Chattanooga Times Free Press

FORGET EXCUSES, WHAT COUNTS IS WINNING ELECTIONS

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In the end it was only a blue ripple, and that should prompt soul-searching among Democrats — particular­ly as everyone looks ahead to 2020.

Don’t listen to Democrats who portray these midterms as an important triumph. In 2016 and again this year, liberals were unrealisti­c in their expectatio­ns and listened too much to one another and not enough to the country as a whole; if that happens again in the run-up to 2020, heaven help us all.

It’s great that for the first time, more than 100 women are expected to serve in the House. But of the three highest-profile Democratic candidates who were repositori­es of the party’s hopes — Beto O’Rourke, Stacey Abrams and Andrew Gillum — not a single one won. Yes, the margins were narrow. But while it’s fine to make excuses, it’s better to win elections.

It’s too easy for Democrats to boast about winning the popular vote in House races overall or winning a few governorsh­ips. To actually govern, and to get their way with judicial appointmen­ts, Democrats must also win the Senate. That is possible but will require more than bravado.

So what lessons can be learned? As Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns noted in The New York Times, “The candidates who delivered the House majority largely hailed from the political center, running on clean-government themes and promises of incrementa­l improvemen­t to the health care system rather than transforma­tional social change.”

Both sides overreache­d. Every time Trump belittled women, he lost votes. And every time Democrats mentioned the word “impeachmen­t” or talked about abolishing ICE, Republican­s benefited.

The Democrats’ mishandlin­g of Brett Kavanaugh was a gift to Republican candidates, for Sens. Joe Donnelly, Claire McCaskill, and Heidi Heitkamp all lost re-election bids after opposing Kavanaugh. Meanwhile, Sen. Joe Manchin was re-elected in the Trumpiest state of all, West Virginia, after voting for Kavanaugh.

A risk going forward: Democrats jockeying for the presidenti­al nomination in 2020 will veer left — tugging the party toward impeachmen­t talk or a blizzard of subpoenas — in ways that may help Trump.

One lesson from the midterms is that a nominee like Sen. Elizabeth Warren might increase the odds of Trump’s re-election. A nominee from beyond the Beltway with experience running things, like Mitch Landrieu, the former New Orleans mayor, or the outgoing Gov. John Hickenloop­er of Colorado, might be a better bet.

And if, as expected, Democrats in the House pick Nancy Pelosi to be speaker, that will be a postelecti­on gift to the Republican Party. That’s unfair but true; she should clear the way for a successor.

Democrats should look at referendum results as a glimpse of a road map forward. Three conservati­ve states — Utah, Nebraska and Idaho — appear to have voted to expand Medicaid. Voters in two conservati­ve states, Arkansas and Missouri, raised the minimum wage. And Florida voted overwhelmi­ngly to restore voting rights to most people who have completed sentences after felony conviction­s.

One problem: Many Democrats live in an urban blue bubble, without a single Trump-supporting friend. Ever since the 2016 election, a progressiv­e wing has tarred all Trump voters as racists, idiots and bigots. Not surprising­ly, it’s difficult to win votes from people you’re calling bigots.

So a plea: It’s gratifying to give heroic speeches thundering against fascism, but remember that what makes a difference in people’s lives is winning elections, passing laws and approving judges. To do that, Democrats must engage in less fist-waving and far more listening.

 ??  ?? Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof

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