Philosopher said:Hoyer raised $11 million or so this cycle. That means more to most members, understandably.
Murtha's statement last year was orchestrated by Pelosi -- she picked him to be the one to make that statement, as I understand it. And he has long been one of her strongest supporters. My sense is that either she put him up to this and is trying to eliminate Hoyer as a threat, or she doesn't care and is helping him out of loyalty. Murtha was her campaign manager when she first ran for leader.
PopeDirkBenedict said:Regardless of what happens, Pelosi is very, very, very dumb to publicly come out in favor of Murtha over Hoyer.
If Hoyer wins, Pelosi looks weak because the caucus has voted against her choice and the honeymoon is over. Even if Murtha wins, she looks clumsy and has created a dividing line and a public enemy. If the Dems don't well in the next two years and suffer losses in the House in 2008, it adds fuel for Hoyer to take her on as Speaker. Remember that many freshmen who come from conservative districts have already come out for Hoyer. By endorsing Murtha over Hoyer, she makes it easy for columnists and political journalists to posit that she is ignoring the wishes of the very members whose election made her Madam Speaker.
I believe Murtha deserved the public acknowledgement.PopeDirkBenedict said:She didn't have to support Murtha publicly in a press release. Had she stayed behind the scenes and use a few phone calls to undecided Congressmen to get support for Murtha. She could have kept plausible deniability. Everyone knows that she was going to support Murtha over Hoyer; Murtha was her campaign manager when she ran against Hoyer to be the minority leader. This was a move she didn't have to make.
Columbo said:I believe Murtha deserved the public acknowledgement.PopeDirkBenedict said:She didn't have to support Murtha publicly in a press release. Had she stayed behind the scenes and use a few phone calls to undecided Congressmen to get support for Murtha. She could have kept plausible deniability. Everyone knows that she was going to support Murtha over Hoyer; Murtha was her campaign manager when she ran against Hoyer to be the minority leader. This was a move she didn't have to make.
I like that she didn't waffle with something like that.PopeDirkBenedict said:Columbo said:I believe Murtha deserved the public acknowledgement.PopeDirkBenedict said:She didn't have to support Murtha publicly in a press release. Had she stayed behind the scenes and use a few phone calls to undecided Congressmen to get support for Murtha. She could have kept plausible deniability. Everyone knows that she was going to support Murtha over Hoyer; Murtha was her campaign manager when she ran against Hoyer to be the minority leader. This was a move she didn't have to make.
Would you rather have Murtha recognized or have a strong Speaker? It really is an either/or choice. She could have recognized Murtha by putting out a press release lauding both men for their part in making a Democratic majority.
Columbo said:Man... Murtha is embarrassing himself on Hardball.
The Abscam explanation holds NO water.
He feels like a slimeball good ol boy on this show
Perry White said:It's Hoyer
PopeDirkBenedict said:Columbo said:I believe Murtha deserved the public acknowledgement.PopeDirkBenedict said:She didn't have to support Murtha publicly in a press release. Had she stayed behind the scenes and use a few phone calls to undecided Congressmen to get support for Murtha. She could have kept plausible deniability. Everyone knows that she was going to support Murtha over Hoyer; Murtha was her campaign manager when she ran against Hoyer to be the minority leader. This was a move she didn't have to make.
Would you rather have Murtha recognized or have a strong Speaker? It really is an either/or choice. She could have recognized Murtha by putting out a press release lauding both men for their part in making a Democratic majority.