Manager Mike Doyle holds the coveted Roll Call trophy as he, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic team celebrate their victory over the Republicans on Thursday.
On Thursday night at Nationals Park, there was no bitterness. There was no bickering over the national debt. There wasn’t even the typical July Beltway heat or humidity.
On a made-to-order evening for baseball in the nation’s capital, there was only the game.
Democrats dominated the Republicans, 8-2, in the 50th Annual Roll Call Congressional Baseball Game, but for just a moment lawmakers got to escape the divisive debate over how to raise the nation’s debt ceiling and instead enjoy its pastime.
Mere hours after a session with President Barack Obama at the White House, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) was able to cheerfully work a crowd, dressed in a casual striped pink polo, khaki shorts and brown loafers. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) sat in the first row behind home plate, cheering on her side despite a prime location to heckle the other team. And House Minority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) walked through the stands on the third base line, packed with Democratic staffers, to a standing ovation.
And in the most alternate of D.C. universes, a freshman in the minority had the biggest effect on the game.
First-term Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.) took a no-hitter into the sixth inning, shutting down the GOP side, while also blasting hits all over the outfield when the Democrats were at bat.
As Richmond walked to the dugout in the middle of the sixth, minutes after giving up his first single to Rep. Steve Pearce (R-N.M.), he was showered with chants of “MVP” from the hundreds of Democrats in the stands relishing his control of the mound in the first game since Democrats lost control of the House.
Video: Highlights from the 2011 Congressional Baseball Game
DREAMers prepare to deliver cantaloupes to the offices of the 224 House members who voted in favor of Rep. Steve King’s amendment. Each cantaloupe will be wrapped with its own sticker that says “This cantaloupe was picked by immigrant hands in California. You gave Steve King a vote. Give us a vote for citizenship.”
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