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		For Democrats, U.S. House win moves 
		Pelosi to center stage 
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		 [November 07, 2018] 
		By Susan Cornwell 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Now that the 
		Democrats have won control of the U.S. House of Representatives, they 
		need to choose a leader and that means solving one of their toughest 
		puzzles: Nancy Pelosi.
 
 A contest among the Democrats for the House's top job of speaker will 
		play out over the next 10 weeks or so, with the formidable 78-year-old 
		San Francisco liberal at the center.
 
 Pelosi has been clear that she wants to be speaker of the House again. 
		She made history from 2007 to 2011 as the first woman speaker, a 
		powerful position second in the line of emergency U.S. presidential 
		succession, after the vice president.
 
 During the congressional campaigns that just ended, about 60 Democratic 
		House candidates called for new leadership, registering indirect 
		dissatisfaction with Pelosi, who has become a punching bag for 
		Republicans.
 
 That level of unrest means the Democrats' first order of business as the 
		House majority will be to decide whether to put the speaker's gavel back 
		in Pelosi's hands, or not.
 
 "None of that frightens me. It's what I anticipate, what I expect and 
		what I thrive on," Pelosi said last month at a Harvard University forum.
 
 At a victory celebration in Washington on Tuesday, Pelosi said a 
		Democratic House "will work for solutions that bring us together because 
		we have all had enough of division.”
 
		
		 
		
 She was flanked by No. 2 House Democrat Steny Hoyer and No. 3 House 
		Democrat James Clyburn in a sign that the three could aim to lead the 
		chamber in the new Congress that convenes in early January. Pelosi made 
		no mention of the upcoming party leadership election.
 
 For 16 years, Pelosi has steered the House Democrats, serving first as 
		minority leader, then speaker, then minority leader again after the 2011 
		Republican takeover of the chamber. Her path back to the top job is 
		clear.
 
 First, she must capture a majority of Democrats in a behind-closed-doors 
		Nov. 28 party leadership election. No certain rival to Pelosi has 
		emerged but there are possible challengers.
 
 Two years ago, in the internal party race for minority leader, 63 
		Democrats voted for Representative Tim Ryan of Ohio, but Pelosi received 
		134 votes.
 
 On Sunday, Ryan was asked on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures" program 
		if he would challenge Pelosi.
 
 "There are a number of candidates that are having conversations that are 
		talking about running," he said. "I will say it's not going to be a 
		coronation. Somebody is going to run for leadership.
 
 "The American people want a change. I think the Democrats want a change. 
		So we're going to have that discussion starting on Wednesday. ... I want 
		to be a part of that discussion."
 
		CLYBURN WON'T CHALLENGE
 Clyburn, a 13-term congressman from South Carolina, has told reporters 
		that he will not challenge Pelosi directly but will run for speaker if 
		she does not have enough votes.
 
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			U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi celebrates the Democrats 
			winning a majority in the U.S. House of Representatives in the U.S. 
			midterm elections during a Democratic election night party in 
			Washington, U.S. November 6, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
            
			 
            Many Democrats have said the No. 2 House Democrat, Steny Hoyer of 
			Maryland, also is waiting in the wings. But at ages 78 and 79, 
			respectively, neither Clyburn nor Hoyer represents the kind of "new 
			blood" that some younger Democrats seek.
 A handful of more junior lawmakers are in the frame, as well. One is 
			Louisiana's Cedric Richmond, 45, chairman of the Congressional Black 
			Caucus, which recently sent a letter to lawmakers saying that if 
			there is a leadership change, it wanted one of the top two 
			Democratic leadership spots, a Democratic aide said. Clyburn is also 
			a caucus member.
 
 Ben Ray Lujan, 46, New Mexico is the current chairman of the 
			Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which coordinates House 
			Democrats' election efforts. He appeared with Pelosi before 
			reporters on Tuesday and said he was confident that Democrats would 
			win a House majority.
 
 Two others sometimes tagged as potential party leaders are Hakeem 
			Jeffries, 48, a New Yorker who is also a member of the Congressional 
			Black Caucus, and Cheri Bustos, 57, from a northwestern Illinois 
			district that President Donald Trump won in 2016.
 
 If Pelosi prevails at the party level, she would become the 
			Democrats' candidate for speaker in a public roll call vote in early 
			January by all 435 House members from both parties.
 
 The winner of a majority of the votes cast gets the gavel. That 
			means the candidate of the party with the most House seats wins, as 
			long as party members stick together.
 
            
			 
            
 The current House speaker is Paul Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican who 
			is retiring from Congress.
 
 (Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Additional reporting by Richard Cowan 
			and David Morgan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Bill Trott)
 
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