Van Hollen Weighs Leadership Options

By Tory Newmyer
Roll Call Staff
October 30, 2008

Days from an election that could roughly double Democratic margins in the House, Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), the quarterback of the majority party’s campaign push, remains mum about whether he would reprise the role next cycle.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) — who is responsible for appointing the head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee — has offered the job to Van Hollen again, sources confirmed. It presents a tough call for the Maryland Democrat.

A second term would preserve Van Hollen’s seat at the leadership table at a time when expanded Democratic majorities, and a possible Democratic White House, could unlock the party’s big-ticket priorities. And it would allow him to continue building a national Rolodex of donors and operatives handy for a future Senate run that he is widely thought to be eyeing.

But it would also mean another two years of a grueling traveling schedule — and more time away from his wife and the two of his three children still in school — with the unglamorous task of defending Democratic gains rather than adding to them. “Those are the competing factors,” a senior Democratic aide said.

Several sources close to the lawmaker said he is pouring himself into the final days of the campaign with stops this week in New Jersey and Florida, and is putting off any decision about his next move until after Tuesday’s balloting.

“He genuinely decided this is something he’s going to take a look at post-election,” said one Democratic strategist with ties to the committee.

An ideal scenario would present Van Hollen with an as-yet-unknown third option. The House Democratic leadership ladder looks stable at the top, but if Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) wins the White House, he could raid its ranks to stock his administration with Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel (Ill.), or, more likely, Majority Whip James Clyburn (S.C.). Either way, Van Hollen would likely have an opportunity to run for an elected post.

Democratic aides and strategists said other opportunities could open. Van Hollen could flex his legislative muscles heading up a new policy task force. Or Pelosi could create a special leadership role for him, as she did for Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.) when she named him assistant to the Speaker, an unelected slot.

Pelosi has demonstrated that she is willing to shuffle the leadership deck to reward a proven Democratic benefactor. After Emanuel engineered the party’s 2006 victory, she persuaded then-Caucus Chairman John Larson (D-Conn.) to stand aside and let Emanuel take the slot in the majority. Larson settled for the vice chairmanship.

“Depending on how things shake out, he’ll have, if not a senior title, a senior adviser role in Democratic leadership,” a Democratic strategist said. That, several sources agreed, would be the least Pelosi could do to reward his performance at the helm of the House Democrats’ campaign arm.

Stepping into the job under Emanuel’s outsized shadow, Van Hollen was expected to focus on helping Democratic freshmen hang on to seats that they won in conservative districts by surfing the 2006 wave. Instead, thanks to tight management, aggressive fundraising and recruiting — and outside factors, namely the continued collapse of the GOP brand, massive Republican retirements and the economic meltdown — House Democrats are poised to repeat gains on the scale that recaptured the majority for them two years ago.

“I would hope the Speaker would ask him to do it again, and I would hope he would accept,” said former Rep. Martin Frost (D-Texas), the last lawmaker to serve back-to-back terms leading the DCCC, in the 1996 and 1998 cycles.

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