• Re: Pelosi Failed

    From Two-faced Nancy@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 19 00:37:03 2024
    XPost: alt.war.civil.usa, free.two-time-loser.nancy.pelosi, talk.politics.guns XPost: talk.politics.misc

    On 15 Mar 2022, Rudy Canoza <notgenx33@gmail.com> posted some news:iM9YJ.121040$Wdl5.101735@fx44.iad:

    Nancy Pelosi started her career carpet bagging from Baltimore to
    California, immediately taking up with the noisy Democrat queers from Berkeley and San Francisco.

    Nancy Pelosi is not an especially impressive figure. She was elected to Congress in 1986, and she spent her first six years in Washington, D.C.,
    as a rank-and-file member of Congress who did nothing of any great
    interest. That changed after Bill Clinton was elected in 1992, but the immediate overreach resulted in Pelosi and her colleagues annoying the
    public so profoundly that the Democrats lost control of the House of Representatives for the first time in 40 years, and then stayed in the
    minority for the following twelve.

    Since 1994, in which year the House became competitive for the first
    time since the 1950s, the Democrats have had a majority just four times
    — that’s eight years out of a total of 28. During those eight years,
    Nancy Pelosi has been the Democrats’ choice for speaker every time the
    question came up.

    Did she do a good job? Not really, no. During half of the time that
    Pelosi was in charge of the House (from 2007 to 2009, and then from 2019
    to 2021), Pelosi had a GOP president to deal with, and was thus
    prevented from effecting major change. For two of her years at the top (2021–2023), she had such a small majority that she couldn’t do much —
    and what she did do was highly questionable. And then there were the two
    years, between 2009 and 2011, when she got a lot done. But, really, how
    could she have avoided doing so? After 2008, the Democrats had massive landslide majorities, and, while they certainly used them to achieve big legislative goals, they also guaranteed a backlash that severely damaged
    the party at all levels of government, that took the gavel out of
    Pelosi’s hands at the next possible opportunity, and that kept her in
    the minority for nearly a decade thereafter.

    Pelosi’s last act of note was to throw her own branch of government
    under the bus. Having insisted in no uncertain terms that the president
    could not unilaterally cancel student-loan debt — “people think that the president of the United States has the power for debt forgiveness,” she
    said last year, “he does not, the president can’t do it, so that’s not
    even a discussion” — Pelosi took to pretending that, actually, he could.

    That’s not a great record, is it?

    https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/pelosi-failed/

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