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Cillizza: Nancy Pelosi can't be beaten
Nancy Pelosi can't be beaten
(CNN)In the wake of Jon Ossoff's special election loss a week ago,
calls began, again, within some corners of the Democratic caucus that
it was time for Nancy Pelosi to step aside as the highest ranking House
Democrat.
Republicans
had, again, used Pelosi as a cudgel in the campaign -- bashing Ossoff
as a national Democratic pawn who would go to Washington and vote for a
radically liberal agenda championed by the California Democrat.
And, there's a real argument -- I've made it before!
-- that the Democratic party needs Pelosi to step off the stage in
order for a next generation of leaders to emerge. (Pelosi is 77 years
old.)
But anyone who thinks Pelosi
can be knocked out of leadership just doesn't know much about how House
Democrats work -- and how strong Pelosi, still, is.
First,
there is the fact that Pelosi has zero plans to leave. "I'm a master
legislator, I'm experienced in terms of knowing institutional memory of
the Congress," she said Monday on CBS' morning show.
"If Hillary Clinton had won, I might have gone home. But with Donald
Trump in the White House, with a Republican majority in both houses, no
way."
Then there is this: You don't beat something with nothing.
For
all the chatter about the need for Democrats to rethink their top
leadership following the Ossoff loss, there's no one in their ranks who
could come anywhere near winning a majority of Democratic caucus votes
against Pelosi.
Consider the last
two challenges to Pelosi. In 2010, after Democrats lost 63 seats and
control of the House, Rep. Heath Shuler of North Carolina challenged
Pelosi. He got 43 votes. Six years later, Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan challenged
Pelosi; he got 63 votes to her 134.
There are a few reasons for this.
1. Pelosi's fundraising
She
is, aside from Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, is the best fundraiser
in the history of the Democratic party. And it's not even close. Since
Pelosi got into Democratic leadership in 2002, she has raised almost
$568 million for the party and its candidates -- including $141.5
million in the last election alone, according to figures provided by her
office. That's a stunning amount of money. There's no one else among
House Democrats who could come close to touching that number. And all
those fundraising dollars buy her a whole lot of good will among her
colleagues.
2. The liberal bloc
The
drastic losses suffered by House Democrats in the 2010 and 2014
elections had the seemingly contradictory effect of helping Pelosi. Why?
Because the parts of the Democratic herd that were thinned were largely
the moderate and conservative members. The Democrats that remained were
the most liberal bloc, those representing districts where it is almost
impossible for them to lose. Those liberals have always been Pelosi's
base of support within the Democratic caucus. And their voices got much
more influential even as the Democratic party was being decimated
nationally.
3. A weak bench
Five
years ago, there were a handful of aspiring Democrats in the House seen
as the party's next generation of leaders. Now, almost all are gone or
significantly weakened. Chris Van Hollen is in the Senate. Debbie
Wasserman Schultz is badly damaged after a stint as the chair of the
Democratic National Committee. Xavier Becerra returned to California to
be the state's attorney general. People like Seth Moulton of
Massachusetts or Kathleen Rice of Pennsylvania, who have been two of the
loudest voices against Pelosi of late, are too junior in the chamber to
put up a serious fight. Then there is the fact that Pelosi -- whether
by design or helpful accident -- is surrounded by a current crop of
leaders that are just as old as she is. House Democrats' #2 -- Steny
Hoyer of Maryland -- is 78. The number three ranking Democrat, Jim
Clyburn of South Carolina, is 76.
Bookmark
this piece. Every time you hear chatter about a "serious" effort to
oust Pelosi, pull it up. Unless and until the three points above change
-- and I don't see how, in the near term, they will -- there is no way anyone is beating her.
Pelosi is now virtually guaranteed to go out on her own terms -- whatever and whenever she decides those will be.
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