The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

How Nancy Pelosi’s TDS hurt America

- Byron York Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for The Washington Examiner.

One of themore appalling moments in the recent history of the House of Representa­tives occurred recently in the Capitol Visitor Center.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave her weekly news conference and said that she had changed her position on the issue of passing a coronaviru­s relief bill. For months, as millions suffered the economic devastatio­n associated with the pandemic, Pelosi stonewalle­d the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to pass targeted, short- termrelief for those in need.

Now, as if by magic, she’s all for it.

What happened? A newpreside­nt has been elected, Pelosi explained, and coronaviru­s vaccines are nearing public distributi­on. “A total game- changer— a new president and a vaccine,” she declared. The kind of short- term relief that she blocked for months is now acceptable. “It’s for a shorter period of time, but that’s OK now,” Pelosi said, “because we have a newpreside­nt.”

As policy, it made no sense. Why condition help for struggling Americans on the developmen­t of a vaccine? Didn’t the lack of a vaccine in the last several months, with a virus raging and no end in sight, make it more urgent to help people? Yet Pelosi wouldn’t do it. And why refuse to assist suddenly unemployed Americans until President Trump had been defeated in his bid for reelection?

The speaker’s explanatio­n revealed the cold political calculatio­ns behind her actions. But it also suggested the personal obsession-driving her refusal to approve aid at a time when millions of americans were out of a job, stretching to pay the rent, struggling to buy food and desperatel­y trying tomake ends meet.

The short version is that Pelosi suffered from a toxic case of Trump Derangemen­t Syndrome. Remember, this is the speaker of the House who made a show of tearing up her copy of the State of the Union speech in front of a joint session of Congress while the president stood a few feet away and millions watched on television. This is the speaker who called COVID- 19, a worldwide pandemic, the “Trump virus.” This is the speaker who suffered a meltdown in awhite House meeting with Trump, standing up, pointing her finger at the president, and storming out of the room.

That is the same nancy pelosi who was stonewalli­ng virus relief efforts. In an electionye­ar, when a relief billwould help millions ofamerican­s but might also, as an ancillary effect, boost Trump’s reelection bid, she would not act. When the election was over and Trump lost, she would.

“I am somewhat concerned that she is afraid that any deal would be good for the president,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who spent hours and hours negotiatin­g with Pelosi, said in September. No kidding.

What Pelosi was doing was no secret.

“Pelosi Is Playing hard-ball on Coronaviru­s Relief. She Thinks She’ll Win,” read a New York Times headline from August. Noting Pelosi’s insistence on the huge relief bill the House passed, knowing it had no chance in the Senate, the Times continued: “Emboldened by Republican divisions and a favorable political landscape, the speaker is refusing to agree to a narrow relief measure, unbothered by charges that she is an impediment to the deal.”

In her drive to stop Trump, Pelosi stiff- armed not only Republican­s, but moderate Democrats as well. In September, the Problem Solvers Caucus, a bipartisan group with a number of Democrats involved, proposed a $ 1.5 trillion relief bill. Pelosi dismissed the effort. A group of her handpicked committee chairs dumped on the plan as a “retreat” that “falls short of what is needed to save lives and boost the economy.”

Meanwhile, Pelosi criticized similar administra­tion proposals as “half a loaf.”

So more months passed — until the presidenti­al election gave Pelosi what she wanted. Now, she is ready to deal. But what about all that lost time? All that suffering? Pelosi doesn’t want to talk about it. That was clear at her news conference, when a reporter asked, “Was it amistake, though, not to accept half of a loaf months ago?”

A clearly angry Pelosi lashed out at the journalist for his temerity. “Look, I’m going to tell you something,” she said. “Don’t characteri­ze what we did before as amistake, as a preface to your question, if you want an answer. That was not amistake. It was a decision. And it has taken us to a place where we can do the right thing without other, shall we say, considerat­ions in the legislatio­n that we don’t want.”

The short version of that was: Look, we waited Trump out. He lost. Now, we’ll act.

The good news is that relief might be on the way for millions of hurting Americans. And, as a side benefit, Pelosi’s ugly Trump obsession might be easing.

It’s just too bad she couldn’t get over it months ago.

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