republican Party in two and further erodes confidence in Biden’s legitimacy among the president’s most ardent supporters.