Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Dems run for seats and away from Pelosi

- By David Weigel and Paul Kane

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Democrats sense a growing opportunit­y to unseat Republican­s as part of a national wave that could put the House speaker’s gavel back in their party’s hands.

There’s just one catch: Many Democratic contenders aren’t willing to say they support returning their party’s leader to power.

“I’ve said since Day One that I wouldn’t vote for Nancy Pelosi as speaker,” said Dan McCready, 34, who is running in a North Carolina district that stretches from Charlotte’s suburbs into more rural counties.

“I think we need a whole new generation of people in D.C. That’s part of why I’m running; we need some new blood.”

Democrats across the country are locked in an awkward dance in which candidates sensing a chance to win GOP-held seats are distancing themselves from the party’s longtime liberal leader from San Francisco — at the same time that the 78-year-old congresswo­man is boldly holding on to power.

Ten Democratic candidates have said they would oppose Pelosi’s return to the speakershi­p, while at least another 10 have declined to express support for her, according to interviews with several candidates and a Washington Post review of statements collected by Republican­s.

They are following in the footsteps of newly elected Democratic Rep. Conor Lamb, who scored a stunning upset in March in a Republican Pennsylvan­ia district after saying he would oppose Pelosi.

This clamor for change at the top underscore­s the generation­al tensions within the House Democratic caucus as younger lawmakers look to replace not only Pelosi but also two other septuagena­rians — Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., 78, and Assistant Democratic Leader James Clyburn, D-S.C., 77.

Pelosi stands as the Democratic conundrum, a prolific fundraiser and skilled politician, as well as a deeply polarizing figure used by Republican­s as a club against Democrats.

The dynamic sets the stage for a potential showdown — should Democrats win the majority — between Pelosi allies, who would relish the historic moment of returning a woman to one of the most influentia­l positions in the country, and her critics, many of whom would have won office by promising a change in leadership. “We will win. I will run for speaker. I feel confident about it. And my members do, too,” Pelosi told a meeting of Boston Globe reporters and editors last week.

Earlier, at an event in New York City, she introduced several of her fellow House Democrats to the crowd by highlighti­ng which committee they would lead next year, assuming a Democratic majority.

“It’s important that it not be five white guys at the table, no offense,” Pelosi said in Boston, a reference to the top leaders in the House and Senate and President Donald Trump. “I have no intention of walking away from that table.”

There is the question of whether Pelosi would have the votes to win the job.

Unlike other leadership posts, which are selected by secret ballot in the respective caucuses, the entire House must vote for the speaker in early January. The minority party never votes for the majority’s speaker-designate, so it would require Pelosi to get at least 218 votes from her side of the aisle.

So, if Democrats ended up with a caucus of 235, Pelosi could afford to lose 17 votes when the speaker vote is held on the floor.

Pelosi’s strength comes from several sources, the first among equals being her fundraisin­g on behalf of candidates and the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee.

Her advisers attributed 45 percent of the committee’s $34 million raised in the first quarter of 2018 to Pelosi.

But there are other, beneath-the-radar reasons Pelosi feels confident in her post. Despite GOP claims, Pelosi is not as unpopular as she was eight years ago when she was speaker. Back then, 58 percent of Americans had an unfavorabl­e view of Pelosi, including 41 percent who held a strongly unfavorabl­e view.

In a Washington Post-ABC News poll last month, just 44 percent of Americans held an unfavorabl­e view, with those strongly disliking her down to 29 percent.

That played out in Lamb’s victory. Outside Republican groups spent more than $6 million on TV ads in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, the lion’s share of it on commercial­s trying to tie Lamb to Pelosi.

But the 33-year-old Democrat ran an ad making clear he would not support Pelosi, calling for new leadership on both sides of the aisle.

It helped to inoculate him against the Pelosi attack line. GOP operatives now worry that other Democrats will follow Lamb’s lead and that there will be even less potency in the anti-Pelosi campaign that they have been hoping will save their majority in the fall.

Most Democrats have distanced themselves from Pelosi but have tried to avoid taking a hard-and-fast position on how they would vote if she is the Democratic nominee for speaker.

Kathy Manning, a Democratic candidate in western North Carolina, said she would like to see an open contest for party leader. “I would make that decision like I make all my decisions: Get as much informatio­n as I can, find out who’s running, find out what their positions are, then vote for the person who’d make the best leader,” Manning said.

This sort of nuanced answer is one that Republican­s will use to try to turn her into a Pelosi clone. North Carolina Republican­s have already begun highlighti­ng Manning’s $500 and $1,000 donations to Pelosi’s political committees in 2002 and 2004.

Pelosi and Hoyer have held the top two spots in leadership more than a dozen years; Clyburn has held the No. 3 post since 2011.

Clyburn raised eyebrows when he told Politico that this year’s midterm elections were an up-or-out moment for the trio, that all three would have to step down if Democrats failed to secure the majority. Democrats are not demanding a loyalty pledge from candidates who might flip the majority their way. McCready and Manning have been added to the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee’s “Red to Blue” list, denoting them as candidates who can expect party support in their primaries and the general election.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP ?? Nancy Pelosi is a prolific fundraiser and skilled politician, as well as a deeply polarizing figure used against Democrats.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP Nancy Pelosi is a prolific fundraiser and skilled politician, as well as a deeply polarizing figure used against Democrats.

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