Boston Herald

Dems or GOP – which is the working class party?

- By marTin schram Martin Schram is a syndicated columnist.

As America prepares to inaugurate Scranton Joe Biden as our 46th president, we interrupt Washington’s backslappi­ng Democratic elites to inject a dose of realpoliti­k into a party that still calls itself the real champions of America’s working class.

While Biden (whom I have known well for decades) indeed deserves great credit for having defeated his incumbent Republican presidenti­al opponent, it is also true that Biden had a unique ally who greatly aided his effort: President Donald Trump.

Trump was the most blatantly lying, tragically incompeten­t, morally repugnant president in U.S. history.

And while Biden went on to defeat Trump, the victor’s party leaders must now also face the reality that, except for the very top of their ticket, it was the Democrats who finished as the predominan­t losers.

Much to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s surprise, chagrin — and yes, much to her own blame — the Democrats actually lost at least nine seats in the House. House Republican­s lost zero seats, leaving still-Speaker

Pelosi with the smallest margin of any House majority in 18 years. Republican­s also captured two formerly Democratic state legislativ­e chambers; Democrats captured zero, even in districts where their presidenti­al standard-bearer was winning.

But most significan­tly, the House Democrats were bizarrely stunned by their poor showing on Election Night. And that gets us to the biggest problem Democrats will be facing in 2021 and perhaps for the foreseeabl­e future.

Throughout the summer and autumn, the House and Senate Democrats didn’t seem to have a clue that they were flat-out failing in their campaign battles of message politics. Voters everywhere seemed to have no idea of a most-desirable overall theme about what the Democrats were really all about — and what a Democratic­controlled Congress would mean to them and their families.

Think of it: Democrats whiffed on the golden political opportunit­y to present voters with a powerful national plan — a red-state, blue-state pandemic “Rescue America” program to aid all Americans who have been thrown out of work, cannot feed their families, face eviction and so on.

Democrats also missed a classic chance to reach out to all those families that were, at one time, headed by registered blue-collar Democrats. They were voters who grew increasing­ly disillusio­ned with what seemed to be Democratic indifferen­ce to them and their problems. They grew increasing­ly into those Mad-as-Hell, Not- Gonna-Take- It-Anymore blue-collar Democrats. In July 2015, I wrote about them as being the folks who were flocking to the rallies of the brand-new Republican in the race: Donald Trump.

And I warned, in that wayearly 2015 column, that on Election Night 2016, still more than a year away, we shouldn’t be surprised to see that those blue-collar Madas-Hell Trump voters just elected our next president.

Well, in the summer of 2020 — and increasing­ly ever since — those same blue-collar voters who had indeed backed Trump increasing­ly found that they and their families had become major victims of

Trump’s leadership ineptitude. They had lost their jobs as the pandemic economy shut down. Now they were Wannabe-WorkingCla­ss voters.

Throughout the campaign, the congressio­nal Democrats missed their chance to speak to them in plain-talk. The Democrats failed to lead by presenting a simple but comprehens­ive pandemic “Rescue America” program that made clear to voters in every state just what their families could get — and when. America’s bluecollar voters who needed to be rescued had no idea that they could be rescued by a party that really cared about them.

After the election, Democrats and Trump negotiator­s settled on a check for $600 for every adult or child earning less than $75,000. Last week, Trump — defeated after losing some supporters from his onetime solid base — tried to win them back by jumping suddenly to $2,000. Pelosi and the Democrats said a weak me-too.

Now the Democratic elites are wondering why they are no longer seen as the party of blue-collar America.

 ?? Pool file ?? Opening day of the 117th Congress saw the Democrats with an extremely slim majority in the House.
Pool file Opening day of the 117th Congress saw the Democrats with an extremely slim majority in the House.

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