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Why Pelosi Is 'Committee Of One'

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  • Why Pelosi Is 'Committee Of One'

    WHY PELOSI IS 'COMMITTEE OF ONE'
    by Robert Novak, The Chicago Sun-Times

    Chicago Sun Times
    November 1, 2007 Thursday
    Final Edition

    A story told in cloakrooms of the House of Representatives shows
    how ironic life on Capitol Hill can be. Jim McCrery, the low-key,
    hardworking ranking Republican on the Ways and Means Committee, has
    spent all year trying to establish good relations with the tax-writing
    committee's first Democratic chairman in 12 years, Charles Rangel. He
    succeeded, only to discover that Rangel does not really run Ways and
    Means. Nancy Pelosi does.

    Rangel so far looks like the weakest Ways and Means chairman during
    my 50 years in Washington. That's only because Pelosi so far is the
    most powerful speaker of the House during that same period, a reality
    obscured by her historic role as the first woman to hold that office.

    She does not confer with or defer to standing committee chairmen,
    whose predecessors made previous speakers dance to their tune.

    On both sides of the aisle, the 67-year-old grandmother from San
    Francisco is referred to as the "Committee of One" who rules the
    House. Many speakers over the years relied on their majority leader.

    But not Pelosi, who actually opposed Steny Hoyer's election as
    majority leader.

    Ruling absolutely does not mean even Democrats think she rules well.

    Her misguided effort to pass a resolution condemning the 1915
    Armenian holocaust constitutes a rare public blunder, but beyond
    that she has not crafted a coherent Democratic message. This month's
    Harris Poll puts her nationwide job disapproval ("fair" or "poor")
    at 57 percent. But she is an icon at the Democratic grass roots,
    and none of the committee chairmen who have been downgraded by her
    utters a word of public criticism.

    Rangel's massive proposed tax reform released last week gets less
    respect than what is normally accorded a Ways and Means chairman's
    plan because Pelosi is not on board.

    Much the same treatment has been experienced by John Dingell, the
    senior member of Congress, as Energy and Commerce Committee chairman.

    In bygone days, Dingell deferred to neither Democratic presidents nor
    speakers. But Pelosi is determined to pass an energy bill this year
    even though it means crossing Dingell, who as a Detroiter opposes
    Californian Pelosi on mileage and emission standards.

    No committee chairman wants to take the risk of going public against
    Pelosi, including one who sought her advice -- and, hopefully,
    support -- on a controversial matter of House business. This anonymous
    chairman was rebuffed by the speaker, who declined to talk to him,
    either in person or over the telephone.

    Being the "Committee of One" does not mean Pelosi is without
    lieutenants. She is close to two fellow Californians, both fiercely
    partisan, who head committees: George Miller (Education and Labor)
    and Henry Waxman (Oversight and Government Reform). Miller is regarded
    as her consigliere, always at her side. She is also considered close
    to moderate chairmen Ike Skelton (Armed Services) and John Spratt
    (Budget), plus liberal chairman Barney Frank (Financial Services).

    However, that does not mean she always takes their advice. Skelton,
    a seasoned student of international relations, told her the Armenian
    resolution would antagonize Turkey and thus constituted a foreign
    policy debacle in the making. Rahm Emanuel, the House Democratic Caucus
    chairman, also opposed it (as he had when serving as President Bill
    Clinton's political aide).

    The Armenian episode suggests a Pelosi decision has to approach the
    brink of disaster before Democrats speak out. Her popularity in the
    party beyond Capitol Hill is too great. When I asked one esteemed
    Democratic operative whether Pelosi's authority is without restraint,
    he called that a sexist question because I never would ask that about
    Sam Rayburn or Tip O'Neill. Indeed, I would not. They were not that
    powerful.
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