Monday, July 01, 2019

Democratic Candidates Veer Left, Ignoring Winning 2018 Strategy


Having been involved in both the GOP and the Democrat parties over the last three decades, I often think that at various times, each party has shown itself to be its own worse enemy.  Now, in the lead up to the 2020 presidential and federal elections, Democrat candidates seem to be quickly becoming a potential threat to defeating Donald Trump and holding the House of Representatives and gaining control of the U.S. Senate.  As a prior post noted, some are jumping on board the reparations bandwagon which I perceive to be an absolute loser in the 2020 general election.  Similarly, many of the would be presidential nominees are lurching leftward seemingly oblivious to the realities that (i) one most be able to win the general election, not just the primary, and (ii) voters - and especially GOP attack ads - will not allow far left statements and positions to go forgotten come the 2020 general election.  What plays with the so-called liberal elites doesn't play well in key states such as Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin.  A piece in the Washington Post looks at what drives me to distraction as candidates pander to extreme elements of the Democrat base with no thought to what will happen once the winner of the primary contest is selected.  Here are highlights:

With a full embrace of liberal positions on hot-button issues from immigration to health care, taxes and abortion, the Democratic presidential field has effectively abandoned the strategy that propelled the party to a landslide victory in the 2018 midterms, when Democrats flipped 43 GOP House seats and won 31 districts that Trump carried in 2016. The sharp shift to the left, laid bare over the course of two nights last week on the Miami debate stage, has scrambled the country’s political dynamics headed into a 2020 campaign in which Democrats hope the 2018 results, combined with Trump’s relatively low approval ratings, would put them in a strong position to retake the White House.
Last year’s midterm strategy focused on what party leaders viewed as a sensibly moderate message designed to attract centrist voters. In that campaign, Democratic congressional candidates denounced GOP tax increases for the middle class in Trump’s 2017 tax cut and blasted Republican plans to take away federal protections for preexisting conditions in private insurance.
But many of the leading Democratic presidential candidates are running on a Medicare-for-all plan that would replace private insurance entirely for most Americans and raise middle class taxes to pay for it. Several of the candidates support plans to not just increase background checks for guns but buy back guns already in circulation. They are also elevating social issues Trump has embraced politically in the past like police misconduct, transgender rights and immigration.
“These are not mainstream proposals. Think about it. They are way to the left of Barack Obama,” said Jim McLaughlin, a pollster working on Trump’s reelection campaign. “They are talking about middle class and small business tax increases, no restrictions on abortion. How do you think these things are going over in places like Pennsylvania and Ohio?”
Democratic strategists from the 2018 campaign agree there is a danger.
“We should not be deploying strategies right now that make the national battlefield smaller,” said Dan Sena, the former executive director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. His research on the electorate after Trump’s 2016 win concluded it was a mistake to get into a simple base turnout fight against Trump, who has proved remarkably successful at motivating non-college educated white voters to go to the polls.
In the short term, the new Democratic messaging is aimed less at suburban swing voters in key states like Wisconsin and Michigan than at liberal donors clustered in coastal cities and nonwhite voters in the party’s base, who tend to be more liberal and hold significant sway over the nominating fight.
Last year’s midterm strategy focused on what party leaders viewed as a sensibly moderate message designed to attract centrist voters. In that campaign, Democratic congressional candidates denounced GOP tax increases for the middle class in Trump’s 2017 tax cut and blasted Republican plans to take away federal protections for preexisting conditions in private insurance.
But it is not clear how dramatically the candidates plan to pivot if they do win the nomination, and whether they will be successful. Many reject the argument that more liberal policies will alienate needed voters. They point to Trump’s inability to use immigration fears of migrant caravans to stop a Democratic wave in 2018.
Warren and Sanders, in particular, have cast Trump as a symptom of broader rot in the American political system, not the root cause. The larger problem can only be fixed, they argue, with dramatic policy changes that shift resources from the wealthy, including new taxes on Wall Street, corporate profits or the richest Americans. They contend that message will ultimately resonate with many of the same working-class white voters who supported Trump in 2016.
[S]ome veterans of Obama’s 2012 reelection also chimed in with concern, not just for the coming election but for the prospect of governing, even if Democrats recapture the Senate and hold the House.
“I wonder if we’re solving a problem that is not there and spending the vast majority of our political capital on it,” said Obama’s former campaign press secretary Ben LaBolt, who is unaffiliated in the 2020 race. “Expanding upon and improving Obamacare accomplishes the vast majority of goals that Democrats are looking for.”
Polling shows that single payer health care remains a confounding idea for many Americans. Recent Kaiser Family Foundation polls have found that 56 percent of the nation favors the Medicare-for-all, compared to 74 percent of Americans who support expanded Medicare as an option for younger Americans in addition to private insurance.
When the same people were told that a Medicare-for-all plan would raise taxes and eliminate private health insurance, support fell to 37 percent.
Rick Tyler, a conservative Republican strategist who has become a vocal critic of Trump, said he believes Democrats are playing right into Trump’s hands.
“They are not talking to the blue collar workers that I understand that vote in Pennsylvania and Michigan,” Tyler said. “Are they seriously capable of choosing a nominee who is going to beat Donald Trump? Right now, I have my doubts.”

1 comment:

EdA said...

Please keep in mind, though, that many of the people "concerned" that Democratic candidates are becoming more progressive are Republicans and many others are pundits and "journalists" with proven tendencies towards false equivalencies and also that we can be pretty sure that Republicans will expand on their already begun practice of telling lies -- and that there are definite signs that more people are coming to realize that they themselves are being hurt by the realities of Trump and Republican practices.

It's already become clear, at least to me, that some of the most out-of-the-mainstream ideas, including reparations and extreme single-payer health care, have been written off, with the more probable candidates, including Elizabeth Warren, having come down solidly on incrementalism building on Obamacare or the Affordable Care Act (which is of course the same but more palatable to the perversely under-informed). And, as I say, regardless of what positions Democratic candidates actually have, Mitch McConnell, Traitor Chump, and their enablers and allies will distort, anyhow.

There really is no point in trying to convert the deplorables. But it IS critical to motivate and inspire those parts of the Democratic base who believed the garbage that there's no difference between the parties so they might as well stay home AND those people who are coming to realize that they started voting in their own interests and people who are now realizing that they have been scammed by Don the Con. And the idea of abandoning social justice issues should be a non-starter. Pete Buttisgieg has the right idea, by highlighting the divergence between what Jesus purportedly preached and the Mordor-like reality that the Christianist fundamentalists practice.