Masterclass: Nancy Pelosi on Power

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Nancy Pelosi didn’t write a memoir. Instead, she has delivered a masterclass on how to govern the House of Representatives. Her book, The Art of Power is subtitled My Story as the First Woman Speaker of the House.” 

During her 20 years serving either as Speaker of the House or heading its Democratic minority, Pelosi worked with presidents from Bush to Biden. During those years, she engineered many legislative victories, most prominent among them: her herculean fight on behalf of the Affordable Care Act. Initially she had assigned the ACA to three powerful House committees. Those committees succeeded and – thanks to Pelosi’s considerable arm twisting and persuasion – assembled enough votes to pass final legislation on March 21, 2010. President Obama officially signed the ACA into law three days later.

But Pelosi’s task wasn’t over. When Donald Trump, who had vowed to “repeal and replace” the ACA, won in 2016, Pelosi changed her mind about maybe leaving Congress. She says she had to stay “to keep the other side from making America sick again.” Despite those who urged Democratic leaders to cut a deal and save what they could, they united and worked with “Protect Our Care” to march, rally, and mobilize across the country.

Trying for repeal, Speaker Paul Ryan came up short. He couldn’t rally enough votes for a hodgepodge substitute that would have stripped health care from 24 million Americans. Rather than lose, Ryan pulled his own bill. Pelosi points out, “One lesson in successful legislating: the Speaker should only bring a bill to the floor when he has the votes.” Ryan was forced to go the White House and explain to President Trump that he was unable to pass the repeal.

Nevertheless House Republicans kept trying, even having a Rose Garden celebration while introducing another substitute proposal. That summer, Senate Republicans advanced a measure to repeal ACA with no replacement. It was, according to Pelosi, “a gift to the health care industry and a cruel swipe at America’s working families.”

On the day of the vote, Pelosi talked with Senator John McCain, R-Arizona. They’d become friends — and sometimes foes — over the years. As she tells it, “I wanted Sen. McCain to be aware of some of the dirty tactics being employed by the House GOP. He said, ‘Nancy I don’t need you to tell me that.’” He said, under the circumstances, his vote would be no.

Pelosi kept his comment a secret. That night, she gathered with a crowd of ACA supporters outside the Capitol. She told the crowd, “Let’s believe we can succeed.” Hours later she watched as McCain, ever a person of his word, turned thumbs down during the Senate vote. It was his vote (“the thumbs-down heard ‘round the world”) that sank the repeal.

Pelosi details the outcome. Since its enactment, the ACA has meant that “more than 40 million Americans have gained insurance, nearly 130 million can no longer be denied because of preexisting conditions, and women can no longer be denied – or charged higher premiums than men – simply because they are women.”

The ACA fight is perhaps the most momentous of Pelosi’s eight years, on and off, as the House’s “most powerful leader in modern times.” That includes her work during the Biden years. When Joe Biden took office, the situation was dire: 18 million Americans unemployed, 24 million going hungry, 40 million could not pay their rent. It was Speaker Pelosi who shepherded through Biden’s American Rescue Plan, the Infrastructure Bill, the CHIPS and Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act and its slash in the cost of prescription drugs for seniors.

The most riveting accounts in Pelosi’s book are not the nitty gritty of enacting bills, but her the story about the vicious attack on her beloved husband, Paul Pelosi, and her vivid description of the tense hours she and other leaders spent during the January 6 assault on the Capitol.

Pelosi’s encounters with Donald Trump supply many of the book’s anecdotes, some previously untold. She speaks of seeing Trump’s mental unbalance up close: his penchant for repeatedly stomping out of meetings, his foul mouth, his temper tantrums, disrespect of the nation’s patriots, and ridiculous insistence that he was the greatest of all time. She recalls Trump’s 2020 state of the union speech and how she began marking each page where he told lies, finally giving up and tearing the speech in two. She tells of his midnight phone calls and how Trump secretly listened in on private meetings. Her experiences convinced her that he must — never again — be allowed to occupy the White House.

Pelosi has much to say about the importance of the speaker’s role. She terms it “the most challenging in government.” The speaker has to address the same array of issues as the president, but without the president’s much larger staff and bully pulpit. How did Pelosi manage years of triumphs? The secret she says can be summed up in one word: “respect.” She believes power comes from the bottom up and legislators of whatever background need and deserve the leader’s sincere respect.

There’s another important word Pelosi lives by: “credit.” She is quick to share victories with those who worked to make them happen. On ACA, there’s Sen. John McCain (“I wish he were still here”); Harry Reid, leading Democrats in the Senate; Health and Human Services director Kathleen Sebelius; Congressman John Dingell, and the many others who twisted arms and counted votes.

Often asked why she never ran for higher office, Pelosi says, “I did not regard my role as steppingstone to another office and that’s why members trusted that I didn’t have a personal political agenda.” She confesses a deep love for the House of Representatives  that she’s served for 37 years, and her love for colleagues who must stand for election every two years. More than senators with six-year terms and presidents with four, members of the House are closest to the people they represent.

In addition to her allegiance to the House, Pelosi relies on her religious background for support. She cites a prayer from the wall of a Sierra Leone hospital: “When I die and meet my Creator, He will ask me to show Him my wounds. If I tell him I have no wounds, my Creator will ask; Was nothing worth fighting for?” Pelosi says she’s proud of her wounds: “for the children.”

Jean Godden
Jean Godden
Jean Godden wrote columns first for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and late for the Seattle Times. In 2002, she quit to run for City Council where she served for 12 years. Since then she published a book of city stories titled “Citizen Jean.” She is now co-host of The Bridge aired on community station KMGP at 101.1 FM. You can email tips and comments to Jean at jgodden@blarg.net.

6 COMMENTS

  1. In a later time, perhaps even now, she would have made a wonderful president. Sad that she may have had to sacrifice a long-time friendship with Joe Biden to move the country past our ugly condition. We owe her far more than we even know. Medal of Freedom, well deserved, awarded by her friend Joe. Maybe there will be a reconciliation.

  2. The evolution of a nation’s political existence is a long journey; in our case, one which was planned almost 250 years ago. Presidents are a kind of travel director — they do the talking, describing the next stage we need to go and providing inspiration when our energy flags — while it is Congress, the Courts and the States which actually do the walking needed to reach the goal.

    Presidents do important stuff, to be sure, but nothing gets done unless Congress acts and the Supreme Court validates.

    Nancy Pelosi’s long service in the House of Representatives exemplifies the best motivation for any would-be politician: the desire to work within a system to serve the best interests of her constituents and, by logical extension, all the people.

  3. I consider myself lucky in many aspects of life including having Ms. Pelosi as Speaker. A transformative Speaker.

    On a lesser level, she was busy humiliating the Velveeta Voldemort and stated “I have many grandchildren and can identify a temper tantrum when I see one.”

    Then there was the time Voldemort’s “wall” was the subject with the various iterations of said wall–“I can’t tell any longer–they may be talking about a beaded curtain.”

    Office of The Speaker had responsibilities besides garden variety legislative tasks and Pelosi positively revelled.when taking VV to task.

  4. Jean, this is a fantastic review of Nancy Pelosi’s new book, with enough insights and emotion that I have tears running down my face. R-E-S-P-E-C-T: we all need to sing it in praise of Nancy.

  5. Thank you for this. I was initially opposed to expecting Joe Biden to step down, but seeing how Kamala Harris has exploded into the election has changed my mind. I haven’t seen such excitement since 2008, when Barack Obama was nominated. What I like so much Nancy Pelosi’s approach is her quiet, steely approach. She met privately with Biden, far different from George Clooney expounding publicly about Biden. the way many prominent Democrats publicly humiliated him. I understand that she’s always had guts. I met her once, shook her hand, and she radiated warmth and kindness.

  6. What a gift Nancy Pelosi was to our country and how perfect that you describe her book as a masterclass on governing. She is giving all those who now wield power examples of how to do it effectively and with dignity and respect for others. I also am grateful for how much she has done to help elect more women — as an amazing role model but also by always turning up and giving her support to organizations seeking to help women win office.

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