The Atlantic

What Nancy Pelosi Learned From the Clinton Impeachment

Interviews with the House speaker’s old friends and colleagues offer a window into her reluctance to pull the pin on a political grenade.
Source: Hillery Smith Garrison / AP

Updated at 11:57 a.m. ET on June 16, 2019.

When Republicans voted on impeachment more than 20 years ago, Nancy Pelosi was right there on the House floor, watching as the GOP plunged headfirst into the process without broad public support or the clear prospect of conviction in the Senate. For many establishment Democrats of a certain age—say, those who are now eligible for Medicare—the lesson from that time is clear: Impeaching Bill Clinton was a bad idea that hurt the presidency, the country, and most of all, the House Republican majority.

How Pelosi handles the growing calls from her caucus to begin removal proceedings against Donald Trump will illuminate the degree to which she herself believes that lesson. But as she struggles to manage pressure from roughly a quarter of House Democrats, interviews with some of her old friends and colleagues, and others who were in the

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