Times Colonist

Democrats face head vs. heart balancing act for 2020 battle

- THOMAS BEAUMONT

DES MOINES, Iowa — Democrats beginning to think about the type of person they would like to see take on U.S. President Donald Trump face an early conundrum: Whether a pragmatist has a better chance to take the White House than someone with a more inspiratio­nal personal story.

This heart-versus-head balancing act is coming into focus as potential White House hopefuls begin making trips to Iowa, home to the first presidenti­al caucus in 2020, ahead of formally announcing their candidacie­s.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota will be in the state on Saturday, representi­ng the case for pragmatism. Far from flashy, Klobuchar won a commanding re-election victory this year in a Midwestern state, potentiall­y boosting the argument that she could win in a region that helped send Trump to the White House. Other prospects in this camp include senators Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Bob Casey of Pennsylvan­ia, each of whom cruised to re-election in states that Trump carried in 2016.

But this isn’t an easy argument to make to activists in early voting states who are not just hungry to beat Trump, but also long for inspiratio­n reminiscen­t of former U.S. president Barack Obama’s early campaign, when thousands in Iowa were drawn to his distinctiv­e oratory and biography. That could help prospects such as senators Kamala Harris of California and Cory Booker of New Jersey along with Beto O’Rourke, whose narrow loss in the 2018 Senate race in Republican-heavy Texas has fuelled speculatio­n about his national prospects.

“The electabili­ty argument is less emotional,” said John Norris, a veteran Iowa Democratic operative who led John Kerry’s successful 2004 caucus campaign. “And this will be an emotional election, I think.”

Still, the pragmatist­s point to the math a Democrat will need to get to 270 electoral votes.

A Democrat could conceivabl­y return to the White House by holding Minnesota and winning back any of a number of combinatio­ns of Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan or Wisconsin, typically Democratic presidenti­al states Trump narrowly carried. Klobuchar, Brown and Casey could be well suited for this role.

Klobuchar won a third term this month, getting 60 per cent of the vote and carrying vast stretches of rural western and northern Minnesota that Trump won two years ago.

Brown won a third term by six percentage points in Ohio, where Trump won by eight, on a day Republican­s also held the state’s governorsh­ip, all of its U.S. House seats and majorities in the legislatur­e.

Casey won by nearly 13 percentage points in Pennsylvan­ia, a state Trump carried by less than a percentage point.

And yet the road to the White House is paved with failed candidates who made their dominance of a particular state a central selling point.

In 2003, Democratic Sen. Bob Graham campaigned as one of the most successful candidates in Florida, where the contested 2000 election was decided. But Graham dropped out of the race before the Iowa caucuses, crowded out by Kerry, North Carolina Sen. John Edwards and Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who campaigned individual­ly as inspiratio­nal figures on national security, economic populism and opposition to the war in Iraq.

In 2008, the historic potential surroundin­g Obama and Hillary Clinton pushed out other Democrats early such as Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh, who saw their home state success as a strategic advantage.

Klobuchar’s play could be as much about style as it is electoral strategy. In the era of Trump, where boisterous, public insults are the rule, Klobuchar, pushed her persona of competence. In effect, the self-effacing Klobuchar known for her neighbourl­y demeanour and penchant for bowling alleys could be the stylistic anti-Trump.

“She seems very down to earth and common, like we can relate to her,” said Bryce Smith, Democratic chairman in Dallas County, Iowa, where Klobuchar is scheduled to visit today.

Brown could pose a challenge to Klobuchar for that mantle. More devoutly liberal than Klobuchar on issues such as health care, Brown carries the torch of an ardently prolabour populist, which could resonate in those pro-Trump pockets.

 ?? AARON LAVINSKY, TNS ?? Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota speaks to the media in St. Paul, Minnesota. She represents the case for pragmatism in the search for a candidate to take on Donald Trump in the 2020 U.S. presidenti­al election.
AARON LAVINSKY, TNS Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota speaks to the media in St. Paul, Minnesota. She represents the case for pragmatism in the search for a candidate to take on Donald Trump in the 2020 U.S. presidenti­al election.

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