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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Joe Sommerlad

Congress - live updates: Nancy Pelosi set to return as House speaker as Democrats bid to end government shutdown

Congress will reconvene today with the Democrats taking majority control of the House of Representatives after their success in last November's midterm elections.

Party leader Nancy Pelosi is expected to make history when she returns to the office of House speaker, the first person to do so for 50 years. She is the first woman to hold the office and many doubted she could amass enough votes to secure a second term.

The San Francisco liberal has promised her first act will be to quickly pass legislation to bring the recent government shutdown to an end without releasing funds for President Donald Trump's proposed Mexico border wall. The Republican-held Senate could block such a bill but doing so would see the GOP left accountable for the federal hiatus.

A lot of Democrat Representatives and Senators have been looking forward to the return to Congress. There has been much cheer about the increase in women members across the two chambers.


 
 
Here is that full interview with Nancy Pelosi:


Nancy Pelosi has appeared on NBC's Today show this morning and says she isn't ruling out impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump, depending on findings by the special counsel investigating Russia's meddling in the 2016 election. 
 
"We'll have to wait and see what comes" from Robert Mueller's probe of contacts between Mr Trump's presidential campaign and Russia, she said. 
Lawmakers will take this oath: "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God."
 
Representative-elect Rashida Tlaib will take the oath on a Quran, and not just anyone's. She'll use a 1734 English translation that belonged to Thomas Jefferson.
Here’s today’s order of play:
 
Starting at noon EST (5pm GMT), there will be prayers and pledges of allegiance. 
 
In the 435-member House, a roll call will begin on the election of speaker. Representative Nancy Pelosi is poised to reprise her role in that post, second in line to the presidency. Once the vote is over, Republican majority leader Kevin McCarthy is expected to speak, followed by an address by Ms Pelosi. 
 
The longest-serving member of the House and its dean, 24-term representative Don Young (Republican-Alaska) will swear in the new speaker. The California Democrat is then expected administer the oath to House members and delegates at the same time. 
 
In the Senate, vice president Mike Pence will preside over the oath-taking of the 34 members who stood for election on 6 November. Republicans gained two seats in that chamber. 
 
Although Nancy Pelosi has pledged that her first act as speaker would be to pass a bill to reopen government – and without granting President Trump the billions of dollars he wants to bankroll his Mexican border wall – they need the president’s agreement and, so far, he isn't budging. 
 
The shutdown will last "as long as it takes" to secure the funding for the wall, says Mr Trump following unsuccessful talks with congressional leaders, while Ms Pelosi asked on NBC’s Today: "How many more times can we say no?"
 
The Senate, still Republican-held, has the power to block the Democrats’ resolve and majority leader Mitch McConnell has called Ms Pelosi’s declaration a "political sideshow" and a "total nonstarter."
 
But standing in the way of ending the shutdown would leave the Republicans vulnerable to accusations that they are as responsible for the impasse as Mr Trump, strengthening the Democrats’ hand.
The new Congress will make history for seating a record number of women and becoming the most racially and ethnically diverse.
 
Representatives-elect Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar, Democrats from Michigan and Minnesota respectively, are the first two Muslim women to serve in Congress.
 
And they're just a few of the signs of change that spring from the 6 November elections. For the first time, two Native American women are headed to the House. Massachusetts and Connecticut will also send black women to Congress as firsts for their states, while Arizona and Tennessee are getting their first female senators.
 
Popular New Yorker Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will also make history as the youngest woman to take office in American history, doing so aged just 29.
 
In all, 127 women - 106 Democrats 21 Republicans - will serve in the 116th Congress, holding nearly 24 percent of all seats, according to the Center for Women and Politics at Rutgers University.
 
In the Senate, 25 women will serve, with 17 of them Democrats and eight Republicans.
 
The number of House seats held by Republican women will decline by 10, from 23 to 13.
Pelosi’s comeback depended on her promise to limit her tenure to a maximum of four years. Doing so quelled a rebellion by a stubborn faction of Democrats demanding a new generation of leaders. 
 
She prevailed, wielding skills she will need to manage the roughly 235 Democrats, among the 435 representatives, who will comprise the House majority in the new Congress. 
 
Her ascension sets up a clash with Trump. But where Trump has Twitter and status among his base as a Washington outsider, Pelosi has a network of allies inside and outside Congress - not to mention three decades in the House.
Nancy Pelosi, 78, is poised to be elected as House speaker, the only woman who has held the office and now one of few elected officials who will be returning to it. The last time a speaker regained the gavel was more than a half-century ago. 
 
The California Democrat has spent her political career being underestimated, only to prove the naysayers wrong. In this case, it was by winning back the Democratic majority and amassing the votes for the speaker's job. 
 
"None of us is indispensable," Pelosi told The Associated Press on the campaign trail last autumn, "but I do know that I'm very good at what I do." 
 
Pelosi remains a highly polarising figure, vilified by Republicans as a San Francisco liberal and caricature of big government.
 
But she is also a mother of five and grandmother of nine who has shattered glass ceilings to become one of the most powerful politicians of the 21st century.
The Democrats take control of the House of Representatives for the first time since the "blue wave" of November's midterms saw them wrestle back control of the chamber from the Republicans.
Hello and welcome to The Independent's live coverage as Congress reconvenes in Washington, DC.

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