Hakeem Jeffries favored to lead U.S. House Democrats after Pelosi exit
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[November 18, 2022]
By Richard Cowan and Moira Warburton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi's decision to step down from her
leadership role after her fellow Democrats lost their majority in last
week's midterm elections positions Hakeem Jeffries - a liberal
congressman from New York - as a likely top contender to lead the party
for the next two years.
Jeffries, 52, would be the first Black House Democratic leader,
representing both the party's diverse voter base and bringing a new
generation of leadership. Pelosi, the first woman to hold the job of
speaker, is 82, and two other members of the party's leadership are in
their 80s. House Democrats are scheduled to vote on their leaders on
Nov. 30.
Jeffries, who has held the leadership post of House Democratic Caucus
chairman since 2019, also would represent a stylistic contrast to
Pelosi, who made her announcement on Thursday. She has proven in two
stints as speaker to be hard-charging whereas he is generally considered
more reserved.
"It's Jeffries' to lose," said one House Democratic aide keeping close
watch of leadership jostling, who asked not to be identified.
Pelosi and other senior Democrats have been under pressure to give way
to a younger generation of Democrats in the 435-seat House.
Some other top Democrats may also covet becoming the top House Democrat.
Current House Democratic Leader Steny Hoyer, 83, said he would not seek
a leadership position in the next Congress and backed Jeffries.
Also in the mix for the top leadership job might be the current No. 3
House Democrat, 82-year-old James Clyburn of South Carolina. Clyburn has
been an important voice in the Congressional Black Caucus and played a
major role in energizing President Joe Biden's 2020 primary election
campaign.
Clyburn told reporters ahead of Pelosi's announcement that he intends to
remain in the House Democratic leadership regardless of the path she
takes.
"I plan to stay in leadership. I've been saying that all year," Clyburn
said, adding that he has "no idea" which leadership post he would fill
in the next Congress.
"It's up to the caucus," Clyburn said.
Representative Katherine Clark, 59, of Massachusetts is likely to run
for the No. 2 Democratic leadership job, a post known as "whip." Clark
has served in leadership positions and, like Jeffries, is a member of
the Congressional Progressive Caucus. Moderate Californian Pete Aguilar
could move up from vice chairman of the caucus to become chairman, the
job Jeffries now holds.
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U.S. Representative Hakeem Jeffries
(D-NY) speaks in favor of voting rights legislation during a
Congressional Black Caucus press conference on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., January 12, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File
Photo
THE MINORITY PARTY
The next House Democratic leader will be expected to work closely
with others in party leadership on legislation, strategy and
messaging.
Democratic Representative Adam Schiff, 62, has also risen in
prominence over the past few years thanks to his leading role in the
impeachment of Donald Trump and the subsequent investigation into
the Republican former president's role in the attack by his
supporters on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
But Schiff does not have his eyes on a House leadership position and
instead is considering a run for the U.S. Senate, a source familiar
with his thinking said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The post of minority leader wields far less clout that the speaker.
The Democratic leadership team's duty in the minority will be
deciding if and when to help Republicans get essential legislation
passed such as government funding bills, amid potential revolts from
far-right Republicans.
Republican Kevin McCarthy, positioning himself to become speaker,
will preside over a very narrow majority in the chamber, with no
more than seven votes to play with, depending on the outcome of the
few remaining House races still up in the air, with votes still
being counted.
Top Democrats also will be responsible for promoting Biden's agenda
in the final two years of his term. And it would defend him during
any Republican-led House investigations of his administration or his
family.
The party leader also plays a key role in raising campaign funds for
House Democratic candidates - a task at which Pelosi excelled,
having raked in hundreds of millions of dollars in her two-decade
run.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton and Richard Cowan; Editing by Will
Dunham and Scott Malone)
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