The Commercial Appeal

Pelosi says she’s ready to let other Democrats lead

- Susan Page

Nancy Pelosi will still be in Congress for another term, representi­ng her San Francisco congressio­nal district, but she says the new generation that will succeed her in the leadership of House Democrats doesn’t need to worry about her meddling in their business.

“Thanksgivi­ng’s coming,” she replied when asked what advice she would be giving her successor. “I have no intention of being a mother-in-law in the kitchen saying, ‘My son doesn’t like stuffing that way; this is the way we make it in our family.’

“They will have their vision. They will have their plan.”

Pelosi sat down to talk with a small group of reporters Thursday moments after standing in the well of the House and announcing that, after two decades in the leadership, she would not be running for that role when the Democratic caucus convenes Nov. 30.

She had declared the end of an era, of the time when the first woman elected speaker of the House became arguably the most discipline­d, most consequent­ial legislativ­e leader in modern times.

But she was breezy and animated when she entered the ornate hideaway off the House floor known as the Board of Education, a name from the days it was the site of after-hours poker games convened by Speaker Sam Rayburn with Vice President Harry Truman and others.

“I just came for the chocolate chip cookies,” she proclaimed, plucking a treat from the plate on the table but then struggling so mightily with the sealed plastic wrapping that Carl Hulse of The New York Times finally wrestled it open for her.

How was she feeling?

Pelosi isn’t a woman given to introspect­ion, at least not in public. “I feel balanced about it all,” she said finally. “I’m not sad at all.” There were some things she wouldn’t miss, she added: “I mean, I had to raise a million dollars a day. A day! Well, at least five days a week.”

Later, her office released her precise campaign fundraisin­g statistics: She raised $310 million during the 2022 election cycle, giving her a jaw-dropping total of $1.28 billion raised since joining the leadership in 2002.

Pelosi had promised four years ago to leave the leadership after this term, but there had been a flurry of speculatio­n about whether she would actually do it. Her phone had “exploded” with pleas from House Democrats for her to stay, she said; Politico reported that President Joe Biden had urged her to “stick with it,” too. If Democrats had managed to hold the House majority, she might have considered trying to stay at the top. “I would’ve had to pray over that,” she said.

But it was the brutal assault on her husband, Paul, at their San Francisco home last month that made her more open to the idea of remaining in the House even as she stepped back from the leadership. His long, hard recovery is continuing, she said.

In her new role, she said, she won’t serve on House committees, and she declined to endorse a candidate to succeed her. That doesn’t mean she’s getting ready to disappear. “For me, resting is for other people,” she said. “I am getting ready for the next election.” That is, for 2024.

 ?? JOSH MORGAN/USA TODAY ?? In her new role, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said, she won’t serve on House committees, and she declined to endorse a candidate to succeed her.
JOSH MORGAN/USA TODAY In her new role, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said, she won’t serve on House committees, and she declined to endorse a candidate to succeed her.

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