By Imran Khalid
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On the personal front, by remaining in the limelight through this jet-diplomacy, she wants to appear as a stout and active politician so as to lure her voters in the Florida constituency, while she is also indirectly trying to bolster the ebbing approval rating of Democrats. By appearing as a hawkish face of the Democrats, she is working as a helping hand for President Joe Biden to offset the possibilities of an impending rout in the midterm polls.
Pelosi is facing two kinds of challenges at this juncture of her political career: one, how to save her seat in her home constituency, and later on, how to retain the speakership in the face of growing discontentment among Democrats. In the midterm elections in November, all 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and 35 of the 100 seats in the Senate will be contested.
For the first time in the last two decades of her political career, Pelosi has been facing this kind of dilemma; she is facing tough competition in the Florida constituency as well as a visible division among Democrats on the question of the continuation of her stint as speaker of the house. Her political career is seriously at stake now.
The recent polls of House Democrats suggest that a consensus is building that, if they lose the majority, there would be inordinate pressure on Pelosi to throw in the towel, a prospect she is keenly aware of. But the problem is that many members say they are also starting to contemplate how, if they maintain control of the House, it will eventually enable Pelosi to extend her time in power.
Yet Democrats are visibly split about that possibility, with a palpable contingent eager for new leadership regardless of the outcome, even if she'd be the weighty favorite to retain the speakership. In 2018, Pelosi agreed in principle, without any sort of written agreement, with the dissident House Democrats to limit her tenure to four more years as speaker.
However, multiple members, in their individual capacity as lukewarm-pro-Pelosi, are of the opinion that if the midterms go well for the Democratic Party, a combination of dazed ecstasy and deference to both her fundraising skills and the weightage of female voters could compel them to reconsider an extension to her tenure.
Meanwhile, a vast majority of them are of the view that, in case of retaining the House majority, it would be perfect timing for Pelosi to call it a day on a very positive note. Interestingly, six years ago, Pelosi expressed her desire to quit if Hillary Clinton won the presidency, saying she would announce a timetable for leaving the chair.
Not surprisingly, at the same time, a kind of fatigue and ennui has enveloped the majority of chronic House Democrats who are eager to see a "change of leadership" at all levels. But the octogenarian leaders of House Democrats seem to be quite oblivious to this "simmering revolt" against the old leadership among the backbenchers particularly, and they are still expressing their ambitions to replace Pelosi.
Indeed, a quest for the party overall is running deep inside the Democratic Party and its impact is also reflecting on the House Democrats. Even then, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, who, like Nancy Pelosi, are north of 80, have privately expressed their inclination to succeed her when she leaves. But they do not have many supporters of this idea inside the House.
The urge to have a new leadership is picking up momentum in all layers of the Democratic Party ― and perhaps this is what is pushing Pelosi to frantically try to salvage her position at the apparent twilight of her political career. She does not have much to offer younger voters. That's why, though Pelosi herself believes this is her last run, she hasn't fully shut the door because she doesn't want to look like a lame duck as she moves across the country to raise staggering sums of money to safeguard her thin majority.
Furthermore, after a very productive legislative session that witnessed enactment on major issues related to climate change, infrastructure and gun violence legislation, she is hoping that her high-profile ― and yet very controversial ― visits to Taipei and Yerevan will help in winning some points in the midterm polls.
There are apparent reasons to believe that all her recent foreign trips had the full backing of President Joe Biden who is also equally worried about the prospects of the Democratic Party in the forthcoming polls. He "allowed" her to visit Taipei despite a last-minute telephone call from Chinese President Xi Jinping to stop the trip with a warning "not to play with fire."
Similarly, in the case of her trip to Yerevan, it seems Biden has deliberately kept his silence over her highly acidic and vitriolic statements against Azerbaijan and Turkey. By letting a house speaker to express her "personal" biases and bullish views on highly sensitive flashpoints like the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, President Biden is taking many risks.
He is trying to project Pelosi, who also needs the support of Armenian Americans who can tangibly affect the outcome in her own constituency, as the hawkish face of the Democratic Party. Pelosi's controversial trip was specifically designed, apart from helping Pelosi to win her home seat, to test the nerves of Istanbul and to lure Armenia away from Moscow.
Not surprisingly, Pelosi, who is reflexively trying to imitate the bullish rhetoric of Donald Trump, has drawn parallels between Armenia's situation and those in Ukraine and Taiwan, portraying the conflict as part of a global struggle against tyranny and oppression.
Here she is literally play with the fire. Both Pelosi and Biden are quite confident that this type of belligerent diplomacy will help them in salvaging the midterm polls, but what they don't realize is the negative implications and long-term fallouts of such domestic compulsions on the position of the U.S. in the evolving global power equation.
Dr. Imran Khalid (immhza6@gmail.com) is a freelance contributor based in Karachi, Pakistan.