The education of the star-studded class of House freshmen has begun.
Lesson one: Speaking with the bluntness of a candidate can produce swift and uncomfortable results.
Representative Rashida Tlaib learned that before lunch Friday, when her profane remarks the night before vowing to impeach President Donald Trump drew almost no support, and plenty of pushback, from members of her party.
"It's been pretty intense," Tlaib, a Democrat from Michigan, told The Associated Press in a brief hallway interview as she reported to the House to face her colleagues.
Hours after Tlaib was sworn in as part of the history-making class of freshmen that helped flip the House to Democratic control, she ran afoul of the widespread sense among her colleagues that they should focus for now on health care and other policies rather than impeachment - at least until special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation concludes.
"We're gonna impeach the motherf****r," Tlaib exclaimed during a party Thursday night hosted by the liberal activist group MoveOn, according to video and comments on Twitter.
It was a striking coda to the Democrats' heady ascendance to the House majority Thursday, sparking unusually public corrections from House veterans.
"I disagree with what she said," said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, Democrat from New York, during a CNN interview. His committee would be the one to begin impeachment proceedings.
"It is too early to talk about that intelligently," Nadler said. "We have to follow the facts."
More than Tlaib's profanity, it was her vow to impeach Trump that drew her colleagues' disapproval.
Tlaib's defiance flew in the face of Speaker Nancy Pelosi's warning to focus on policies the candidates had promised ahead of the November 6 elections. The timing also chafed, just hours before congressional leaders were headed to the White House to try to resolve the standoff over the border wall Trump is demanding in exchange for reopening the government. Republicans pounced, using the occasion to question the Democrats' true priorities and Pelosi's leadership.
With a tight smile, Pelosi rejected Tlaib's profanity and her impeachment vow.
"That is not the position of the House Democratic caucus," Pelosi said on MSNBC of Tlaib's comments. "I don't think we should make a big deal of it."
Rep. Gerry Connolly, Democrat from Virginia., served up a reminder to the new members that seniority rules in Congress.
"She's a freshman. It's her first day here," Connolly said of Tlaib. "She went in front of an enthusiastic crowd of her supporters and it was red meat for them. She yielded to that temptation."
"I'm sure upon reflection," Connolly suggested, "she might choose other words to describe her feelings."
Australian Associated Press