Gulf Today

Astute Pelosi wields power with virus relief win

- Shawn Zeller,

Democratic unity has increased since last year on the issue of virus relief. Whatever House Democrats’ disappoint­ment in the election results, the party’s success in consolidat­ing power on both ends of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue is keeping their restive caucus together

When voters narrowed House Democrats’ 35-seat majority to just nine in last year’s election, Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s job got harder. Convention­al wisdom had it that she’d have to tread carefully with Democrats’ famously restive caucus, with progressiv­es on one side and the majority-makers from more conservati­ve districts on the other. But as Saturday’s vote on a $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief bill demonstrat­ed, Pelosi still has plenty of room to manoeuvre.

Only two Democrats voted against the bill. Despite united opposition from the Republican­s, Pelosi secured a 219-212 win.

Democratic unity, in other words, has increased since last year on the issue of virus relief. Whatever House Democrats’ disappoint­ment in the election results, the party’s success in consolidat­ing power on both ends of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue is keeping their restive caucus together.

Joe Biden is geting a litle bit of a honeymoon. Democrats don’t want to be responsibl­e for handing a new president of their own party a loss right out of the gate that could reverberat­e across his policy agenda. Plus, with control of both Congress and the White House, and two shots at budget reconcilia­tion, they have a real chance to make law. Many of the Democratic moderates who opposed last year’s House relief proposals, like Conor Lamb of Pennsylvan­ia and Sharice Davids of Kansas, said they objected to the messaging exercises they represente­d, not additional relief that had a chance of enactment.

Indeed, the calculus was different in May when the House passed a $3.4 trillion relief bill they called the Heroes Act. Fourteen Democrats voted no. Ater party moderates pressured Pelosi to narrow that measure and she brought up a $2.2 trillion version on Oct. 1, 18 Democrats still joined Republican­s in opposition.

Those Democrats were mainly worried that Republican atacks on those bills — that they bailed out profligate states, impeded economic recovery by paying unemployed workers more than they’d get on the job and included nonpandemi­c-related provisions — would resonate. Republican­s are levelling the same charges against the new relief measure. But it’s no longer an election year.

Many of the Democrats who voted against the Heroes bills lost their seats anyway, but 11 remain, including five who voted against both the May and October versions: Davids, Lamb, Jared Golden of Maine, Elaine Luria of Virginia and Kurt Schrader of Oregon. Nine of the 11 voted for Saturday’s bill, with Golden and Schrader the exceptions. None of them have to worry about re-election for another 20 months.

Going forward, Pelosi risks disunity if she plans a significan­t letward lurch. She does not if she proceeds with the centre-let agenda she set in 2019, which now has a greater chance of enactment with Biden in the White House. Her victory in January’s speaker election demonstrat­ed the depth of her support. She received five crucial votes from Democratic moderates who’d opposed her in 2019. If she stays the course in 2021, her caucus will remain loyal.

In the last Congress, the top nine bills on the Democrats’ agenda aimed to overhaul the campaign finance system and toughen government ethics standards, bolster US infrastruc­ture, lower drug prices, protect voting rights of minorities and civil rights of LGBTQ people, shield some unauthoriz­ed immigrants from deportatio­n, increase oversight of gender discrimina­tion in pay, expand background checks for gun purchases, and develop a strategy to combat climate change.

Democratic representa­tives voted for them by a combined margin of 2072-4. Seven passed without any Democratic dissent. Pelosi is starting with the same list of bills in 2021. The House has already passed the LGBTQ anti-discrimina­tion bill without Democratic opposition and plans to take up the campaign finance and ethics measure shortly.

Look a litle further into last year’s legislatin­g and Democrats demonstrat­ed remarkable unity on issues that once divided them, from a bill to grant statehood to the District of Columbia, which only one Democrat opposed, to the measure to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour. Six Democrats voted no, but only one of them is back in 2021.

Pelosi’s narrowed majority holds power at a time when Democratic party loyalty has never been higher, at least in modern times. On votes that split a majority of Republican­s from a majority of Democrats in 2020, the average Democratic representa­tive voted with his party 98% of the time, matching 2019’s record level. (CQ Roll Call has studied partisan voting since 1956.)

There’s not much room for unity to rise in 2021, but it could. Consider that of the 13 Democratic representa­tives defeated in November, eight of them were ranked at or near the botom of the caucus in party unity, from Ben Mcadams of Utah, who was the least loyal, voting with his party 73% of the time, to Xochitl Torres Small of New Mexico, who had the 13th-lowest party unity score among Democrats at 89%.

The lesson for those Democratic moderates who survived is that bucking the party doesn’t insulate a representa­tive in a district that’s moving the other way. Politics is increasing­ly nationaliz­ed.

Meanwhile, Democrats who side with the party can count on financial rewards. Consider the fundraisin­g success of Democrats like Katie Porter of California, Elissa Slotkin of Michigan and Lucy Mcbath of Georgia, all of whom won Gop-held seats in 2018, voted more than 90% of the time the way Pelosi wanted them to, raked in millions in campaign contributi­ons from liberals who live outside their districts and won re-election. The trio were among the top 10 Democrats in their fundraisin­g in the 2020 cycle.

One reason there’s a sense in Washington that Pelosi will struggle in 2021 is the pre-election push by progressiv­e Democrats for a bolder agenda.

Predicated on a stronger Democratic showing than materializ­ed, progressiv­es suggested the party should take votes on proposals Pelosi had eschewed, like the Green New Deal and “Medicare for All.”

Those would divide Democrats and that’s why progressiv­es aren’t likely to get those votes in 2021, as Pelosi explained in her postelecti­on news conference. “I think you will see as we build consensus, we don’t govern from on high,” she said. “I represent San Francisco very proudly and some issues that would be wonderful in my district are just not winning issues in other places in the country that we have to win.”

With virus relief now behind them, House Democrats have stuck together. The next question is whether the same factors — the chance to legislate and to boost a new Democratic president — will have the same unifying effect in the Senate.

Those factors, more than the underlying policy, are driving Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer’s pitch to Democrats, his whip, Richard J. Durbin of Illinois said on Feb. 23: “He’s begging all of us, despite any difference­s with any one section of the bill, that we hang together,” Durbin explained. “This is the signature provision of the Biden administra­tion in terms of dealing with the pandemic and the economy, and we need to stick together.”

 ?? File/reuters ?? Nancy Pelosi speaks during a news conference before the House of Representa­tives votes to provide $1.9 trillion in new coronaviru­s relief at the US Capitol in Washington.
File/reuters Nancy Pelosi speaks during a news conference before the House of Representa­tives votes to provide $1.9 trillion in new coronaviru­s relief at the US Capitol in Washington.

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