Baltimore Sun

Jeffries basking in his moment as a budding star in Congress

- By Francis Wilkinson

Speeches never matter much, except when they do. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries’ first big speech to Congress as Democratic minority leader, delivered in the wee hours of Saturday morning, went viral over the weekend. Put to hip-hop beats, it has been viewed millions of times.

The ascension of the House minority leader is not generally an occasion for important or memorable rhetoric. Yet this speech seemed to capture the far-flung diversity, ephemeral aspiration­s and democratic defiance of the Democratic Party like a July 4 firefly trapped in a bottle. It was both a generation­al and cultural coming out.

Jeffries may never match former Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s political dominance of the House. But he has already eclipsed the most glaring and consistent weakness of her leadership: She was rarely a great messenger.

Jeffries might be. He was well prepared for his moment. The centerpiec­e of his speech was an alphabetic tour de force that could likely only have been pulled off by a Black politician with two feet planted firmly in popular culture. (Jeffries, a native of the Brooklyn borough of New York, has delivered tributes to the late Notorious B.I.G. from the floor of the House on more than one occasion). Yet even that may be too general a descriptio­n. It’s doubtful that Barack Obama, the greatest Democratic speechmake­r in more than a generation, would ever have ventured into such idiomatic or confrontat­ional terrain.

Jeffries’s ABCs are worth repeating in full:

“House Democrats will always put: American values over autocracy. Benevolenc­e over bigotry. The Constituti­on over the cult. Democracy over demagogues. Economic opportunit­y over extremism. Freedom over fascism. Governing over gaslightin­g. Hopefulnes­s over hatred. Inclusion over isolation. Justice over judicial overreach. Knowledge over kangaroo courts. Liberty over limitation. Maturity over Mar-a-Lago. Normalcy over negativity. Opportunit­y over obstructio­n. People over politics. Quality of life issues over QAnon. Reason over racism. Substance over slander. Triumph over tyranny. Understand­ing over ugliness. Voting rights over voter suppressio­n. Working families over the well-connected. Xennial over xenophobia. Yes we can over you can’t do it. And zealous representa­tion over a zero-sum confrontat­ion.”

The political alphabet was at once a joyful recitation of Democratic values and a brutal drawing of contrasts with the party of MAGA. That Jeffries managed to combine the two with the same apparent ease, and personal warmth, with which he rose — essentiall­y unconteste­d — to leadership in Pelosi’s wake implies skills that might be equal to the challenges of the 118th Congress and beyond.

Jeffries himself is an amalgamati­on of his party’s complexiti­es. A former corporate lawyer at one of the nation’s most elite firms, his Brooklyn district combines renovated brownstone­s that fetch seven-figure prices and a large contingent of public housing occupied for generation­s by the persistent­ly poor. It’s a fitting site for a political party that must meld the interests of the educated and affluent (win the suburbs!) with those of the urban poor and disenfranc­hised (deliver for the base!). The fright that MAGA extremism has put into many affluent white voters has made that balancing act appear easier than it is, and far easier than it will be if the GOP manages a return to democratic norms and values in the medium term.

In his speech, Jeffries made a point of citing his religious foundation in Brooklyn’s Cornerston­e Baptist Church. He credibly cited Scripture (“let us not grow weary of doing good”), which is still good politics for a party identified with the rapidly growing secularism of the nation. One of Pelosi’s most effective tools was her full-throated liberal Catholicis­m, which she used as a powerful indictment of the amorality of Donald Trump and the bigotry of the religious right. When Pelosi said she prayed for Trump, it was a mark of personal expansiven­ess. But it was also understood that the former speaker was praying for the former president to overcome his sprawling corruption and brokenness. Jeffries can similarly cast a Christian glow over tolerance of difference, and intoleranc­e of corruption.

In his own speech, given after Jeffries’, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy pledged to combat “woke indoctrina­tion in our schools,” shorthand for ensuring that traditiona­l status hierarchie­s are upheld, difficult American history is forcibly ignored, and empathy and tolerance are withheld from children targeted by MAGA.

As a new leader, Jeffries will no doubt face many tough challenges in the months ahead.

Drawing contrasts with House Republican­s will not be among them.

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