SAN FRANCISCO — Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a trailblazing San Francisco Democrat who leveraged many years of energy within the U.S. Home to change into probably the most influential political leaders of her technology, is not going to run for reelection in 2026, she stated Thursday.
The previous Home speaker, 85, who has been in Congress since 1987 and oversaw each of President Trump’s first-term impeachments, had been pushing off her 2026 resolution till after Tuesday’s vote on Proposition 50, a poll measure she backed and helped bankroll to redraw California’s congressional maps in her social gathering’s favor.
With the measure’s resounding passage, Pelosi stated it was time to start out clearing the trail for one more Democrat to characterize San Francisco — one of many nation’s most liberal bastions — in Congress, as some are already vying to do.
“With a grateful coronary heart, I look ahead to my last yr of service as your proud consultant,” Pelosi stated in an almost six-minute video she posted on-line Thursday morning, wherein she additionally recounted main achievements from her lengthy profession.
Pelosi didn’t instantly endorse a would-be successor, however challenged her constituents to remain engaged.
“As we go ahead, my message to the town I like is that this: San Francisco, know your energy,” she stated. “We now have made historical past, now we have made progress, now we have all the time led the way in which — and now we should proceed to take action by remaining full individuals in our democracy, and combating for the American beliefs we maintain pricey.”
Pelosi has not confronted a severe problem for her seat since President Reagan was in workplace, and has gained current elections by large margins. Only a yr in the past, she gained reelection with 81% of the vote.
Nonetheless, Pelosi was dealing with two hard-to-ignore challengers from her personal social gathering in subsequent yr’s Democratic major: state Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), 55, a prolific and bold lawmaker with a powerful base of help within the metropolis, and Saikat Chakrabarti, 39, a Democratic political operative and tech millionaire who’s infusing his marketing campaign with private money.
Their challenges come amid a shifting tide towards gerontocracy in Democratic politics extra broadly, as many within the social gathering’s base have more and more questioned the flexibility of its longtime leaders — particularly these of their 70s and 80s — to maintain an lively and efficient resistance to President Trump and his MAGA agenda.
In asserting his candidacy for Pelosi’s seat final month after years of deferring to her, Wiener stated he merely couldn’t wait any longer. “The world is altering, the Democratic Social gathering is altering, and it’s time,” he stated.
Chakrabarti — who helped Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) topple one other older Democratic incumbent with a message of generational change in 2018 — stated voters in San Francisco “want a complete completely different strategy” to governing after years of longtime social gathering leaders failing to ship.
Whereas anticipated by many, Pelosi’s resolution nonetheless promised to reverberate by political circles, together with as yet one more main signal {that a} new political period is dawning for the political left — as additionally evidenced by the beautiful rise of Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old democratic socialist elected Tuesday as New York Metropolis’s subsequent mayor.
Often called a relentless and savvy social gathering tactician, Pelosi had fought off considerations about her age previously, together with when she selected to run once more final yr. The primary girl ever elected speaker in 2007, Pelosi has lengthy cultivated and maintained a spry picture belying her age by strolling the halls of Congress in signature four-inch stilettos, and by maintaining a rigorous schedule of flying between work in Washington and constituent occasions in her residence district.
Nonetheless, that veneer has worn down in recent times, together with when she broke her hip throughout a fall in Europe in December.
That occurred simply after fellow octogenarian President Biden sparked intense hypothesis about his age and cognitive talents along with his disastrous debate efficiency towards Trump in June of final yr. The efficiency led to Biden being pushed to drop out of the race — partially by Pelosi — and to Vice President Kamala Harris shifting to the highest of the ticket and dropping badly to Trump in November.
Democrats have additionally watched different older liberal leaders age and die in energy in recent times, together with the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein, one other San Francisco energy participant in Washington. When Ginsburg died in workplace at 87, it handed Trump a 3rd Supreme Courtroom appointment. When Feinstein died in workplace sick at 90, it was amid swirling questions on her competency to serve.
By bowing out of the 2026 race, Pelosi — who stepped down from social gathering management in 2022 — diminished her personal potential for an ungraceful final chapter in workplace. However she didn’t concede that her present effectiveness has diminished one bit.
Pelosi was probably the most vocal and early proponents of Proposition 50, which amends the state structure to offer state Democrats the facility by 2030 to redraw California’s congressional districts of their favor.
The measure was in response to Republicans in pink states reminiscent of Texas redrawing maps of their favor, at Trump’s path. Pelosi championed it as vital to preserving Democrats’ probabilities of profitable again the Home subsequent yr and checking Trump by the second half of his second time period, one thing she and others advised will probably be very important for the survival of American democracy.
On Tuesday, California voters resoundingly accredited Proposition 50.
In her video, Pelosi famous a litany of accomplishments throughout her time in workplace, crediting them to not herself however to her constituents, to labor teams, to nonprofits and personal entrepreneurs, to the town’s vibrant range and aptitude for innovation.
She famous bringing federal assets to the town to recuperate after the Loma Prieta earthquake, and San Francisco’s main position in tackling the devastating HIV/AIDS disaster by partnerships with College of California San Francisco and San Francisco Basic, which “pioneered complete group primarily based care, prevention and analysis” nonetheless used immediately.
She talked about passing the Ryan White CARE Act and the Reasonably priced Care Act, constructing out numerous San Francisco and California public transportation techniques, constructing inexpensive housing and defending the setting — all utilizing federal {dollars} her place helped her to safe.
“It appears prophetic now that the slogan of my very first marketing campaign in 1987 was, ‘A voice that will probably be heard,’ and it was you who made these phrases come true. It was the religion that you just had positioned in me, and the latitude that you’ve got given me, that enabled me to shatter the marble ceiling and be the primary girl Speaker of the Home, whose voice would definitely be heard,” Pelosi stated. “It was an historic second for our nation, and it was momentous for our group — empowering me to carry residence billions of {dollars} for our metropolis and our state.”
