Thanks for Not Insisting on Dying in Office, Nancy Pelosi
She really waited until the 119th hour to call it.
Photo: Getty Images Politics
It’s hard to remember a time when our government didn’t look like a nursing home. The last time we didn’t have a septuagenarian—or older—in the Oval Office was in 2016, and this year, the three members of Congress who died (rest in peace) died of old age. So it must have been really hard for Nancy Pelosi to buck the trend—and retire at the ripe age of 85. (Thank. God.)
85. She was just a kid https://t.co/yWwK4ZAB3o
— PointlessHub (@HubPointless) November 3, 2025
On Thursday, the first female House Speaker tweeted a nearly six-minute video extolling San Francisco and paying homage to the city she’s represented for nearly four decades. “I want you, my fellow San Franciscans, to be the first to know—I will not be seeking reelection to Congress,” she said. “With a grateful heart, I look forward to my final year of service as your proud representative.”
Thank you, San Francisco. pic.twitter.com/OP8ubeFzR6
— Nancy Pelosi (@TeamPelosi) November 6, 2025
Following Pelosi’s announcement, several politicians—including Hillary Clinton and Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas)—thanked her for her service and credited her influence. Former president Barack Obama said she’ll go down in history as “one of the best speakers the House of Representatives has ever had.” Even Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who’s been seemingly pulling a reverse John Fetterman as of late, went on CNN to say, “I’m very impressed at her ability to get things done. I wish we could get things done for our party like Nancy Pelosi was able to deliver for her party.” (But never forget: MTG was caught liking a comment in 2019 that said a “bullet to the head” could remove Pelosi from her Speaker position.)
On the other end of the MAGA spectrum, current House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) sensed an opportunity to whine about Tuesday’s Blue Wave and lamented Pelosi’s move as a result of “radicals” taking over the Democratic Party. “That is a very important sign that I hope that you all will delve into,” he said. Delve, we shall!
If anyone was incredibly happy about the news, however, it was Trump, whom Pelosi made an enemy with on day one of his first term, when she rejected his handshake and deliberately ripped up a copy of his State of the Union address. “The retirement of Nancy Pelosi is a great thing for America,” Trump texted to Fox News’ Peter Doocy, calling her a “highly overrated politician.” “She was evil, corrupt, and only focused on bad things for our country. She was rapidly losing control of her party, and it was never coming back. I’m very honored that she impeached me twice and failed miserably twice.”
Pelosi won her first election in 1987, and “broke the marble ceiling” when she became the first woman to hold positions as both the Democratic Whip in 2001 and the Democratic Leader in 2002. She was House Speaker from 2007 to 2011 and from 2019 to 2023, and during her 20 terms, she helped architect the Affordable Care Act and Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009, which permitted workers to sue employers for discriminatory pay.
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