Waterloo Region Record

Former labour secretary pledges to fix Democratic Party

- Hope Yen and Bill Barrow The Associated Press

ATLANTA — Newly elected Democratic national chairman Tom Perez has pledged to unite a fractured party, rebuild at all levels from “school board to the Senate” and reach out to chunks of rural America left feeling forgotten in the 2016 election.

Speaking in television interviews on Sunday, Perez indicated that an important first step was joining with vanquished rival Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison, who agreed at Perez’s invitation to serve as the Democratic National Committee’s deputy chairman. Perez said the two would work hard to put out an affirmativ­e party message while opposing President Donald Trump’s policies, adding that he and Ellison were already getting a “good kick” that Trump was stirred to tweet that the DNC election was “rigged.”

“We lead with our values and we lead with our actions,” Perez said, describing a party focus that will emphasize protecting Social Security, Medicare and “growing good jobs in this economy.”

“You know, our unity as a party is our greatest strength. And it’s his worst nightmare,” he said. “And, frankly, what we need to be looking at is whether this election was rigged by Donald Trump and his buddy Vladimir Putin.”

The former labour secretary in the Obama administra­tion acknowledg­ed that swaths of the U.S. had felt neglected, saying he had heard from rural America that “Democrats haven’t been there for us recently.”

“That’s exactly what we’re going to do,” Perez said, stressing grassroots efforts in all 50 states. He pointed to Democrats’ success Saturday in one of their stronghold­s, Delaware, where they found themselves in an unexpected­ly competitiv­e race. Stephanie Hansen won a special election for a state Senate seat after vigorous party campaignin­g that helped preserve Democrats’ control of the chamber.

As DNC chair, Perez must now rebuild a party that in the last decade has lost about 1,000 elected posts from the White House to Congress to the 50 statehouse­s, a power deficit Democrats have not seen nationally in 90 years.

“A lot of people feel forgotten, and we will not allow that to happen,” he said.

On Saturday, the DNC elected Perez as its chair in a competitiv­e race that took two rounds of voting — unpreceden­ted in recent memory for either major party. They picked Perez, who was backed by former president Barack Obama, over Ellison, backed by liberal and former presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. Piercing cheers after Perez’s election were boos, yells and expletives from more than a few young Ellison supporters in the gallery, some of them in tears. Reaction wasn’t enthusiast­ic among the liberal groups that had embraced Sanders and have intensifie­d their efforts since Trump’s stunning victory over Clinton in the November election. “We don’t have the luxury of walking out of this room divided,” Ellison said Saturday over the jeers.

Perez, the first Latino to be DNC chair, indicated Sunday that Democrats would continue to speak out forcefully against Trump’s policies, even if it meant at times coming across as a “party of no.” After Perez’s victory, Trump took to his preferred medium, twitter. “Congratula­tions to Thomas Perez, who has just been named chairman of the DNC. I could not be happier for him, or for the Republican Party!” the president wrote.

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Tom Perez

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