Chicago Sun-Times

Wise up, Dems, and find more like Ossoff

- S. E. CUPP

It had all the makings of a Hollywood movie — a reverse Cinderella story in every respect: a fresh- faced, good- looking member of the liberal, well- educated elite poised to win in a Southern red- state stronghold once held by Newt Gingrich.

Jon Ossoff ’s rise in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District special election was to be, for many Democrats and many more in the media, a “barometer” of President Trump’s unpopulari­ty and falling momentum.

USA TODAY: “Georgia Election Seen as Trump Political Barometer.”

ABCNews: “Trump Faces Early Referendum in Georgia Congressio­nal Race.”

AP: “Georgia Special Election Shapes Up As Referendum on Trump.”

But that, of course, was assuming he would win. Now that Ossoff is headed for a much- harder- to- win runoff, I’m betting many of those headline writers and pundits who were desperate to prematurel­y link Ossoff ’s impossible win to a Trump downturn would like to walk back the significan­ce of his loss.

The allure was understand­able. Here was a former Capitol Hill staffer- turned- filmmaker, educated at Georgetown and the London School of Economics, on the brink of beating 11 Republican­s to turn blue a district that had been red for four decades, just months after Trump became president.

With atmospheri­cs like this, it’s no wonder actual Hollywood invested millions in Ossoff ’s election, despite the fact that John McCain and Mitt Romney won the district by significan­t margins.

The likes of Samuel Jackson, George Takei and Chelsea Handler all tweeted their support for a guy they couldn’t vote for. ( In their defense, not even Ossoff could vote for Ossoff, as he doesn’t live in his own district.)

Alyssa Milano personally drove voters to the polls. According to the Federal Election Commission, John Leguizamo, Sam Waterston, Kristen Bell, Connie Britton, Jessica Lange, Lynda Carter, Rhea Perlman, Jane Fonda and Jon Cryer all contribute­d to his campaign.

Democrats have helped Ossoff break a record for a special election in Georgia, raising more than $ 8.3 million for the shiny new upstart. His closest competitor, Republican Karen Handel, in comparison, raised $ 463,000.

But Ossoff hasn’t won, yet. So now those who insisted on linking his fate to Trump’s will have to live with the unintended results — which is that Democrats haven’t yet figured out how to stop Trump at the ballot box.

The better strategy for Democrats might have been to temporaril­y suppress their bloodlust for the president and acknowledg­e the obvious: that it was always going to be difficult for a liberal to win a reliably red district that Trump himself won, albeit narrowly, and that Ossoff only managed to rise so high in the polls because 11 Republican­s split their votes.

Knowing that, the smarter lesson is that Democrats shouldn’t be so afraid of fresh faces.

When Ohio’s 43- year- old Rep. Tim Ryan ran to unseat Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi this year, Democrats had a real opportunit­y to inject some new life into the party. Instead, the same old faces — Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, Harry Reid, Maxine Waters — are still haunting the halls of the Capitol like specters of a moneyed, coastal, elitist past.

Ossoff proved that a millennial who talks more about fiscal responsibi­lity and balancing the books than he does Trump’s tax returns or his latest gaffes can be competitiv­e even in red districts, that is, if Democrats don’t sabotage him in favor of protecting party elders.

The takeaway from Georgia’s 6 was never going to be Trump’s rise or downfall. And Republican­s, if they can organize, will be in good shape to keep their seat. If anything, the special election is a warning to Democrats — if they want to get close to overtaking Republican­s, they’ll need more Ossoffs and fewer Pelosis. Contact S. E. Cupp at thesecupp. com. This column originally appeared in the New York Daily News. Follow S. E. Cupp on Twitter: @ secupp

Ossoff hasn’t won, yet. So now those who insisted on linking his fate to Trump’s will have to live with the unintended results — which is that Democrats haven’t yet figured out how to stop Trump at the ballot box.

 ?? | JOHN BAZEMORE/ AP ?? Jon Ossoff, a Georgia Democratic candidate for Congress, speaks during an election- night party Tuesday in Dunwoody, Georgia.
| JOHN BAZEMORE/ AP Jon Ossoff, a Georgia Democratic candidate for Congress, speaks during an election- night party Tuesday in Dunwoody, Georgia.
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