Showing posts with label Nancy Pelosi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nancy Pelosi. Show all posts

Saturday, September 21, 2024

A Nancy Pelosi interview last week



Kadia Goba interviews Nancy Pelosi at Semafor Sept 18, 2024/By Patricia Leslie

Wednesday Nancy Pelosi was at Semafor to promote her new book, The Art of Power: My Story as America's First Woman Speaker of the House (free copies were distributed to attendees) and to answer questions from Semafor's politics reporter, Kadia Goba.

Pelosi said she had just come from a leadership meeting to discuss the Jimmy Lai sad situation in China.(Editor's note: On the news later, Lai's son said that the Chinese had held his dad in solitary confinement for more than three years. Jimmy Lai, 76, is a diabetic.)

At the beginning of her talk (to the swooning crowd), Pelosi said, "I think that’s it’s really important for us to show that most of this language that is provoking violence is coming from a very extreme place in our country." (Springfield did not come up during her talk.)

"We try to find common ground in a democracy which you do non-violently." She mentioned the assault on her husband, Paul, in their home in San Francisco in 2022, turning to the audience and asking to "imagine someone coming into your home, going into your bedroom" before an attack.

"How disrespectful they were about the assault on my husband," she said, speaking of opposition leaders. "What it does to your children."

She thought the Republican party would try to "lower the temperature" of violent talk and mentioned Charlottesville where one person was killed. "The president of the United States would not condemn those actions."

Goba said since "everybody" expects the Republicans to take the Senate, what does Pelosi think?

"Well," Pelosi smiled and turned to the audience who applauded:  "Not everybody," she said slowly.   

"I speak without any authority because I am not in the Senate," said Pelosi. "You’ll have to ask them about prospects.  I am more optimistic than 'everybody thinks we’re going to lose.' I don’t say that. No.”

January 6 was a topic Goba refused to abandon, bringing it up several times. Pelosi noted that more than 100 Capitol Hill police were injured. Trump did not seek National Guard help (despite his recent statements to the contrary).

California has 52 representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives of whom 40 are Democrats and Pelosi is working to elect more. She represents San Francisco.

"Whatever happens in this election, we must accept the results. It’s one reason why Hakeem Jeffries [present U.S. House minority leader] must have that gavel on January 6. If I didn’t have the gavel on January 6, who knows what would have happened? 

"Everything is at risk in this election," she said. People are concerned about jobs," and everyday issues. "What does your candidate mean to me?" voters ask.

For some reason, moderator Goba seemed stuck on Pelosi's relationship with Kamala Harris and asked the former speaker repeatedly about how close they are. (What does it matter?) 

Pelosi said she knew Harris officially, not personally, Pelosi praising Harris and Harris's "eloquence" conveying ideas and policy.

What happened to the open primary Pelosi promoted? Goba wanted to know.

"Yes, people could have jumped in," Pelosi said, "and some people were sort of preparing [to do that] but she [Harris] took off with it. Actually, it was a blessing because there's not that much time between then and the election. It wasn't that we didn't have an primary. It's just that [to loud applause] nobody else got in.

"The president endorsed her [Harris] and that’s a big deal because Joe Biden is the most consequential president of modern times. He’s accomplished so much more. Even Barack Obama in his eight years in service would admit [what 
Joe Biden has done] in this short period of time."

She said it was not only legislation Biden has achieved, but executive actions "and how you get things done."

Biden knows the job from being vice president, Pelosi said.

Back to January 6 again: "He [Trump] had the right to go to court. Every court turned him down. He just didn't have a case."

"Nobody," she emphasized the word, "ever expected that the president of the United States would incite an insurrection that would send people to do violence....It was not just any old day.

"We're talking serious stuff here. Elections are about the future."

Switching to a topic of eating preferences, who knew Peolosi was crazy about hot dogs? Yes, she is!

"I had one for lunch today. I have one almost every day and chocolate ice cream (very dark chocolate, she paused and whispered the words a few seconds later) for breakfast." 

But she does not want her grandchildren to practice what grandma does! Nor should anybody, for that matter, she cautioned.

"Growing up in Baltimore in an Italian neighborhood, food was very important to us." 

She was told she should not write a book now since it would exclude so much of what is happening (Trump and the attack on her husband) and the former speaker said she'll just have to write another book.

For those who disagree with her content : "Write your own book" (to audience laughter).

She emphasized that "recreate" and "recreate" are the same words, but we all need to "take a time off to re-create" which "I hardly ever do" but she recommends it to others.

Pelosi ended her talk with lines from the Star-Spangled Banner composed by Francis Scott Key in the Baltimore harbor in 1814. 

There was "proof through the night that our flag was still there," adding "with liberty and justice for all, whatever the results of the election are, we will be for a peaceful transfer." She left the stage to a standing ovation. About 150 attended.

patricialesli@gmail.com

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Nancy Pelosi was at National Geographic


Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi at National Geographic, Oct. 23, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie

It was the day of her brother's funeral but still, the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, the third most powerful person in the United States, kept her date at National Geographic to help launch the institution's new exhibition, Women: A Century of Change.

In National Geographic's auditorium, Ms. Pelosi addressed hundreds who stood and applauded when she entered and who stood and applauded when she left. The speaker noted that her daughters, Alexandra and Nancy, were present.

In conversation with Susan Goldberg who is the editorial director of National Geographic's publications and the first female editor-in-chief of the magazine, Speaker Pelosi talked informally about her entry into public life and, based on her experiences, she had some recommendations for those who may consider it.

At first in the public arena, she was shy.  The "best advice" she has for those listening: "Be yourself" and ask: "What is your 'why'?"

Ms. Pelosi was first elected to Congress in 1987 when only 23 of 435 representatives were women.  Now, there are 102, and some are Republicans. "We need more women" in Congress, she said.  There is no glass ceiling.
 
When she was first elected speaker in 2007 (and again in 2009 and 2019), George Bush was president, and she said then:  "At last, we have a woman at the table.

"There need to be many women at the table," she said to applause.

When members of the audience weren't clapping, they sat spellbound.
Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi with National Geographic's Susan Goldberg, Oct. 23, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 
Speaker Pelosi and Ms. Goldberg sat in front of a few enlarged photographs from Ms. Pelosi's life which included the "Mona Lisa" of political Washington, the photograph of Speaker Pelosi taking command at a White House meeting last month with President Trump and other men seated at a large table.
Speaker Pelosi chats with National Geographic's Susan Goldberg with a famous photograph as backdrop, Oct. 23, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie

George Washington appointed Commander in Chief at the Second Continental Congress, June 19, 1775, Philadelphia/Library of Congress, Wikimedia Commons

Ms. Pelosi laughed a lot and was obviously comfortable in the surroundings. She looks better in real life than she does in photographs or on television.
 
"You have to be ready to take a punch," she laughed and the audience laughed with her.  
In one form or another, she recommended that those listening "follow your passion."
Speaker Pelosi chats with National Geographic's Susan Goldberg Oct. 23, 2019 in front of a photograph of Speaker Pelosi with her mother/Photo by Patricia Leslie


If she ruled the world, "the one thing" she would do: "Educate women and girls." 



"Anything is possible. When women succeed, the world succeeds," and the audience loudly proclaimed its agreement as Speaker Pelosi exited the stage.
 
Women: A Century of Change opens at National Geographic/photo by Patricia Leslie
Women: A Century of Change opens at National Geographic/photo by Patricia Leslie


The National Exhibition exhibition features its photographs of women from the last century. A separate gallery is devoted to 24 women who herald the future and includes Speaker Pelosi and Christine LaGarde.

Every attendee at the launch event received a copy of the new National Geographic magazine which features the exhibition and begins a year of women's coverage to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women getting the right to vote in 1920.

What: "Women: A Century of Change illuminates, celebrates and reflects on where the world’s women have been, where they are now and where they are going."

When: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. daily through Spring, 2020. The last ticket is sold at 5 p.m.

Where: National Geographic, 1145 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20036

Tickets: Adults: $15; seniors, military, students: $12; children ages 5-12, $10; children under age 5 are admitted free. No charge for contributing members.
 

Closest Metro stations: Farragut West (Orange Line) and Farragut North (Red Line)

For more information: 202-857-7700

patricialesli@gmail.com