Donald Trump still hasn't figured out how to deal effectively with Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and probably thinks it's very unfair that she got the prime spot on CBS' 60 Minutes Sunday night. The resentment oozed out all over Twitter Monday morning, with Trump whining about the "puff piece" about her, when she has "passed no meaningful Legislation [sic]." Then something something "No Collusion" and a follow-up repeated attack on Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, who he says "controls" Pelosi.
Of course it's nonsense. The first quarter of Pelosi’s leadership of the House—the House she won back from Trump's party—has seen around 150 non-administrative bills shepherded to the floor and passed. Seven of those bills passed the Senate and were signed by Trump, including getting government reopened, and seven bills passed into law in a bit over three months’ time—when the first month was taken up with government shutdown fights—is no small accomplishment with Mitch McConnell running the Senate.
What Pelosi has done with her first 100 days includes: passing H.R. 1, the massive anti-corruption, pro-voting rights bill; two gun safety bills, the first to come to the floor in eight years; bills to promote small businesses and anti-discrimination in government contracting; a public health bill to address global pandemics; several appropriations bills; and a number of national security bills.
Meanwhile, McConnell's Senate has passed dozens and dozens of resolutions honoring sports teams and recognizing things like "National Safe Digging Month" and "National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month," as well as jamming through Trump's unqualified and extremist judicial and executive nominees. No legislation of substance—beyond appropriations—is going to pass McConnell's Senate. Not with the House in Democratic control.
Trump has no answer for Pelosi other than to try to undermine her leadership by suggesting she's not in control. Which, if you watch the House and understand how it all works, is clearly laughable. But if you're traditional media (even Lesley Stahl on 60 Minutes, whose main thrust in the interview was Dems in Disarray), you will likely give it traction, because that's what you do.