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Pelosi's First Year As House Speaker Marked By Little Change On War

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  • Pelosi's First Year As House Speaker Marked By Little Change On War

    PELOSI'S FIRST YEAR AS HOUSE SPEAKER MARKED BY LITTLE CHANGE ON WAR
    Zachary Coile

    San Francisco Chronicle
    Dec 23 2007
    USA

    The last day of the House's 2007 session last week summed up the
    turbulence of Nancy Pelosi's history-making first year as House
    speaker.

    In the morning, she beamed a wide smile as she stood beside President
    Bush while he signed an energy bill with the first major increase in
    fuel economy standards in 30 years.

    But by Wednesday afternoon, her party was facing two of its biggest
    defeats. To keep the alternative minimum tax from hitting 20 million
    Americans next year, Democrats had to abandon their pledge not to
    pass any legislation that increased the deficit.

    Then Pelosi, whose party took control of Congress pledging to change
    course in Iraq, watched the House approve $70 billion in war funding,
    part of a budget deal that avoided a government shutdown. Members of
    her own party denounced it as a capitulation to the White House.

    "The war in Iraq is the biggest disappointment for us, the inability
    to stop the war," Pelosi told reporters in a group interview in her
    ceremonial office just hours before the war vote. She quickly pegged
    the blame on congressional Republicans.

    The Democrats' failure to shift the war's direction, their No. 1
    priority for the year, has eclipsed many of the party's successes on
    other issues, including raising the minimum wage for the first time
    in a decade and passing the strongest ethics and lobbying reforms
    since Watergate.

    And Bush, despite his lame-duck status, outflanked Democrats in
    the end-of-year budget fight - forcing them to accept his number,
    $555 billion in domestic spending, and funding for Iraq - simply by
    refusing to yield.

    Asked about the setbacks last week, Pelosi, as she has all year,
    flashed her most optimistic smile and refused to be drawn into the
    criticism.

    "Almost everything we've done has been historic," she said.

    But if Pelosi is smiling, so are Republicans. They began the year
    defeated and demoralized. But they have since shown surprising unity,
    backing the president on the war and finding new purpose in blocking
    Democrats' spending initiatives.

    "We've stood up to them every step of the way," House Minority Leader
    John Boehner, R-Ohio, said last week.

    The tense mood among Democrats in the session's final weeks was a
    marked contrast from the festive first weeks of the new Congress, when
    Pelosi was sworn in as the nation's first female speaker, surrounded
    by children on the House floor. She promised to lead Congress in a
    new direction.

    Democrats took off on a legislative sprint in which they quickly
    approved their "Six for '06" agenda including raising the minimum
    wage, cutting interest rates on student loans, backing federally
    funded embryonic stem cell research, and revoking tax breaks for
    oil companies.

    But the bills bogged down in the Senate, where the Democrats' 51-49
    majority is so thin it allowed Republicans to determine what would be
    passed. Democrats have struggled to get the 60 votes needed to overcome
    filibusters, which are now an almost daily experience in the Senate.

    "Pelosi suffered the same ailment that (former Republican House
    Speaker) Newt Gingrich suffered from when he became speaker:
    Senate-itis," said Norman Ornstein, a congressional scholar at the
    American Enterprise Institute. "A lot of what the House accomplished
    this year either sat in the Senate or got eviscerated by the Senate.

    What you are left with is not nearly as robust as what you started
    with."

    Even the energy bill, the Democrats' crowning achievement, was
    stripped of a broad tax package and a renewable electricity standard
    that would have pushed the nation toward wind and solar power. Still,
    the fuel economy piece alone is expected to save 2.3 million barrels
    of oil a day by 2020 - more than the United States currently imports
    from the Persian Gulf.

    Pelosi had to make some painful trade-offs. To get the minimum
    wage hike signed, Democrats had to attach it to a $120 billion war
    spending bill.

    Other elements of her agenda fell victim to Bush's veto pen. Congress
    twice passed a bill with bipartisan support to expand the state
    children's health insurance program to cover 4 million more children.

    Bush twice vetoed it, forcing Democrats to settle for an 18-month
    extension of the current program.

    Pelosi and her Senate counterpart, Majority Leader Harry Reid,
    D-Nev., held countless votes on war measures setting timetables
    for the withdrawal of U.S. troops and other restrictions on Bush's
    policy. But their strategy counted on Republicans switching sides -
    and very few did.

    "I didn't foresee that," Pelosi acknowledged. "We thought they would
    reflect the wishes and views of their constituents."

    Some critics called the assumption naive. Anti-war groups have urged
    her to use Congress' power of the purse to simply cut off funds for
    the war, but Pelosi opposes the move, which many Democrats fear would
    be seen as undermining the troops. Instead the party has pushed for
    a "responsible redeployment" - meaning funding the war, but with
    strings attached.

    In October, Pelosi's ally and the House's top appropriator, David Obey,
    D-Wis., said Democrats would draw a line in the sand: They would refuse
    to pass any more war funding without a timeline for withdrawal. But
    by last week, with the budget impasse threatening to shut down the
    government, Democrats dropped the strategy.

    Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Petaluma, a founding member of the Out of Iraq
    Caucus, said the Democrats' mistake was not to force the threat to
    deny funds earlier in the year.

    "I wish she could have been bolder," Woolsey said, while acknowledging
    that Pelosi had to mediate between competing views in the caucus. "If
    we had started that earlier, we could have built on it until it
    reached a crescendo, because it's what the American people want."

    The Democrats were left in a weak bargaining position at the end of
    the year. They needed to pass 11 spending bills, but Republicans and
    Bush demanded the $70 billion for the war in return. The president also
    held firm on his spending limits. If the impasse led to a government
    shutdown, Pelosi knew her party would receive much of the blame. So
    she agreed to the deal, with the concession that Democrats were able
    to preserve money for their priorities, including home heating aid
    for the poor and health care for veterans.

    "We made it very clear months ago we were not going to shut down the
    government," said Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez, one of Pelosi's top
    lieutenants. "Tragically, that put the president in the driver's seat."

    Miller said the fight over the war has obscured the progress Democrats
    made on other fronts, including cutting interest rates on loans for
    college students and passing a huge increase in veterans' benefits. He
    said Pelosi worked tirelessly to get the energy bill over the finish
    line.

    "At the beginning of the year, people said we had no chance of getting
    an energy bill," Miller said. "This was a tour de force for her."

    Pelosi also showed she was willing to buck some of her party's most
    powerful members to get her way. She went head-to-head with Rep. John
    Dingell, D-Mich., Detroit automakers' top ally, over raising fuel
    economy standards - and won. She pushed through an ethics reform bill
    that her friend Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., called "total crap."

    "Some of her colleagues when they took back Congress said, 'That
    reform message worked to get us elected, but now it's our turn.' "
    Ornstein said. "That has not been her attitude and her approach,
    and I give her credit for that."

    Pelosi had clumsy moments, too. She pushed hard for a resolution
    denouncing Turkey's mass killings of Armenians during World War I as
    genocide, only to reverse course when it sparked a diplomatic fight,
    with Turkey threatening to reduce logistical support to U.S. troops
    in Iraq.

    Republicans say she has reneged on a promise to run a more open
    House. Following a pattern set by the GOP when it ran the House for 12
    years, Democrats have often rammed bills through, giving Republicans
    few opportunities to amend them.

    "It's hard to work together when you're not even invited into the
    room," said Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas.

    But Pelosi's supporters say Republicans haven't been willing to
    compromise and have mostly tried to block Democrats from racking
    up accomplishments.

    "The Republicans have frustrated us because they want to run a
    negative campaign saying the Democrats didn't accomplish anything,"
    said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Los Angeles.

    The bickering in Congress, over the war and other issues, has taken
    a toll. When Democrats took power, Congress had an approval rating
    of 35 percent, but it's since dipped into the low 20s, according to
    the Gallup poll.

    Pelosi is already crafting a strategy for next year, when the
    presidential race is likely to take some of the spotlight off
    Congress. With the war debate at an impasse, she's planning to push
    a series of measures on health care, the economy, the mortgage crisis
    and global warming.

    If Democrats can't win on these issues, at the very least they can draw
    sharp distinctions with Republicans leading up to the fall elections,
    she said.

    "One of the reasons we were able to be successful with the energy
    bill is that this is something we took to the American people," she
    said. "That is what we have to do next. We have to go public with
    many of these issues."

    News from the presidential campaign. A18

    Pelosi's first year San Francisco Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi made
    history as the nation's first female House speaker in January, but
    she's had a bumpy first year marked by successes and failures.

    Biggest successes -- Passed an energy bill raising fuel economy
    standards for the first time in 30 years, the equivalent today of
    taking 28 million cars off the road by 2020.

    -- Approved a major cut in interest rates on student loans to make
    college more affordable.

    -- Passed the strongest ethics reforms since Watergate, banning gifts
    from lobbyists and making earmarks more transparent.

    -- Secured the largest increase in veterans' benefits in history.

    -- Increased the minimum wage for the first time in a decade, from
    $5.15 an hour to $7.25 over three years.

    Biggest failures -- Despite repeated votes, failed to enact any major
    changes in Iraq war policy.

    -- Tried to expand the state children's health insurance program to
    cover 4 million more children, but was blocked by President Bush and
    House Republicans.

    -- Sparked a diplomatic fight with Turkey by pushing a resolution
    condemning the country's mass killing of Armenians during World War I.

    -- Abandoned the party's "pay-as-you-go" budget rules to avoid letting
    the alternative minimum tax hit 20 million Americans.

    -- Accepted Bush's spending limits in the end-of-the-year budget
    fight to avoid shutting down the federal government.
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