By Harold Meyerson
This is one of those odd weeks when Congress may actually work. Both houses are likely to pass Democratic bills to expand SCHIP, the children's health coverage program. Yesterday, the House enacted lobbying reform, and the Senate may follow suit tomorrow. Also yesterday, the House passed a bill restoring the right of victims of pay discrimination to sue their employers.
In short, it's one of those weeks when Nancy Pelosi has no doubts about the wisdom of her decision to become speaker of the House.
'What's it like?' she asked herself, beaming, at the conclusion of a breakfast meeting with roughly 20 liberal journalists yesterday morning.
'It's fabulous! Absolutely fabulous!'
It can't always be thus. Her biggest frustration, of course, is Congress's inability to end the war in
In September,
Pelosi (understandably, given the administration's mountain of misrepresentation on all war-related matters) is wary. 'The plural of anecdote is not data,' she said. 'I'm very concerned they'll pass off anecdotal successes as progress in
The question in September will be whether congressional Republicans continue to support President Bush's open-ended commitment to keeping
The GOP strategy is not without its pitfalls. Republicans have succeeded in tanking Congress's approval ratings, but polls consistently show the public, most importantly in swing districts, preferring Democrats to Republicans. With this week's vote on expanding SCHIP, though, Democrats are convinced that the price of blocking health care for uninsured children is more than many Republicans are willing to pay. Bush has vowed to veto the legislation; Pelosi, noting with an almost incredulous glee that the administration will stand athwart children's health care on the grounds of opposing a higher tobacco tax, says, simply, 'Welcome to this discussion.'
Not all discussions, even in a good week, are so pleasurable to anticipate. Asked about the resolution that her congressional colleague Jay Inslee of
Pelosi understands the gravity of the damage that the administration has done to the Constitution and why that has impelled some of her colleagues to advocate impeachment. 'If I were not the speaker and I were not in Congress,' she said, very quietly, as she concluded her answer, 'I would probably be advocating for impeachment.' But the consequences she foresees from stopping the nation's business for an unwinnable fight outweighs those considerations.
Pelosi deserves considerable credit for holding her party together on a range of divisive issues, but she plainly views the coming fight among House Democrats on fuel efficiency standards as irrepressible.
The energy bill the House will pass this week contains no provisions that would raise those standards; such provisions, if any, await the outcome of a battle between Pelosi and Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman John Dingell, the Democrat who has represented Detroit and the auto industry in Congress since 1955 (that is, before tailfins).
'I respect all our chairmen,' Pelosi said. But the legislation, she continued, isn't about them. 'It's about our children's ability to breathe clean air. Nothing less than the planet is at stake. I love him [Dingell] dearly, but we have to prevail. . . . The forces at work here [against stricter standards] are rich and entrenched,' she concluded, 'and it takes just a few [votes] to prevent us from unleashing the future.'
Thus, the most elegant of happy warriors, in a week when it's fun to be speaker.
