Miami Herald

House Dems choose Jeffries to replace Pelosi as party leader

- BY LISA MASCARO

House Democrats ushered in a new generation of leaders on Wednesday with Rep. Hakeem Jeffries elected to be the first Black American to head a major political party in Congress at a pivotal time as longservin­g Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her team step aside next year.

Showing rare party unity after their midterm election losses, the House Democrats moved seamlessly from one historymak­ing leader to another, choosing the 52-year-old New Yorker, who vowed to “get things done” in the new Congress, even after Republican­s won control of the chamber. The closeddoor vote was unanimous, by acclamatio­n.

“We stand on their collective broad shoulders,” Jeffries said afterward of Pelosi and her team.

“The best thing that we can do as a result of the seriousnes­s and solemnity of the moment,” he had said earlier, “is lean in hard and do the best damn job that we can for the people.”

It’s rare that a party that lost the midterm elections would so easily regroup and stands in stark contrast with the upheaval among Republican­s, who are struggling to unite around GOP leader Kevin McCarthy as the new House speaker as they prepare to take control when the new Congress convenes in January.

Wednesday’s internal Democratic caucus votes of Jeffries and the other top leaders came without challenger­s.

Cheers broke out in the private meeting, where typically contested party elections unfolded instead like church service, a calland-response affirming Democrats’ confidence in their choices, some in the room said.

The trio led by Jeffries, who will become the Democratic minority leader in the new Congress, includes 59-year-old Rep. Katherine Clark of Massachuse­tts as the Democratic whip and 43-yearold Rep. Pete Aguilar of California as caucus chairman. The new team of Democratic leaders is expected to slide into the slots held by Pelosi and her top lieutenant­s — Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland and Democratic Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina — as the 80-something leaders make way for the next generation.

But in many ways, the trio has been transition­ing in plain sight, as one aide put it — Jeffries, Clark and Aguilar working with Pelosi’s nod these past several years in lower-rung leadership roles as the first woman to have the speaker’s gavel prepared to step down. Pelosi, of California, has led the House Democrats for the past 20 years, and colleagues late Tuesday granted her the honorific title of “speaker emerita.”

“It an important moment for the caucus — that there’s a new generation of leadership,” said Rep.

Chris Pappas, D-N.H., ahead of voting.

Jeffries said Wednesday he will work with Republican­s “whenever possible but we will also push back against extremism whenever necessary.”

Clyburn, now the highest-ranking Black American in Congress, is seeking to become the assistant Democratic leader, keeping a seat at the leadership table and helping the new generation to transition.

Pelosi and Hoyer plan to remain in office, an unusual but not unpreceden­ted arrangemen­t that Jeffries called a “blessing” the new leaders can seek their counsel.

 ?? ?? Jeffries
Jeffries

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States