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		Ohio Democrat hints may take on Pelosi 
		for powerful U.S. House speaker job 
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		[November 17, 2018] 
		By Richard Cowan
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Out of a small pool 
		of party dissidents trying to stop fellow Democrat Nancy Pelosi from 
		becoming speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives in January, only 
		one has been bold enough to hint strongly that she might toss her own 
		hat into the ring.
 
 Representative Marcia Fudge has not formally announced her candidacy. 
		But she has alluded to her interest in media interviews in recent days, 
		and says she is being encouraged to run by an undisclosed number of her 
		Democratic colleagues.
 
 In a statement to Reuters on Friday, Fudge noted support from people 
		"who look to me as the next speaker of the House."
 
 "In this first stage of the process, I am still giving it considerable 
		thought" but have not made a final decision, she said in an email.
 
 Democrats are scheduled to meet behind closed doors on Nov. 28 to pick 
		their leaders for the new 2019-20 House after wresting the chamber from 
		the Republicans on Nov. 6. A vote by the full House on the speaker is 
		expected in early January.
 
 The speaker is arguably the second most powerful position in the U.S. 
		government after President Donald Trump's.
 
 Representative Tim Ryan, a ringleader in the revolt against Pelosi, said 
		Democrats won the election on a promise of change. "And Marcia Fudge is 
		change. We have to respect the people who sent us here."
 
 Despite a decade in the House, the 66-year-old Fudge, the former chair 
		of the Congressional Black Caucus, does not have the national profile 
		that Pelosi has cultivated in 16 years of leading her party in the 
		chamber.
 
 That may be exactly what Pelosi critics are looking for - someone who 
		can bring fresh blood to a leadership team with an average age of 78, 
		Pelosi's age.
 
 Fudge represents the Midwestern "swing state" of Ohio and would be the 
		first African-American speaker. She is also a woman in what is being 
		called the "year of the woman" in U.S. politics, with a flood of new 
		female lawmakers joining House Democratic ranks.
 
 As lawmakers left for a recess on Friday, Fudge met Pelosi for 45 
		minutes, after which the California representative said tersely on 
		Twitter: "We had a candid and respectful conversation."
 
 SMOOTH OPERATOR
 
 Many Democrats are still betting on Pelosi, one of Congress' most savvy 
		politicians, who made history in 2007 when she became the first female 
		speaker.
 
 Pelosi helped orchestrate the party's huge midterm election win. 
		Democrats made a net gain of at least 32 House seats when only 23 were 
		needed to recapture a majority. Several seats are still undecided.
 
 Republicans kept control of the Senate.
 
 Some Democratic lawmakers have suggested Pelosi could tamp down any 
		insurrection by promising to serve as speaker for a limited time, 
		opening the way for a new generation of leaders.
 
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			Representative Marcia Fudge (D-OH) takes the stage at the Democratic 
			National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. July 25, 
			2016. REUTERS/Charles Mostoller/File Photo 
            
 
            Democratic strategist Jim Manley said her opponents, believed to 
			number around two dozen, have so far been "unable to provide a solid 
			justification for launching this maneuver at this point in time."
 Asked by Reuters to outline the kind of changes someone like Fudge 
			could bring, Democratic Representative Kathleen Rice, a Pelosi 
			critic, did not tick off a different legislative agenda or even 
			criticisms of Pelosi's performance.
 
 Instead, she said, Fudge "would make history as the first 
			African-American speaker," adding "she's a woman, which I think is 
			significant as well."
 
 Running for speaker or any leadership position in Congress is mostly 
			conducted through one-on-one conversations.
 
 One former senior House Republican aide said the dissidents' 
			strategy of waiting until the last minute to formally declare a 
			challenge to Pelosi had its advantages, one of which is that without 
			an opponent Pelosi has no-one to attack.
 
 Fudge has faced criticism in recent days for refusing to embrace 
			legislation extending civil rights protections on the basis of 
			sexual orientation and gender identity. The bill is backed by nearly 
			every other House Democrat.
 
 Fudge has tried to quell the controversy, saying she supports equal 
			rights but prefers a broad rewrite of civil rights law.
 
 Some Democrats worry a messy leadership fight could overshadow the 
			midterm election successes.
 
 Democratic Representative Gerry Connolly, who backs Pelosi, said 
			many members yearn for new leaders, but he fears the potential 
			fallout from a bitter speaker's race.
 
 Democrats were elected "to provide adult supervision for Donald J. 
			Trump...so let's not be overly distracted," he said.
 
 (Reporting By Richard Cowan; additional reporting by Susan Cornwell; 
			editing by Grant McCool and Sonya Hepinstall)
 
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