Seth Moulton Had His 5 Minutes
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Tuesday evening, Liz Goodwin, writing for the Boston Globe, speculated that conservative and very ambitious Massachusetts congressman Seth Moulton was playing a risky game against Pelosi. His bid to replace her with a Wall Street-friendly shill "has been brash and bold or reckless and quixotic, depending on your point of view. But what," asked Goodwin, "will it look like if Pelosi regains the gavel? Make that, most likely, when." And, of course, she did win yesterday-- 203-32. The more daunting hurdle she faces is in January "when she likely needs to get 218 votes on the House floor to officially become speaker. That means she can only lose about 17 Democrats and still claim the gavel without some support from GOP members."
Moulton, who’s emerged as the unofficial leader of the group trying to dislodge Pelosi, may find himself in a jam, and perhaps a pariah in the party caucus, if she is able to quell the dissent in her ranks as her allies confidently predict. The question for him isn’t just how defeat will play inside the House but also what it will look like outside the Beltway, where his larger ambitions may well lie.In theory, Moulton is right. In reality, he's a rightist. And, besides... you can't replace somebody with nobody. And Moulton never could drum up a candidate willing to run against her-- and knew no one would vote for him aside from freshmen he's given money to. Progressives want someone better than Pelosi; not someone worse. Moulton and his cronies are all worse... much, much worse.
Much will depend on the tone he sets when this contretemps is done; will he beat a retreat or carry on as a critic? Certainly, the Marine veteran has been aggressive to this point, deploying every weapon in his arsenal against the longtime Democratic leader, prompting blowback from liberal pundits and some of his own constituents. He recruited House candidates who largely repudiated Pelosi on the trail, gathered signatures on a letter opposing her, and went on a media blitz warning of the dangers to Democrats if she’s reelected.
The two have traded barbs, with Moulton saying he was “100 percent” sure she will not be the next speaker and Pelosi dismissing his criticism out of hand. “I will be speaker of the House no matter what Seth Moulton says,” Pelosi told reporters earlier this month.
So far, Pelosi has neutralized opposition to her with carrots, not sticks. She convinced Representative Brian Higgins of New York to remove his name from Moulton’s letter by promising an effort to advance legislation to expand Medicare and by adding several new leadership positions for younger members. Moulton and Pelosi have not reached out to each other to negotiate.
Moulton’s predicament recalls a famous line from the HBO show The Wire: “You come at the king, you best not miss.” With Pelosi firmly in charge as speaker, Moulton could face consequences, from missing out on plum committee assignments to facing stony silence when it comes to his legislative agenda.
While Pelosi has made no sign that she plans to retaliate, there’s a rich tradition of speakers taking revenge on critics. After securing his third term as speaker several years ago, Representative John Boehner of Ohio kicked two Republicans who opposed him off the influential Rules Committee.
For Moulton, it’s the Transportation Committee that beckons. The congressman was the managing director of a high speed rail company before heading to Washington, and he has had his eye on a seat on the committee for several years.
When Representative Mike Capuano lost the primary to incoming Representative Ayanna Pressley earlier this year, Massachusetts lost its seat on the Transportation Committee, opening up a spot.
But that seat is looking like a long shot now that Moulton is the face of the Democratic resistance to Pelosi.
Representative Richard Neal, the dean of the Massachusetts delegation, declined to answer questions about whether Moulton will be considered for the seat through a spokesman.
“I believe it is crucial to have someone from our state serving on that important committee. And I will urge my colleagues in the Democratic leadership to strongly consider this request,” Neal said in a statement.
Moulton already sits on the Armed Services Committee.
But House speakers control far more than committee assignments. With the gavel, Pelosi can decide whom to tap to write bills and amendments, as well as whose reelection coffers get an infusion of party cash.
“If I were him or his staff, I’d be watching over my shoulder in the weeks to come,” said Jim Manley, a former top aide to Senators Ted Kennedy and Harry Reid.
One of Pelosi’s closest allies brushed off the idea she would be concerned with Moulton or any of the other rebels attempting to block her election after she became speaker.
“I don’t think she’s in the business of settling scores,” said Representative Jim McGovern, who is set to become the chair of the Rules Committee. “Nancy Pelosi is about issues and about what’s good for this country.”
Moulton’s allies hope any blowback would be brief.
“He’s going to pay a price for standing up like this, but in the past when there have been these kinds of pushes in the caucus leadership they tend to be forgotten pretty quickly,” said David Gergen, an informal adviser to Moulton.
Gergen added that he doesn’t believe Moulton is interested in pressuring Pelosi on policy issues in the way Tea Party members dogged Republican leadership. Moulton will likely continue making the case that House leadership needs to pass the torch to the next generation, but not remain a thorn in Pelosi’s side on her legislative agenda. “I think they’re fairly close together on policy,” Gergen said of Moulton and Pelosi.
“I believe once this process is over . . . Seth will be an important part of the Democratic caucus,” said Representative John Garamendi of California, who’s running for a leadership spot.
Moulton declined to comment for this article, but he argued in a statement that his push for new leadership has never been personal.
“Leader Pelosi wants to boil this down to a personal argument, but this is so much bigger than her,” he said in a statement. “It’s about the entire, stagnant, three-person leadership team and having a serious conversation about promoting leaders who reflect the future of our caucus.”
Labels: battle for the speakership, House Democratic leadership, Seth Moulton
8 Comments:
“Nancy Pelosi is about issues and about what’s good for this country.”
Give me a minute to stop laughing.
OK, I'm better now. I need to fix that statement for accuracy:
“Nancy Pelosi pretends to be about issues and is really about what’s good for her.”
"We're all capitalists here" - right Nancy? Where's that MFA bill? Oh, right - you're only looking to IMPROVE Obamacare. And impeachment remains off the table. I watch to see how you interfere with investigations of Trump crimes. I expect a lot of betrayal as you give away the store to corporations and tell We the People to like it.
I wouldn't have liked Seth Moulton as Speaker because he clearly doesn't know what he's doing. But you do, Nancy. And you will only do what's best for you.
best for her... and her donors. that's the implication, as always, ain't it?
As bad as Pelosi is for the middle class, Moulton is even worse. That's today's Democratic party ladies and gentlemen. It's all about doing the bidding for the money bundlers - and nothing for the middle and lower classes who are struggling and could really need some reasonable help and support.
I know, I know. BUT Pelosi is a strong politician who can get get things done. This is absolutely not the time to quarrel within the ranks. It is critical for the Dems to hang together and be strong and do what needs to be done with Trump's disastrous presidency.
And..to argue about getting rid of her with no one to take her place or no plan sounds exactly like Brexit. Nothing good would come of it. Leave Nancy alone. Dissing her is not good for the current times, not good at all.
Bernie will have a lot of influence, too. Nancy is anything but a fool.
Hone, will there ever come a time, when people like you will say, "yes, now is the time to stand up for principles"?
Hone,
Are you related to Nancy Pelosi somehow? How do you constantly defend the indefensible and expect to be believed?
I believe almost every one of these anti-Pelosi congress-critters represent a district that trends Democratic. Most don't have the excuse that they are trying to represent a reddish constituency. I hope progressive groups use this Faustian bargain of supporting Pelosi for a 2-year stint in a lame duck Congress, to give them air to primary the shit out of these right-wingers. AOC took out a largely moderate, if mostly corrupt, Crowley, they should be able to get a left-leaning challenger a shot in most all of these seats with true DINOs.
Don't bother spending resources primarying junk like Cisneros or other newly flipped reddish to red districts. Those seats will end up back in Republican hands in a presidential election year. The key for 2010 is to focus on state seats to take over redistricting and getting rid of right-wingers in blue seats.
Hone actually has one thing correct. Dumping Pelosi with nothing to fill the vacuum WOULD be like the brexit disaster.
However, though Pelosi is an able pol who CAN get things done, you must also ponder what kinds of 'things' she'll actually DO and contrast those with the 'things' she'll never do.
do: 'paygo'... yep, that's pretty much it.
don't do: impeach, raise taxes, trump oversight, bank oversight, enforce Sherman.....................
so, dear Hone, keep Pelosi... but you cannot be happy about it at all. If you are happy, you don't remember anything from this century.
Just more ironclad proof that the democraps are never going to change and will always refuse improvements for you and I.
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