Sixteen Democrats who’ve opposed Nancy Pelosi’s quest to become speaker released a letter Monday saying they will vote for ‘new leadership’ when the House picks its leaders in January, posing a threat to her effort to lead her party’s House majority in the next Congress.
The release of the letter suggests that rather than spending the next six weeks focusing on a fresh agenda to present to Americans, House Democrats could be consumed with a bitter and attention-grabbing internal leadership fight.
The battle pits the party’s largely liberal and diverse membership backing Pelosi, D-Calif., against a small group of mostly moderate, male lawmakers. Of the 16 Democrats who signed the letter – which stops short of explicitly saying they will vote for an opposing candidate for speaker – all but two are men: Reps. Kathleen Rice of New York and California’s Linda Sanchez.
‘We promised to change the status quo, and we intend to deliver on that promise,’ the authors wrote, referring to campaign pledges to back new House leaders made by a number of Democratic candidates.
‘Therefore, we are committed to voting for new leadership in both our Caucus meeting and on the House Floor.’
No surrender: Nancy Pelosi showed no signs of backing down from running despite enough members of her caucus signing a letter to block her from becoming Speaker
Rebels: New York congresswoman Kathleen Rice (left) and California congresswoman Linda Sanchez (right) are the only two female signatories to the anti-Pelosi letter
Pelosi, who has activated an aggressive campaign for the job involving House colleagues, prominent outside Democrats and party-aligned interest groups, showed no sign of surrender.
She is known as a precise vote counter with a keen sense of her caucus’ leanings and is aided by the lack of a declared opponent and many weeks during which she can dangle choice committee assignments, rules changes and other goodies to help attract support.
Pelosi has repeatedly expressed confidence she will be elected speaker. A senior Democratic aide noted Monday that more than 9 in 10 Democrats had not signed the letter.
Though the mavericks’ numbers represent a handful of the 232 House Democrats elected – with a handful of races still undecided – they could still garner enough opposition to thwart her.
When the full House elects its new leaders Jan. 3, the speaker will need a majority of 218 votes, assuming that no one votes ‘present’ and Republicans oppose her en masse, as seems likely. At 232 seats, Pelosi could afford to lose just 14 Democrats and still become speaker.
The rebels’ letter to their Democratic colleagues praises Pelosi, 78, for her long career and calls her ‘a historic figure’ who helped the party win major legislative victories. Pelosi was speaker from 2007 through 2010 when Democrats briefly held the House majority and has been the party’s leader since 2003.
Letter: This is how the 16 declared their public opposition to Nancy Pelosi
‘However, we also recognize that in this recent election, Democrats ran and won on a message of change,’ they wrote. ‘Our majority came on the backs of candidates who said that they would support new leadership because voters in hard-won districts, and across the country, want to see real change in Washington.’
Of the signees, five are incoming House freshmen, or hope to be. Two of them – Anthony Brindisi of New York and Ben McAdams of Utah – are in races in which The Associated Press has yet to call a winner.
Even so, Pelosi critics assert there are several more Democrats who’ve not signed the letter who are prepared to vote for a candidate opposing Pelosi. That includes Rep. Marcia Fudge of Ohio, who has said she is considering running for speaker.
President Donald Trump has tweeted his respect and support for Pelosi and even offered to round up GOP votes to help elect her speaker. Pelosi’s office has said she will win with Democratic votes, and it seems a stretch to expect Republicans to help elect her speaker – a vote that could open them up to primary challenges in 2020.