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Politico

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Pelosi says she doesn’t have ‘many differences’ with AOC after private meeting


Speaker Nancy Pelosi met privately with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Friday, after a messy public feud between the two highest-profile House members riveted the Capitol earlier this month.

Ocasio-Cortez did not say anything as she walked into the speaker’s office shortly before 8:30 a.m., and she quietly slipped out 30 minutes later, eluding reporters.

Pelosi offered few remarks after the meeting, noting she has a press conference later in the morning.

“I don’t think we have that many differences,” Pelosi said after the meeting as she rushed to the House floor to open the chamber for the day.

Pelosi said “no” when asked if she discussed Ocasio-Cortez’s comments from earlier this month suggesting the speaker was singling out congresswomen of color.

“I have meetings with members all the time...we covered a range of issues in our conversation particular to the congresswoman’s committees,” she said.

Allies for both lawmakers had sought to downplay expectations ahead of the meeting, which comes just as the House departs for a six-week recess. But the summit between Pelosi and Ocasio-Cortez has been the subject of much palace intrigue in the House over the last week.

The behind-closed-doors conversation came after a days-long spat between Pelosi and Ocasio-Cortez earlier this month that ignited when the speaker dismissed the influence the New York Democrat and her high-profile progressive freshman friends — known collectively as “the squad” — have in the House.

“All these people have their public whatever and their Twitter world,” Pelosi told the New York Times after a dispute over a contentious border aide bill publicly pitted members of the squad against their Democratic colleagues in late June.

“But they didn’t have any following,” Pelosi continued. “They’re four people, and that’s how many votes they got.”

Tensions between progressive and moderate House Democrats were still inflamed after an internal debate over the border bill spilled out publicly, resulting in nasty name calling on Twitter and a dramatic confrontation on the House floor.

Pelosi’s comments about the squad bluntly exposed ideological divisions that had been quietly simmering for months before the border debate.

The remarks infuriated Ocasio-Cortez and other squad members — Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.). The quartet vented on Twitter, with Ocasio-Cortez noting the latest comment was one in a series of seemingly dismissive remarks Pelosi had made related to her.

“Those aren’t quotes from me; they‘re from the Speaker. Having respect for ourselves doesn’t mean we lack respect for her,” Ocasio-Cortez

. “It means we won’t let everyday people be dismissed.”

Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff took it a step further, ripping into Pelosi and questioning her leadership skills in a series of

.

Ocasio-Cortez escalated the feud later that week when she made comments to the Washington Post suggesting Pelosi was purposefully singling out congresswomen of color to criticize.

Her remarks enraged senior members of the caucus, who were already angry about a series of tweets from Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff weeks earlier that accused moderates of “criminalizing brown people” for political gain.

The feud looked like it was going to drag into another week until President Donald Trump unified Democrats after tweeting a racist series of statements on July 14 telling the members of the squad — all women of color — to “go back” to another country.

All four of the congresswomen are American citizens. Trump continued his drumbeat of attacks — including repeating a series of falsehoods about the progressives and declining to stop chants of “send her back” at a political rally later that week, remarks aimed squarely at Omar.

Democrats moved quickly to condemn Trump’s comments, with Pelosi causing a last-minute flurry of controversy after calling the president’s comments “racist” on the House floor.

Now, as the House departs for its longest break away from Washington this year, Democrats say they’re all looking to move on.


Article originally published on POLITICO Magazine

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