Nancy Pelosi is poised to reclaim the title of House speaker on Thursday when the new Democratic majority arrives in Washington and takes over control of the House of Representatives.
The House of Representatives will convene at noon ET to kick off the new session of Congress. A final floor vote to elect the next House speaker will take place shortly afterward followed by a swearing in of new members.
Pelosi hasn’t been formally elected yet, but is already talking as if she has.
She discussed what it will be like to work with President Donald Trump as the next speaker in an interview on NBC’s “Today” that aired Thursday morning, saying, “I don’t know if he knows how to deal with women in power and women with strength, but we’ll see.”
Pelosi added, “Let’s hope for the best in that regard because again it is a new day for many people in Congress and in Washington, DC and in the country.”
A small, but vocal, faction of Democrats initially worked to derail Pelosi’s bid to become the next Speaker following the 2018 midterm elections, but no challenger against her ever emerged and she ultimately succeed in winning over many of her critics.
The longtime House Democratic leader is now on the verge of winning back the position of power she previously held when she served as the first and so far only female House speaker from 2007 to 2011.
In the role of speaker, Pelosi will be one of the most visible members of the Democratic Party to regularly face off against President Donald Trump and will preside over an emboldened and energized Democratic majority that is poised to launch aggressive oversight of the President and his administration.
One of the most immediate challenges that will confront Pelosi as leader of the new House Democratic majority will be the fight over the President’s long-promised border wall that triggered a standoff between congressional Democrats and the President and resulted in a partial government shutdown, which is now in its second week.
Pelosi has already outlined a plan for Democrats to pass a legislative package later in the day on Thursday to re-open shuttered parts of the government. Contrary to the President’s demands for $5 billion for a border wall, however, the legislation does not provide any new wall funding, setting up an early confrontation between the new Democratic majority and the administration.
Pelosi’s path to the speakership
Pelosi always projected confidence that she would reclaim the Speaker’s gavel, but faced criticism and pushback along the way.
At the end of November, she secured the nomination to become speaker by winning support from a majority of House Democrats — a total of 203 votes in closed-door leadership elections. But she came up slightly short of the total 218 votes typically needed to win the speakership in the final January vote.
To become Speaker requires the support of a majority of all members of the House who are present and voting, a threshold that could be as high as 218 votes. It would be possible for Pelosi to win with fewer votes, as several previous House speakers have, if some members vote present or decline to participate.
Ahead of the final vote, Pelosi deployed her deal-making abilities to win over detractors, and by mid-December, she appeared to have secured the votes necessary to prevail after negotiating an agreement with some of the Democrats who had been lobbying to block her from the speakership. As part of the agreement, Pelosi backed a proposal to enact term limits for the party’s top three leaders.
“I see myself as a bridge to the next generation of leaders, a recognition of my continuing responsibility to mentor and advance new Members into positions of power and responsibility in the House Democratic Caucus,” Pelosi said in a statement at the time.