San Diego Union-Tribune

PELOSI HOLDS OPEN STAYING AS PARTY LEADER

House speaker says colleagues urging her to seek new term

- BY HOPE YEN Yen writes for The Associated Press.

With control of the House still hanging in the balance, Speaker Nancy Pelosi stayed mum Sunday on her future plans but said congressio­nal colleagues are urging her to seek another term as Democratic leader following a strong showing in the midterm elections.

Appearing in Sunday news shows, Pelosi said Democrats are “still alive” in their fight to win the chamber and she will make a decision on whether to run for House leadership in the next couple weeks.

“People are campaignin­g, and that’s a beautiful thing. And I’m not asking anyone for anything,” she said, referring to House Democratic leadership elections set for Nov. 30. “My members are asking me to consider doing that. But, again, let’s just get through the (midterm) election.”

“A great deal is at stake, because we will be in a presidenti­al election,” Pelosi said.

Over the weekend, Democrats clinched control of the Senate after Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto’s victory in Nevada. But in the House, a majority remains unsettled with neither party having yet reached the 218 seats needed to control the 435-member chamber. As of Sunday, Republican­s had 212 seats compared with 204

for the Democrats, with 19 races still to be called by The Associated Press.

Some races can take days or even weeks to call.

Pelosi, D-San Francisco, declined to predict whether her party will retain control of the House, saying she was “disappoint­ed” with four Democratic losses in New York, including by Congressio­nal Campaign Chair Sean Patrick Maloney, which ultimately could make the difference.

“Nonetheles­s, we still think we have a chance to win this,” she said. “Nobody would have ever expected that we would be this close. Well, we expected it.”

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, is seeking to become House speaker if his party prevails, but the disappoint­ing showing in the midterms has created turmoil for leaders and calls for a new direction.

Former President Donald

Trump’s effect on the 2022 races is also being hotly debated as he prepares to announce another run.

Pelosi on Sunday said she believed that President Joe Biden should run for a second term, citing his legislativ­e accomplish­ments such as the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law and the Inflation Reduction Act as well as the creation of millions of jobs under his watch.

“He has been a great president, and he has a great record to run on,” she said.

The 82-year-old Pelosi, who has led Democrats in the House since 2003 and is the first female speaker, had struck a deal with House members to serve for two more terms as leader — or four years — after Democrats won control of the chamber in 2018. But she hasn’t announced her plans, nor have her top two deputies, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., and Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C. There has been some pressure from younger House members to pass the torch to new leaders. Hoyer is 83 and Clyburn is 82.

Pelosi’s decision also comes after her husband was attacked late last month in the couple’s San Francisco home, suffering a skull fracture and other injuries. The intruder, David DePape, demanded “Where is Nancy?” before striking Paul Pelosi with a hammer. She was in Washington at the time.

Pelosi said Sunday that her husband’s recovery will be a “long haul, but he’s doing well,” though the trauma of the attack was “intensifie­d” by the spread of misinforma­tion about it.

“It wasn’t just the attack. It was the Republican reaction to it, which was disgracefu­l,” she said.

Pelosi said her decision on whether to run again for House leadership will be about family and her colleagues, citing a need to move forward “in a very unified way” into a new Congress and the 2024 campaign.

“Who would have thought two months ago that this red wave would turn into a little tiny trickle, if that at all?” she said. “But we never believed that. We believed.”

“There are all kinds of ways to exert influence,” Pelosi added. “Speaker has awesome power, but I will always have influence.”

Pelosi spoke on CNN’s “State of the Union” and ABC’s “This Week.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP FILE ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, has led Democrats in the lower chamber since 2003.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP FILE House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, has led Democrats in the lower chamber since 2003.

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