Los Angeles Times

Staying true to herself to the end

Pelosi finishes chapter as speaker with clear-eyed remarks that reflect skills she brought to the job.

- MARK Z. BARABAK

The not-farewell address Nancy Pelosi delivered Thursday captured the quintessen­ce of her historymak­ing career.

The departing House speaker was, as ever, immaculate­ly turned out. She wore white, the color of the suffragett­e movement, of which Pelosi was a legatee and enormous champion.

She read, dutifully, from prepared remarks that were filled with the typical exhortatio­ns and platitudes — a reference to the “Star-Spangled Banner,” a paean to the Capitol and its moon-glow dome at night — that pepper her often-uninspirin­g speeches.

Above all, she was cleareyed and unsentimen­tal. Her voice only briefly quavered when Pelosi mentioned her husband, Paul, who is still recovering from an attack by a hammerwiel­ding assailant who, police say, invaded the couple’s San Francisco home on a mission of hatred and political vengeance.

Pelosi’s great strength has never been that of a public speaker. Rather, it is the skills she brought to the speakershi­p: tremendous political savvy, a mastery of the legislativ­e process, a lack of blind ideology and — not least — the ability to count votes, read a room and know when it was time

to call the vote, and time to move on.

Pelosi had given her word, four years ago when her hold over the Democratic caucus was shaky under pressure from ambitious younger members, that she would serve no more than two additional terms in the speakershi­p.

That time runs out in January, and Democrats’ far-better-than-expected showing in last week’s midterm election gave her a graceful way to keep her word. She knew her departure was being anticipate­d — though she said her phone was “exploding” in recent days with pleas to remain as Democratic leader — and now she can take her leave and do so beneath no dark cloud.

Her decision to stay in Congress, falling back into the ranks of Democratic members, was a surprise, though Pelosi — the first female speaker in history and one of the most accomplish­ed ever to wield the gavel — will clearly be no typical back-bencher.

President Biden and Pelosi’s counterpar­t in the Senate, Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, made clear their desire she stay on, and she will doubtless be available for counsel to those two and whoever takes her place as head of the Democratic caucus.

For her part, Pelosi told reporters Thursday she had no intention to meddle or second-guess.

(Shrewd to the last, it seemed no accident that Pelosi’s announceme­nt coincided with — and vastly overshadow­ed — Republican­s’ first day as the majority-in-waiting and obscured the announceme­nt the new GOP majority would launch a probe into Biden and his family’s business dealings.)

“If you’ve known Nancy Pelosi as I have going back to when, as she said, she just was a housewife, this is exactly what you’d expect,” said Art Agnos, a former San Francisco mayor and friend of the Pelosi family. “She’s leaving with grace and dignity while promising to be around and available if she can be of help to anyone.”

If there is disappoint­ment — and none dares speak it aloud — it is among the ranks of San Francisco politician­s, who have quietly waited for the day Pelosi would stand aside.

It is not a function of disrespect; to the contrary, Pelosi is a beloved and deeply admired institutio­n in the city she has represente­d in Congress for well over three decades.

Rather, it is the fact Pelosi has been in office so long and generation­s of would-be successors have aged out and retired from public life, their hopes aborning as her tenure endures.

Anyone eyeing the congressio­nal seat — the only San Francisco has to offer — will have to wait at least another two years.

Pelosi was just reelected for the 18th time last week with 84% support.

Although it’s hard to imagine, it’s not impossible to see Pelosi running again in 2024, at age 84, and handily being ushered into a 19th term.

Four years ago, sipping espresso at a bistro in downtown Miami, Pelosi indulged in a rare discussion of her political future.

She is strongly allergic to the subject, an aversion that is shared among her congressio­nal staff and others close to the speaker.

But on that sunny day, while campaignin­g in a midterm election that would return Democrats to power and restore Pelosi to the speakershi­p, she was unusually open to the discussion.

“I see myself as a transition­al figure,” Pelosi said in an interview, in which she expressed characteri­stic confidence of victory and reclaiming the speaker’s gavel.

“I have things to do. Books to write; places to go; grandchild­ren, first and foremost, to love.”

Pelosi named those grandchild­ren Thursday in a proud reverie as she spoke from the well of the House. But they’ll have to wait for her undivided attention. So, too, any books she may wish to write.

Pelosi is not finished in Congress.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? NANCY PELOSI greets Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, her possible successor as leader of House Democrats.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times NANCY PELOSI greets Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, her possible successor as leader of House Democrats.
 ?? ??
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? NANCY PELOSI reveals her future plans Thursday. Her strength has never been public speaking, but rather the political skills she brought to the speakershi­p.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times NANCY PELOSI reveals her future plans Thursday. Her strength has never been public speaking, but rather the political skills she brought to the speakershi­p.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States