Kuwait Times

Tea party parallel? Liberals taking aim at their own party

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Four days after Donald Trump’s surprising White House victory, the liberal organizati­on CREDO Action fired off a frantic warning to its 4.6 million anxious supporters. Their worry wasn’t the new president. It was his opposition. “Democratic leaders have been welcoming Trump,” the email said. “That’s not acceptable. Democratic leaders need to stand up and fight. Now.”

Amid a national surge of anti-Trump protests, boycotts and actions, liberals have begun taking aim at a different target: Their own party. Over the past few weeks, activists have formed a number of organizati­ons threatenin­g a primary challenge to Democratic lawmakers who offer anything less than complete resistance to the Republican president. “We’re not interested in unity,” said Cenk Uygur, the founder of Justice Democrats, a new organizati­on that’s pledged to replace “every establishm­ent politician” in Congress. “We can’t beat the Republican­s unless we have good, honest, uncorrupte­d candidates.”

While party leaders have urged Democrats to keep their attacks focused on Trump, the liberal grass roots sees the fresh wave of opposition energy as an opportunit­y to push their party to the left and wrest power from longtime party stalwarts. The intraparty pressure is reminiscen­t of the tea party movement, where conservati­ve activists defeated several centrist Republican incumbents. Their efforts reverberat­ed through the 2012 and 2016 presidenti­al elections, forcing candidates to the right on economic issues.

Like Uygur, many founders of the new groups are supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ presidenti­al campaign, eager to continue their effort to remake the Democratic Party. Uygur’s group says they’ve already found 70 possible candidates who will refuse corporate campaign donations while running for Congress - challengin­g elected Democrats if needed. Those people are now going through candidate training. Democratic officials from more conservati­ve states worry that those primary contests will result in the party holding even less power in Washington.

Sen Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat likely to face a tough re-election fight in a state won overwhelmi­ngly by Trump, said the effort will make Democrats a “super minority” in the Senate. A coalition named “WeWillRepl­aceYou” is urging Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York to remove Manchin from his new role in the party leadership after Manchin expressed openness to working with Trump. “If you want to go ahead and beat me up in a primary then go ahead,” Manchin said. “All it does is take the resources from the general.”

Even without primaries, the party faces a challengin­g political map in 2018. Republican­s will be defending just eight Senate seats, while Democrats must hold 23 - plus two filled by independen­ts who caucus with them. Ten of those races are in states Trump carried last November. The activists say they’re willing to trade power for conviction. “I’d rather have 44 or 45 awesome Democrats who are lockstep together than 44 or 45 really awesome Democrats and three to four weakkneed individual­s who are going to dilute the party,” said Murshed Zaheed, CREDO’s political director.

Shift

They point to a postelecti­on shift among Democrats as a sign that their efforts are working. Initially, Schumer and even liberals such as Sanders and Massachuse­tts Sen Elizabeth Warren cautiously spoke of working with Trump on certain issues. After the wave of liberal fury, most Democrats have shifted into full opposition mode. “Democrats have a reflexive instinct to compromise,” said Ben Wikler of MoveOn.org, which has directed its members to protest at Democratic as well as Republican congressio­nal offices. “At this moment of successive Trump crises, resistance rather than compromise is what the country needs.”

Democratic leaders say the path to victory next year depends on a strong economic message, one that casts Trump as betraying the working-class voters who boosted him to victory. “What we have in common, whether you’re West Virginia or Massachuse­tts or Kansas is a commitment to economic opportunit­y,” said Tom Perez, the newly elected Democratic National Committee chairman. A memo this past week from Priorities USA gave Democrats a “10-point checklist” for criticizin­g Trump’s economic policies and conflicts of interest, saying the party cannot simply count on the president to remain “his own worst enemy.” — AP

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