US House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, 82, has told an American media outlet that she doesn’t have “any plans to step away from Congress.”
“I wish it would be faster, but it isn't,” Pelosi noted, adding, “[…] there are all kinds of ways to exert influence […] speaker has awesome power, but I will always have influence.”
This followed the California Democrat hinting in a separate interview with another US broadcaster that last month’s life-threatening attack on
her husband Paul Pelosi may affect her decision on whether to quit her job in Congress or not.
Earlier this month, Paul was released from a hospital after undergoing treatment for serious injuries sustained during an alleged hammer attack at his residence in late October.
Pelosi spoke a few weeks after Michigan Democrat Elissa Slotkin, 46, called for “new blood” and a “new generation” to step up and be at the helm of the party. She was echoed by 53-year-old Dean Phillips, a Minnesota Democrat, who told a US media outlet that “Rep. Slotkin shares the same perspective as me and the majority of the class of 2018.”
The remarks came as a trio of young Democrats, including Hakeem Jeffries, 52, as well as 59-year-old Katherine Clark and Pete Aguilar, 43, have been trying in the past several years to take the reins of the Democratic Caucus.
Separately, Pelosi said “Yes, I do” when asked by the outlet whether she believes that President Joe Biden should run again in the 2024 election.
“He has been a great president and he has a great record to run on,” the House Speaker argued, also crediting POTUS with helping turn out the votes necessary for narrow victories in key battleground states during the mid-terms.
This came after Biden claimed that he feels good about his further presidency after the midterm elections as the Democratic Party managed to retain control of the Senate following Democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto’ re-election victory in in Nevada.
The remarks were preceded by the 46th US president making a fresh slip-up last Saturday, when he mistakenly thanked Colombia instead of Cambodia for hosting the ASEAN Summit.
Biden's numerous gaffes continue to draw criticism from Conservatives, who have repeatedly argued that such escapades are a sign of health problems, suggesting that the Democrat, who is the oldest president in the history of the US, is not mentally fit to run the country. In a Reuters/Ipsos poll released shortly before the midterms, Biden's public approval rating plummeted to 39%.