Incoming Democrats of mixed opinion on Pelosi as their leader
WASHINGTON — Rep.-elect Donna Shalala, D-Fla., a contemporary of House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi but one of the newest additions to her caucus, has a message for fellow incoming freshmen mulling about who should lead them. Pelosi, Shalala says, is the right person for a tough job.
The former Clinton Cabinet official said Pelosi has earned the right to the speakership, at least for now. “I would look at what the job is and it’s a little bit of herding cats and it’s a little bit about keeping a Democratic Party that’s full of lots of different points of view. And I think that Nancy has demonstrated that time and time again,” Shalala said in an interview alongside four other newly elected House Democratic women on ABC News’s “This Week.” “She has a backbone. She’ll stand up to a president.”
Pelosi, who was House speaker from 2007 to 2011, faces a challenge in her bid to return in that post, fuelled in part by resistance from incoming Democratic freshmen who pledged during their campaigns in conservative-leaning districts not to support her. One of them, Rep.-elect Abigail Spanberger of Virginia, said she will honour the commitment. “If we are going to turn a page and bring civility back to the political discussions, we need to change the people who are directing that conversation,” Spanberger said, appearing with Shalala on ABC.
Congressional leadership elections are typically insider affairs. But Pelosi’s fate has grabbed national attention, with celebrities, outside Democratic luminaries, and liberal groups, including labour unions and grassroots activists, weighing in on her behalf.
Democrats will have at least
233 seats in the new Congress, meaning Pelosi can afford to lose no more than 16 Democratic votes, assuming no Republicans back her. So far, 20 Democrats oppose her, and 68 aren’t saying what they intend to do when the full House votes on the matter Jan. 3.
At the moment, however, Pelosi has no declared Democratic competition. A small group working to oust her has been unable to recruit a challenger, though Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, a former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, is weighing a run.
Some prominent members of that caucus support Pelosi. “She has probably the most diverse leadership team in the history of any legislative body as far as the Congress is concerned,” Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., said on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” He predicted, “She’ll be fine.”
Pelosi is hustling to ensure that outcome. She spent much of Thursday and Friday holding one-on-one meetings with lawmakers in her leadership office. Her advisers closed the week signalling confidence.