Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Lawmaker has strong warning for Democrats

Marcy Kaptur is the longest-serving woman in Congress. She has been in the House longer than any woman has served there in history. She entered Congress in 1983.

- — Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, via the Associated Press

Marcy Kaptur says the party needs to wake up or lose the working class to the Republican­s, for good.

The lifelong Democrat has a message for her party: Wake up.

Wake up or you will lose the House in the next election and maybe not regain it for many years. Wake up or you will lose the working class to the Republican­s, for good. It is already happening. Kaptur points out that leadership in the House is dominated by members from the two coasts and from wealthy districts.

A political realignmen­t is taking place. Rural America is already Republican and, more specifical­ly, Trumpian. Working-class and workingpoo­r Americans are leaving the Democratic Party and voting Republican. Why? Because they feel their plight, their reality, has at least been recognized by President Donald Trump’s GOP.

Mind you, Kaptur thinks Trump did nothing for these voters, and never seriously intended to. But she recognizes what he recognized: what has happened to manufactur­ing and the working class in many American communitie­s.

She represents an Ohio district characteri­zed by economic decline — Toledo, Lorain and parts of Greater Cleveland.

But such places and the people who live in them, says Kaptur, are largely invisible to her Democratic colleagues who are busy forming caucuses around identity politics. And there is no one from a district like hers in Democratic leadership.

“It’s been very hard for regions like mine, which have had great economic attrition, to get fair standing” in leadership, she says.

Instead, Kaptur says her colleagues tell her that they don’t get her or her voters.

Why don’t people just move away from a place like Lorain, Ohio? Well, maybe because they were born there and their families are there.

Kaptur still lives in the same simple house where she grew up, in Toledo.

She is an old-fashioned Roosevelt-Truman Democrat. But does she feel like a minority, a lonely voice, in the House caucus and in her party? “Yes, I do,” she says.

Well, Kaptur is not going to retire or change parties or become a congresswo­man without a party. She will keep on, and keep fighting for what she believes. Her latest cause is to establish an infectious disease unit in the National Institutes of Health.

But she, like many Democrats, is disillusio­ned and alienated.

A devout Catholic, she cannot share the obsessive enthusiasm of her party for abortion. She is for women’s rights and rights to privacy, but not for government funding of abortion or late-term abortion.

She is an environmen­talist, passionate about saving Lake Erie, but she also wants to save the auto industry — all that is left of industry in Toledo or Detroit.

Cultural questions are tough ones, morally and politicall­y, but most people seek a balance.

And, no small thing, Kaptur has been seriously disrespect­ed by her party. She has been denied a major committee chairmansh­ip after all these years — 20 terms in the House. Think about that and what it means to disrespect that.

“I think economics can bind us,” the congresswo­man said. “I think that when we divide into too many subgroups, we lose the overarchin­g theme,” says the congresswo­man. She’s right. Dead right. The overarchin­g theme should be opportunit­y, not identity.

Democrats in the House need to respect Kaptur, respect the people she represents, and respect what she identifies as the right and resonant overarchin­g theme: opportunit­y, jobs. They need to counter the GOP’s appeal to the working class, and not simply surrender the field.

Kaptur has watched her beloved Ohio, once the ultimate swing state, become more and more deeply red. The Dems will lose a lot more people if they do not start to listen to, and represent, middle America. They will wish they had first listened to Marcy Kaptur.

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