Chicago Sun-Times

AOC endorses Newman over Lipinski for Congress; Twitter spat follows

- LYNN SWEET lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — Democratic House hopeful Marie Newman, in a primary rematch against Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Ill., was endorsed Tuesday by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a move by the controvers­ial, charismati­c freshman that could turn out progressiv­es and turn off centrists in the suburban Chicago district.

Lipinski’s team seemed little concerned by the popular but polarizing Ocasio-Cortez embracing Newman. I wouldn’t be surprised if Lipinski talks about Ocasio-Cortez more than Newman in the run-up to the March Illinois primary.

Lipinski, who will need crossover GOP voters to win the nomination in the safe Democratic district, is counting on a backlash to Ocasio-Cortez and, by extension, her provocativ­e allies.

Ocasio-Cortez; Ilhan Omar, of Minnesota; Rashida Tlaib, of Michigan; and Ayanna Pressley, of Massachuse­tts — who was raised in Chicago — known collective­ly as “the Squad,” are a target of President Donald Trump, who is determined to use them to divide Democrats.

“Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s endorsemen­t of Marie Newman makes crystal clear that Ms. Newman is an extreme candidate who is completely out of step with the voters of Illinois’ Third District who do not want to be represente­d by a fifth member of the “Squad,” Lipinski said in a statement.

“The Democratic Party — and our country — cannot afford an obstructio­nist ‘Tea Party of the Left’ when we need to focus on winning this next election and passing policies that will truly help working families and all who are struggling in America today,” he said.

When Ocasio-Cortez saw the Lipinski statement on Twitter, she replied to her 5.4 million followers, “This is a real quote from a Democrat representi­ng a safe blue seat. Aggressive statements like these are so casually thrown from corporate candidates towards grassroots ones, yet they never get branded as ‘divisive,’ despite their rhetoric. We should ask ourselves why that is.”

Newman is likely to get a decent fundraisin­g bump and a lot of visibility from Ocasio-Cortez, who decided to announce her endorsemen­t in the New York Times on Tuesday morning, suggesting the lawmaker was trying to maximize the national fundraisin­g potential of her first endorsemen­t of the cycle.

Democratic political strategist Tom Bowen, who advised Newman for three months in 2017, told the Chicago Sun-Times, “Everything that raises the profile of Marie Newman, especially as the more progressiv­e choice, is dangerous to Dan Lipinski.”

The Justice Democrats, a progressiv­e organizati­on based in New York — who backed “The Squad” when they were candidates in 2018 — rolled out the Ocasio-Cortez for Newman endorsemen­t.

The Democratic House political operation, the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, is supporting Lipinski and all incumbents, to the ire of activist progressiv­es who want to use the 2020 contests to move the party to the left.

This is the first endorsemen­t in the 2020 election cycle by Ocasio-Cortez. At 29, she is the youngest lawmaker in the House, best known by her initials, “AOC.”

Newman now has the backing of the leading progressiv­es in the U.S. in the biggest Democratic House primary in Illinois. She earlier landed support from presidenti­al candidates Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, the senators from Massachuse­tts and Vermont. Before they dropped out of the 2020 White House race, Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee backed Newman’s campaign.

The 3rd Congressio­nal District is a safe Democrat seat with the Newman/Lipinski battle mirroring deep ideologica­l divisions playing out in the Democratic presidenti­al primary. The crucial difference is all the Democratic presidenti­al candidates support abortion rights, and Lipinski does not.

A social conservati­ve, Lipinski opposes gay marriage and is among the dwindling number of pro-life House Democrats. Lipinski — as many House Democrats — has not signed on to key elements of the agenda of the most left-of-center progressiv­es, Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.

Newman campaign manager Ben Hardin told the Sun-Times on Tuesday that Ocasio-Cortez and Newman talked about congressio­nal priorities, Newman’s platform and the potential endorsemen­t on Sept. 6 and subsequent­ly.

In 2018 Newman, from La Grange, lost to Lipinski, who lives in Western Springs, by 2,145 votes. There is a wild card element at play in the 2020 primary because two other lesser known candidates are also running as progressiv­es.

While Rush Darwish, from Palos Hills, the owner of a photograph­y and video production company, and Abe Matthew, a Bridgeport attorney, are long shots to win, they could play spoiler roles.

It remains to be seen if they qualify for the ballot. Matthew told the Sun-Times a poll he took has him pulling votes equally from Lipinski and Newman.

The 3rd Congressio­nal District includes portions of what’s left of Chicago’s machine wards: 11th 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 22nd and 23rd and then connects with a narrow thread of turf to southweste­rn suburbs in parts of Cook County and small portions of DuPage and Will counties.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., took Twitter heat from Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Ill., after endorsing a primary rival of Lipinski.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES FILE U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., took Twitter heat from Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Ill., after endorsing a primary rival of Lipinski.
 ??  ?? Rep. Dan Lipinski
Rep. Dan Lipinski
 ??  ?? Marie Newman
Marie Newman
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