The Note: Pelosi flashes signature discipline in push for House speaker

The Nancy Pelosi political clinic gets its latest show date on Wednesday.

November 28, 2018, 6:01 AM

The TAKE with Rick Klein

The Nancy Pelosi political clinic gets its latest show date on Wednesday, when she faces off in a vote for speaker of the House against ... well, no one at all.

A combination of expectation and resignation surrounds the series of steps that seem likely to result in handing Pelosi back the speaker's gavel.

Her survival atop the House Democratic conference is an unlikely tale more than a decade in the making. The so-far-fruitful effort to blunt a serious challenge has been a show of force, as disciplined as it is elegant.

It's also no small feat in this era of fractured politics. A restive, newly elected class of House Democrats is mostly falling in behind her, despite a campaign where her name was used as a stand-in for tired, liberal ideology.

Winning upwards of 40 seats helped her cause. So has President Donald Trump -- though not in the way he offered when he said he would gladly hand her Republican votes to become speaker.

Trump's post-election actions -- up to and including firing his attorney general and barbs aimed at special counsel Robert Mueller -- have served to remind Democrats of the stakes in this moment.

"The public has entrusted us to save our democracy," Pelosi wrote Tuesday in a letter asking colleagues to support her bid for speaker. The same discipline Pelosi has shown in keeping her grip on power will be an important quality come January.

The RUNDOWN with John Verhovek

It's been nearly two months since the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and still it seems the White House is content to throw its collective hands up in the air when it comes to the question of who's responsible for the heinous crime.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Tuesday that the administration has still not seen "definitive evidence" that ties Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman to the murder and national security adviser John Bolton questioned whether it was even necessary to listen to the audio of Khashoggi's murder.

PHOTO: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman looks on during a meeting with Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (not pictured) in Cairo, Egypt, Nov. 27, 2018.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman looks on during a meeting with Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (not pictured) in Cairo, Egypt, Nov. 27, 2018.
Bandar Algaloud/EPA via Shutterstock

But with the G-20 summit this weekend and the White House still not ruling out a meeting with the Saudi crown prince, the time for demurring and questioning should come to an end.

"Some kind of response to that certainly would be in order, and we are discussing what the appropriate response should be," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters on the subject during a news conference on Capitol Hill Tuesday.

Whatever the response may be, and no matter the political complications confronting the White House when it comes to a crucial Middle Eastern ally, clarity on what happened to Khashoggi is the bare minimum needed when Trump steps back onto the world stage this weekend in Argentina.

The TIP with Adam Kelsey

Perhaps because Alabama and Mississippi sit right next to each other and share decades-long, deeply conservative voting histories, there seemed to be an eagerness to compare Tuesday night's closer-than-usual Mississippi Senate runoff to Sen. Doug Jones' surprise 2017 victory in Alabama.

But Democrats' successes -- if they can truly be labelled as such -- were the result of wholly distinct circumstances and don't seem to be indicative of any other immediate party triumphs, at least in that part of the country.

Democrat Mike Espy benefited from Mississippi's employment of the non-partisan top-two voting system, which forced Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith to face her "primary" challenger on Election Night, leading to results that, to the casual observer, seemed to show the Democrat nipping at her heels.

PHOTO: Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith speaks during a campaign event in Meridian, Mississippi, Nov. 25, 2018.
Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith speaks during a campaign event in Meridian, Mississippi, Nov. 25, 2018.
Jonathan Bachman/Reuters

In any other state, the senator would've dispatched with Republican Chris McDaniel in an earlier contest, been the strong Election Day favorite, and the race would've received little fanfare -- as was the case for the other Magnolia State Senator, Roger Wicker.

In Alabama, in a unicorn of an election, it took a spectacularly poor candidate, Roy Moore, to give Democrats a victory. And even then, with numerous allegations of sexual assault, including of minors, stacking up against the already polarizing Moore, Jones won by fewer than 2 points.

That's not to say that all is lost for Democrats in the reddest of strongholds. The party staged House upsets earlier this month in Oklahoma, South Carolina and Staten Island, New York.

Despite inroads, the Gulf Coast remains far from the best example of this year's blue wave -- and the tide remains crimson.

THE PLAYLIST

ABC News' "Start Here" Podcast. Wednesday morning's episode features ABC News Senior congressional correspondent Mary Bruce and ABC News' Trish Turner, who analyze Rep. Nancy Pelosi's ongoing vote-wrangling to win Speaker of the House, and Sen. Jeff Flake's threat to not vote for Trump's judicial nominees until there's a vote on legislation to protect special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation. ABC News Senior Foreign correspondent Ian Pannell explains why the war in Afghanistan is still claiming American lives. And, ABC News Chief Business and Economics correspondent Rebecca Jarvis examines Trump's tweet, which raised the prospect of cutting all General Motors subsidies. http://apple.co/2HPocUL

ABC News' "Powerhouse Politics" Podcast. ABC News' "Powerhouse Politics" Podcast. On ABC's "Powerhouse Politics" podcast, ABC News Chief White House Correspondent Jonathan Karl and Political Director Rick Klein talk with retired Gen. Stanley McChrystal about President Trump and McChrystal's new book, "Leaders: Myth and Reality." https://bit.ly/2w091jE

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

  • Ivanka Trump, the eldest daughter and a senior adviser to the president, defended her use of a private email account while transitioning to an administration job, insisting to ABC News in an exclusive interview on Tuesday "there's no connection between" her situation and Hillary Clinton's email scandal. Read the story now and watch the interview with ABC News Correspondent Deborah Roberts on "Good Morning America."
  • House Democrats meet to vote for House speaker, beginning at 10 a.m.
  • First lady Melania Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar will participate in a town hall discussion on the nation's opioid crisis at 10:30 a.m. at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia.
  • President Donald Trump meets with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to discuss the Gateway Tunnel Project at 12:45 p.m. at the White House.
  • Trump attends the National Christmas Tree lighting at 4:45 p.m. at the National Mall.
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    The Note is a daily ABC News feature that highlights the key political moments of the day ahead. Please check back tomorrow for the latest.

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