Boston Herald

Georgia congressio­nal race therapy for liberals

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In the days after Donald Trump was inaugurate­d in January, liberals in America were depressed, despondent and asking themselves what to do next. David Nir, the political director of the liberal blog Daily Kos, had an answer, and that answer was Jon Ossoff.

Nir and the Daily Kos team had been crunching the numbers from Trump’s election since the day after it happened. Which districts did Trump underperfo­rm in? Where were the opportunit­ies for Democrats? They quickly noticed that in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District, which Mitt Romney won by 23 points in 2012, Trump had won by just a point and a half. Could Rep. Tom Price be vulnerable the next time around?

Within weeks, the Price seat was not just a target for 2018, it became the prize in a 2017 special election, after Trump tapped Price as his secretary of Health and Human Services to oversee the dismantlin­g of Obamacare. In the minds of progressiv­es, the Price seat was not just open, it was ground zero for the Trump resistance.

“No one wants to wait until 2018 — or 2020 — to fight back against Donald Trump,” Nir wrote in a post on Daily Kos at the end of January. “The good news is, we don’t have to.”

Nir then went on to introduce the site’s 3 million readers to Ossoff, a then29-year-old former congressio­nal staffer who had jumped into the special election in early January.

Even though there were three other Democrats in the race, Nir announced that Daily Kos would break with their usual policy and endorse Ossoff, who had already been endorsed by Georgia Rep. John Lewis. Crucially, Nir also provided a link to an ActBlue page where Daily Kos readers across the country could send donations to the unknown candidate in suburban Atlanta. This was their way to fight Trump.

“Flipping this seat from red to blue would send shockwaves through Congress,” the ActBlue message read. “Replacing Trump’s anti-Obamacare point man with a Democrat would be an amazing little cherry on top.”

With that single post from Nir, the special election in Georgia’s 6th District transforme­d from a typically hushed conversati­on among Republican­s about who should get “Newt’s old seat,” into a national campaign by progressiv­e Democrats to put a bull’s-eye on Price’s home turf.

Ossoff raised more than $800,000 in a week from the ActBlue link.

Within five weeks, Ossoff had raised $1.85 million and had 5,000 volunteer sign-ups. The national media, along with other outside progressiv­e groups, began to pay attention to the race to replace Price in earnest. End Citizens United endorsed Ossoff in February. Two days later, the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee announced it would send nine staffers to the district and would transfer money to the Georgia Democratic Party for get-out-the-vote efforts. While the Democratic National Committee sat on the sidelines dealing with its own internal drama, the Daily Kos had turned the Ossoff race into a national therapy session for liberals who just wanted to do something. It turns out, they wanted to do a lot, and still do. As of Election Day, Ossoff had raised more than $8.3 million, with $1.5 million of that coming through the Daily Kos efforts alone. A perfect Democratic storm? In many ways, the Ossoff race is a unicorn for Democrats — an exotic species they won’t see again soon. The 12-week special election attracted far more qualified GOP candidates than the district could reasonably absorb. Had 11 Republican­s not chosen to run, it’s unlikely Ossoff would have rocketed to the top of the early polls ahead of every Republican as he did.

The 2017 timeframe also meant that Ossoff had the attention of the entire national grass-roots ecosystem focused on him alone. Would he have popped so quickly with 434 other House races and 33 Senate races all happening at the same time? Probably not.

The one thing we can take away from the 6th District special election is that Daily Kos put Ossoff on the map for national Democrats looking for a way to fight back against Donald Trump.

And after fading into the background of progressiv­e politics for the last few cycles, Daily Kos has made itself an undeniable force in the resistance to Trump’s America.

Roll Call columnist Patricia Murphy covers national politics for The Daily Beast.

 ??  ?? OSSOFF: Candidacy seen as ground zero for the Trump resistance.
OSSOFF: Candidacy seen as ground zero for the Trump resistance.

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