If you saw my face, I'd be smiling ear to ear," Nancy Pelosi tells THE WEEK, lighting up the evening sky in India, which is still taking in the euphoria over the chances of Vice President Kamala Harris becoming the next president of the United States.
It is 7:15 in the morning on the American west coast (7:45pm in India) as Pelosi, former speaker of the US House of Representatives and one of the leading power centres in the Democratic Party, settles in for an exclusive conversation. Her infectious enthusiasm easily breaks the gap of time, cultures and civilisation as she bonds over shared experiences of Gandhian philosophy that she marvelled at as a little girl and of imbibing the Dalai Lama's message of peace.
Pelosi's arena of public service spans continents and hearts, making her one of the most popular world leaders. "Be yourself. Be ready. And know your power," writes the 84-yearold leader in her new book, The Art of Power, as she prepares to pass on the baton of being a "mother" of her country's children to her long-time friend Harris. "I look forward to not being the most powerful woman in politics in America when she will become president of the United States," says the first woman speaker of the house. And as potential president, Harris is unique. "She happens to be a woman. She happens to be black.
She happens to be an Indian-American," says Pelosi. A gush of joy comes through her words.
When Pelosi was elected to the House of Representatives for the first time in 1987, she was one of just 23 women among its 435 members. Most older male members on the Capitol Hill dismissed her as a wealthy housewife from San Francisco, but by hard work and sheer force of personality she rose to the senior leadership of the house Democrats, which had been a male preserve.
Esta historia es de la edición August 25, 2024 de THE WEEK India.
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Esta historia es de la edición August 25, 2024 de THE WEEK India.
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