By The Prowler on 12.10.02 @ 12:03AM
Nancy Pelosi needs his help but isn't man enough to ask for it.
Moderates in the House Democratic Caucus are pressuring new
leader Nancy Pelosi to appoint Rep. Martin
Frost to his old position as head of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee, which he'd previously run during
the 1998 election cycle. Frost was credited with picking up House
seats for Democrats that year, helping to hasten the exit of
then-Speaker Newt Gingrich.
"Giving him that slot would help bridge the gap between us and
Pelosi," says a conservative Democratic House member in town for a
caucus conference hosted by Pelosi. "But more important, he's good
at recruiting candidates and fundraising for the party. If we need
anything, we need people with those skills. The minority leader
can't afford to let any bad blood between her and Frost cloud the
realities of where we need to be as a caucus."
That's not the sort of advice Pelosi, the liberal from San
Francisco, seems willing to heed. Over the weekend and on Monday
there were persistent reports that the new Democratic minority
leader had narrowed her choice for the critical job of DCCC chair
to Rep. William Jefferson of Louisiana,
Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Mike
Thompson of California.
Frost and liberal Ed Markey of Massachusetts
have both been mentioned in media reports since Pelosi's ascension,
but Jefferson has been a name front and center, in part because of
the dearth of black Democrats in leadership. The Congressional
Black Caucus has been pressing for Jefferson's appointment, despite
ongoing questions about his failure to repay campaign debts from
previous elections.
Thompson and Brown are both cookie-cutter liberals in the mold
of Pelosi. Jefferson is only marginally less liberal than the other
candidates and isn't particularly close to Pelosi, which is perhaps
why she's hesitant to bring him on.
"She's probably thinking that if the next election cycle goes
like this past one, she's one and done," says the conservative
Democrat. "Why gamble? Which is just another reason why she should
go with Frost."
Pelosi brought the Democratic House members to Washington for a
two-day conference on the election lost and to discuss ways to
develop an economic plan for the coming congressional session. But
it isn't just House members feeling their way toward the future.
Democratic National Committee chairman Terry
McAuliffe has been meeting with prominent Democrats around
the country to discuss the election. Recently he met with New
Mexico Gov.-elect Bill Richardson and had plans to
sit down with Democratic bigs in Arizona, California and Texas. The
New Mexico and Arizona discussions were probably the most
informative, if only because those are two states where Democrats
actually performed well in races against solid Republican
competition.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi