Friday, January 31, 2014

Will she run for a 14th term?

"Democrats need to net 17 seats to hand Pelosi the gavel, and analysts expect little movement, with President Obama's low approval ratings and redistricting reducing the number of competitive districts.
The decisions by Pelosi's California allies also raise the prospect that the minority leader herself could decide to retire—if not this year, then in the near future. (On previous occasions, Pelosi has said she's running for a 14th term.) She's played an active role in helping her party fundraise to take back the House, and she has shown no signs of slowing down. But California's filing deadline is more than a month away (March 7), giving her time to change course.

In a statement released this afternoon, Pelosi reiterated she is running for another term.

"I'm running. I've already started the paperwork process. My work is not finished," she said.
...Before the 2012 nonpartisan redistricting, most House seats in California were gerrymandered to the point where most members stayed in their seats indefinitely. (Before the last election, the average tenure among California members of Congress in 2012 was just under 16 years.) Many of the more senior members developed close ties with Pelosi, and sought to move up the congressional leadership chain instead of pursuing statewide political office.
...That's changed recently, thanks to a redistricting shake-up and Democratic efforts to recruit younger, more diverse talent to the state. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee made a concerted effort in 2012 to recruit a diverse crop of outsiders, bringing in newcomers such as emergency physician Raul Ruiz and Mark Takano, the first openly gay person of color to hold a seat in Congress."

Here's a little background on her from a well-written 2009 article that contains some well-placed Taibbi-esque jabs, but without the overkill:

"After all, for Pelosi, vote counting is something you do with people you love. She’s the seventh child and only daughter of Thomas “Big Tommy” D’Alesandro Jr., a slick dresser who wore diamond rings on each of his pinkies and began representing Little Italy in Maryland’s House of Delegates at 22, followed by five terms in Congress and three as Baltimore’s mayor. (When asked about his rival in one election, D’Alesandro said, “I don’t know [who he is], but it’s some no-good son of a bitch, that’s all I can tell you.”) Nancy’s childhood home functioned as D’Alesandro’s auxiliary office, with a portrait of FDR in the living room, copies of The Congressional Record stored under her bed, and an open door for constituents searching for jobs, permits, stop signs. The kids manned the front desk, Mom stirred a pot of stew for the hungry, and the blessings that constituents received were written on index cards, then organized into a “favor file.”

After graduating from Trinity College, a girls’ school in D.C., Pelosi married a financier, with whom she then moved to Manhattan—“I love the way the adrenaline just comes up through the ground in New York,” she says—and then San Francisco, when her husband was offered a job at a bank that was lending to tech companies beginning to spring up in Silicon Valley. She began to host Democratic fund-raisers in her home to meet the new community. “Moving to San Francisco at that time, it wouldn’t have been unreasonable for her to trip, but she’s as straight as can be,” says Marc Sandalow, author of Madam Speaker, another biography of Pelosi. Jerry Brown, a high-school acquaintance of her husband’s, needed help running against Jimmy Carter in the 1976 primaries, and Pelosi offered to set him up in Maryland. He carried the state, and she was awarded a seat on the Democratic National Committee for her efforts, quickly rising through the ranks by formidable fund-raising skills and helping to organize the 1984 convention in San Francisco. She ran for national party chairman, but withdrew when she realized that she didn’t have the votes. It’s the only election she hasn’t won in her political career. “People tell me that I was the best-qualified candidate,” she grumbled at the time. “But some of them tell me it’s too bad that I’m not a man.”"

New York Magazine

18 comments:

chickelit said...

Of course she should run again and win. Nancy Pelosi personifies what's wrong with the Dem party -- for example, why I stopped voting for them. She is the best mirror for people across the country to look into and think "not in my yard."

Leland said...

I realize the GOP is stupid, but how dumb must one be not to make Pelosi the poster child for ACA? I get calling it Obamacare, but Obama isn't up for re-election. Pelosi may not have direct competition in her district, but every Democrat voted to the House will vote for her as Speaker. The GOP should package this video and remind everyone that the Democrat controlled House run be Speaker Pelosi threw away rules and tradition to ram the ACA into being with only a 5 point margin. She and Democrats should never be given that much control again.

The Dude said...

"D'Alesandro ran for Governor of Maryland in 1954, but was forced to drop out due to being implicated in receiving undeclared money from Dominic Piracci, a parking garage owner convicted of fraud, conspiracy, and conspiracy to obstruct justice."

Not for nothing is Maryland known as the cradle of corruption.

Unknown said...

My work is not finished."

Lord help us.


I agree, Leland. Why didn't the GOP seize upon the above, and make it a central issue? In so many ways.

Imagine if the GOP passed the equivalent of the ACA (on party line vote, in the dead of night - without actually reading the thousands of thousands of pages?)

Imagine the endless media outrage?

Unknown said...

Nancy and Hillary are queen central planners. And they won't go away.

Amartel said...

The GOP establishment is doing just fine as the Progressive Lite Party. (Not that they would make any inroads whatsoever in dull old fascist San Francisco.) There is just no motivation or energy in the GOP to show the Progressive Left for who they really are. Pelosi is just one of many many many examples of succeeding by latching onto state power and then spending the rest of her career failing upwards at the expense of the American taxpayer. (See, e.g., our two Senators.)

Will she run for a 14th term?
It's not like it's a difficult job. The real question is: Has she siphoned enough OPM into her personal coffers and, if so, is her personal reputation within the establishment sufficiently protected so the OPM can't be siphoned right back out?

Calypso Facto said...

"My work is not finished"

She means "My husband's work is not finished." He needs more time to complete the sale of the unused USPS properties under the contract she landed for him so that he can collect the $1 billion of sales commissions from Uncle Sam.

ricpic said...

Why do people who move to San Francisco "trip," whatever that means? Reason I ask is because the article praises Pelosi for not tripping when she moved to San Francisco. I realize this is New York magazine, in other words cloud-cuckooland, nevertheless...

chickelit said...

@ricpic: I believe it reefers to "seeing the elephant" or, in her case, not.

President-Mom-Jeans said...

I don't care if she stays in office or not, that god forsaken shithole of a district will always bring forth another leftist monster.

I just hope that dirty old bitch shakes loose the mortal coil sooner rather than later. All her ill gotten wealth and botox won't make her immortal.

Oh the celebration that will occur when Pelosi finally is rotting in the ground.

Leland said...


Imagine the endless media outrage?


I don't have to imagine. I recall all the media outrage over the Iraq War resolution, which won by a much greater margin and with 2 weeks of debate on the resolution without amendment.

Amartel said...

April said "Nancy and Hillary are queen central planners. And they won't go away."

Well, Nostrils Waxman is finally shuffling off. Not all of them get carted off the legislative floor in a jewel encrusted golden sarcophagus borne aloft by poor people (close relatives hoping for bequests). Of course this is only happening now that an appropriately stupid failure has been selected for succession to his throne of corruption and consequence-free incompetence.

edutcher said...

Scratch every liberated woman, you find Daddy's Little Girl - with a Sugar Daddy.

"the first openly gay person of color to hold a seat in Congress"

So nice to see she has her priorities straight.

ricpic said...

You can't get mo' fab than openly gay poison of colah.

Bleach Drinkers Curing Coronavirus Together said...

I think she's a fine rep and never understood all the Republi-hatred toward her. But then, I never understand Republican hatred in general. It seems to be an end unto itself most of the time.

Unknown said...

So Ritmo, you'd be fine if the GOP slammed legislation through - on party line vote - for something that adversely affected your life?

Amartel said...

It's not hatred - calling opposing views "hate" is typical lefty projection and argument deflection.

deborah said...

I think she'd have a ball as governor.