WASHINGTON — House Democrats on Tuesday picked 74-year-old Rep. Gerry Connolly to lead the party next year atop an influential congressional committee, pushing aside growing calls for generational change in leadership ahead of a second term for Donald Trump.
In a closed-door meeting, the majority of the caucus voted for Connolly to be the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee over 35-year-old Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who campaigned on calls to pass the torch to younger leaders. Connolly has seniority on the committee, having served on it for 16 years. The vote was 131-84.
''I think my colleagues were measuring their votes by who's got experience, who is seasoned, who can be trusted, who's capable and who's got a record of productivity and I think that prevailed,'' Connolly told reporters after the vote.
The Virginia Democrat on Monday had won the endorsement of a Democratic panel that makes recommendation for committee assignments. But Ocasio-Cortez and her allies had said the initial vote was close enough to keep her in the race and try again at Tuesday's caucus-wide meeting.
In a brief statement on social media, Ocasio-Cortez wrote: ''Tried my best. Sorry I couldn't pull it through everyone — we live to fight another day.''
Rep. Annie Kuster, the chair of the New Democratic coalition, said some of her members, who come from swing districts and tend to vote moderately, had concerns about Ocasio-Cortez supporting primaries against other Democrats, even though she pledged not to do that in the closed-door session this week.
''I think there are members that very much want this generational change but I think, members who had only been here a couple of terms gave them pause," Kuster said.
Ocasio-Cortez's loss comes as several other younger Democrats won the ranking spots on committees, pushing out more senior members. It's all part of a generational struggle in the party that has grown more urgent following Democrat's electoral defeat last month that handed Republicans complete control of Washington come January.