Nov. 19, 2006
EDITORIAL: A Loser of a First Impression
By Dale McFeatters
Scripps Howard News Service
Nancy Pelosi's first act as speaker-elect of the U.S. House was to
stumble
badly.
A child of Baltimore's machine politics broke an old rule of those
politics
by picking a fight that she should have known she would lose -- and
lose
big.
Late in the game, she suddenly endorsed John Murtha for the post of
House
majority leader, in effect her top deputy, over the consensus favorite,
Steny Hoyer. Hoyer won, 149 to 86.
So much for a display of Democratic unity. The great crush of press
outside
the Democratic caucus was there for the Hoyer-Murtha fight, not the
Pelosi
coronation.
In the short term, Pelosi's rebellious charges did her a favor. Hoyer
is a
skilled and popular legislative operative who will, as the saying goes,
make
the trains run on time.
The more roughhewn and blunt Murtha would have been a constant target
for
Republicans, who have it in for the former Marine who became the first
authoritative lawmaker to say that the Iraq war was a failure and the
United
States should withdraw.
One of the House Democrats' strongest issues in the election was that
they
would restore high ethical standards that corrupt Republicans had
allowed to
lapse.
Murtha, who had a near-death experience with a corruption scandal 26
years
ago -- resurrected once he announced for the leadership -- would have
been
viewed as a repudiation of that pledge. He derided as "total crap"
Pelosi's
ethics reform package, but said that as leader he would work to see
that it
passed anyway, showing a certain flexibility of principle that voters
find
all too common in politicians.
In the longer run, Pelosi may have hurt herself with the Murtha gaffe.
That
misstep showed that she is not invulnerable and may have prompted some
ambitious Democrats to think about a leadership challenge down the
road.
Like Pelosi did with Democrats, Newt Gingrich led his fellow
Republicans out
of the wilderness in 1994. He weathered an abortive coup in 1997 and
resigned as speaker in 1998.
The 41 freshmen House Democrats are a generation removed from Pelosi,
66,
and Hoyer, 67, and their first experience with their new leaders was a
failed attempt by one to oust the other. The newcomers have to be
wondering.
If Democrats had to have this test of wills -- and maybe it was
inevitable
-- it was better to have it now, in the exhibition season, so to speak,
than
next year when the games count for real.