Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jeffries launches leadership bid

House Democrat seeks to be the caucus’ fist Black leader

- MICHELLE L. PRICE AND LISA MASCARO

NEW YORK — A day after Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she would step aside, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York launched a history-making bid Friday to become the first Black person to helm a major political party in Congress as leader of the House Democrats.

In a letter to colleagues, Jeffries gave a nod to the “legendary figures” before him: Pelosi, the first female speaker in U.S. history, and her leadership team. He encouraged his fellow House members to embrace a “once-in-a-generation opportunit­y” to unleash their “full potential as a team.” And he pledged to draw on the diverse Democratic caucus as it works to govern in a divided Congress and win back the majority after House Republican­s narrowly seized control in the midterm elections.

“The House Democratic Caucus is the most authentic representa­tion of the gorgeous mosaic of the American people,” Jeffries wrote.

“I write to humbly ask for your support for the position of House Democratic Leader as we once again prepare to meet the moment.”

Along with Pelosi, the other top two House Democrats — Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the majority leader, and Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, the whip — also announced their intentions to step down from leadership. All three are in their 80s.

The next generation wasted no time preparing to take their place. Along with Jeffries, Reps. Katherine Clark of Massachuse­tts and Pete Aguilar of California — who have worked together as a lower-rung leadership team — swiftly wrote to colleagues with their bids for the second- and third-ranking positions in House Democratic leadership. Jeffries and Clark are in their 50s, while Aguilar is in his 40s.

Pelosi heartily backed the potential new leaders.

“It is with pride, gratitude and confidence in their abilities that I salute Chairman Hakeem Jeffries, Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark and Vice Chairman Pete Aguilar for being ready and willing to assume this awesome responsibi­lity,” Pelosi said Friday in a statement.

House Democrats will meet privately as a caucus in two weeks, after the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, to select their leaders. So far, Jeffries, Clark and Aguilar have no stated challenger­s.

The Brooklyn-born Jeffries has long been seen as a charismati­c new leader, known for his sharp but careful style, first in New York politics and then when he entered the national stage upon winning election to Congress in 2012.

A former corporate lawyer and state assemblyma­n, Jeffries has represente­d Brooklyn and parts of Queens for a decade and quickly rose through the ranks in Congress, serving as the party’s 5th-highest-ranking member as chair of the House Democratic Caucus.

“You could sense there was some purpose in him,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil-rights leader, recalling the quiet and pensive young lawmaker he first met decades go.

“He always seemed like a guy that was headed somewhere but was willing to pace himself to get there,” Sharpton said. “You meet a lot of people that are ambitious, that would do anything. You never got that impression from Hakeem.”

While Jeffries has been part of the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus, he’s seen as a more moderate, business-friendly lawmaker who is sometimes at odds with the House’s furthest-left members.

His district includes the Black cultural hub of the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborho­od, home to Jackie Robinson and once represente­d by Shirley Chisholm, the first Black woman elected to Congress.

The job of minority leader puts Jeffries in line to become speaker if Democrats regain House control.

Growing up in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights neighborho­od, Jeffries attended New York City public schools before graduating from the State University of New York at Binghamton, where he studied political science. He received a master’s in public policy from Georgetown University and a law degree from New York University.

He clerked for a federal judge and worked for several years at a New York City law firm and later as a corporate lawyer for CBS.

His first runs for public office were strong back-toback but unsuccessf­ul attempts to unseat longtime Democratic state Assemblyma­n Roger Green starting in 2000.

New York Attorney General Letitia James, who was Green’s campaign manager, said Jeffries was then “an upand-coming insurgent” who “wanted to make his mark in central Brooklyn — and in fact, he did.”

When the seat opened in 2006, Jeffries won. He served six years in Albany, working on criminal justice and civil rights legislatio­n.

He sponsored a law that stopped the New York Police Department from keeping a database of personal details of every person stopped and questioned under the department’s controvers­ial stop-and-frisk tactic, even if the people were released and not charged with a crime.

He continued that work in Congress. After the 2014 chokehold death in New York of Eric Garner, a Black man whose gasps of “I can’t breathe!” became part a national rallying cry against police brutality, Jeffries sought to pass legislatio­n that would make the chokehold maneuver a federal crime.

 ?? (AP/Carolyn Kaster) ?? Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., talks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday.
(AP/Carolyn Kaster) Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., talks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday.

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