Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Election defeats dishearten Democrats

- By Erica Werner Associated Press

The most recent losses — in Georgia and South Carolina — have led to calls for new leadership in the party.

WASHINGTON » Democratic Party divisions were on glaring display Wednesday as a special election loss in a wildly expensive Georgia House race left bitter lawmakers turning their anger on their own leaders.

“We as Democrats have to come to terms with the fact that we lost again,” said Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass. “Personally I think it’s time for a new generation of leadership in the party.”

The loss in Georgia followed similar disappoint­ments in special House elections in Kansas and Montana, as well as in South Carolina Tuesday night. The Carolina outcome was closer than in Georgia but drew little national attention.

In the well-to-do Atlanta suburbs, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California was the focus of torrents of negative advertisin­g in a House race that cost more than $50 million, the most expensive in history. Republican Karen Handel beat Democrat Jon Ossoff by about 5 percentage points.

Although the race was widely viewed as a referendum on President Donald Trump, he was rarely discussed by either candidate, and House Democrats were rattled that the attack ads casting the 77-year-old Pelosi as a San Francisco liberal proved so potent. Some expressed fears about the same tactic being used elsewhere as they aim to take back control of the House in next year’s midterms. Democrats need to pick up 24 House seats to retake the majority.

“It makes it a heck of a lot harder,” said Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, who unsuccessf­ully challenged Pelosi in a leadership election last fall. “One of the disappoint­ing things from the last couple days is that that approach has a little bit of punch to it, it still moves voters.”

Trump’s election as president had papered over the intraparty disputes and generation­al divides among House Democrats, as lawmakers joined in opposing the White House and trying to channel the energy of their party’s liberal base. But now, after a string of disappoint­ments, those divisions have re-emerged, though Pelosi appears unlikely to face an immediate challenge.

Lawmakers are also bemoaning a weak Democratic bench of candidates nationally, and demanding a better strategy for success and a new and stronger economic message that differenti­ates them more clearly from the Republican­s.

“If we think we’re going to win these elections because President Trump’s at 35 percent, I think in districts like mine and certainly Georgia and South Carolina, it takes more than that,” said Rep. Tim Walz of Minnesota. “And I’m not sure that that’s there yet. I certainly don’t feel it.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this June 9 photo, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — ASSOCIATED PRESS In this June 9 photo, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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