The Mercury News

Pelosi outlines agenda if Dems win the House

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON >> Projecting confidence about her party’s chances, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi outlined five of the top 10 agenda items Democrats will pursue if they retake the House in next month’s election. Lowering health care costs, rebuilding infrastruc­ture and running the House chamber with more transparen­cy and openness are near the top of the Democratic agenda, Pelosi said during a talk Tuesday at Harvard’s Institute of Politics. Democrats would also prioritize giving legal status to young immigrants, known as Dreamers, and strengthen­ing background checks on gun purchases, she said.

Democrats need to gain 23 seats to wrest control of the House from Republican­s, something surveys suggest is within reach.

“If the election were today we would win the majority,” Pelosi said.

Pelosi said she couldn’t predict whether the election would be a “wave” or “tsunami” for Democrats, but said she expects the party to triumph, putting her in line to regain the speaker’s gavel.

“I’ve never seen anything like the mobilizati­on that is out there, the grassroots,” she said.

One item not on Pelosi’s top-10 list: impeaching President Donald Trump.

“I think impeachmen­t, to use that word, is very divisive,” she said.

Instead, she said House committees under Democrats would conduct oversight of the administra­tion and help special counsel Robert Mueller conclude his Russia investigat­ion, preserving all the documents from his probe for congressio­nal follow-up.

“Getting the documents and the truth — and where they lead us — that’s what we have to do,” she said.

Looking ahead to a possible lame-duck session after the election, Pelosi indicated Democrats won’t relent in their opposition to funding Trump’s proposed border wall. She says it’s not the best or most cost-effective way to protect the border.

“It happens to be like a manhood issue for the president and I’m not interested in that,” she said.

Pelosi has been the leader of House Democrats since 2003, an extraordin­ary stretch that includes becoming the first woman elected speaker in 2007. But some Democrats running for office this year have called for a new face at the top, echoing the complaints of rank-and-file Democratic lawmakers who say generation­al change is needed.

One item she’s personally hoping to add to the House agenda in the early days is the Equality Act, which would add protection­s for women and LGBT people to the existing Civil Rights Act.

Pelosi in a letter earlier this week to her colleagues encouraged them to stay laser-focused on the agenda they’re bringing to voters.

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