Dayton Daily News

Democrats tremble in fear before Alexandria the Great

- By John Kass Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.

The Democratic political establishm­ent is calcified and shaky on its aging, aching feet, not knowing what to do with Alexandria the Great.

Do they bend the knee? Do they dare oppose her and the movement she represents?

Meanwhile, establishm­ent Republican­s mock Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez with the same simpering, self-satisfied snickers they once applied to Donald Trump, before he was elected president to kick them in their sensitive parts.

By contrast, establishm­ent Democrats understand her. She’s the face of an energized hard-left movement pushing them further and further to the left. And there’s not a damn thing they can do about it.

They’re somewhat afraid of her, now that she defeated 10-term incumbent U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley of New York, who was in line for a prominent leadership role until she crushed him in the Democratic primary a month ago.

She’s a rock star. She looks good on TV. She’s young, and excites young voters who didn’t much like the constant hectoring of Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party that rigged the last presidenti­al primary against Sanders. She’s a Latina.

She’s a socialist — a real one, a Bernie Sanders organizer, though with a harder edge than old Bernie. She’s not folding. She’s herding.

Alexandria is a hard lefty, much farther to the left than the big government elite Democratic Party apparatchi­ks.

The Democrats praise her ostentatio­usly and hope to use her. But you can hear the trembling in their voices, fearful of Alexandria the Great.

“I have three kids, two of whom are daughters,” Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez said recently in an interview with liberal radio host Bill Press. “One just graduated college, one who is in college, and they were both texting me about their excitement over Alexandria because she really — she represents the future of our party.”

The future of the Democratic Party?

She had a disastrous com- ing-out on the PBS reboot of “Firing Line,” flubbing easy questions on the economy: “Well, unemployme­nt is low because everyone has two jobs.” And though she proved she has the left’s visceral hatred of Israel, when pressed she said she was “not the expert on geopolitic­s on this issue.”

Liam Warner of The National Review wrote, “Most of the time Ocasio-Cortez opened her mouth only to change feet.”

Her message isn’t for Republican­s, but for the Democratic Party:

Abolish ICE (the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t bureau) and effectivel­y end enforcemen­t at the border; mandate a national $15 per hour minimum wage; promise “free” health care for all, and “free” college tuition; and drop some hate on Israel.

You may argue that such policy goals are unworkable, unaffordab­le, maybe even somewhat idiotic and threatenin­g. But that’s irrelevant.

For Democrats, the great push leftward may play well on America’s two left coasts. But it won’t help woo the working class in Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio, which abandoned the Democrats for Trump.

And it may just help Trump in 2020 by ensuring the Democrats nominate some looney-tune.

Moderately left of center Democrats met in Ohio recently for their Third Way conference, to argue that a Bernie Sanders progressiv­e wasn’t the way to go. But possible Democratic headliners stayed away. They don’t want to be shamed.

Elsewhere, New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand wants to abolish ICE if Democrats take Congress in the midterm elections.

The American news media, which are overwhelmi­ngly liberal but eagerly wedded to the establishm­ent class, have spent much of their time since November 2016 railing against Trump.

The shrieking from the Democratic Media Complex helps bind the Democratic tribes against their common orange-haired enemy. But all the wildly emotional virtue signaling has obscured something.

It is the legitimate anger of those on the left as to how they were treated in 2016, when Democrats insulated themselves against democracy by rigging the primaries against Sanders, using the leverage of superdeleg­ates for Clinton and taking all that Wall Street cash.

Sanders voters, many of them young, passionate and idealistic, see the Democratic establishm­ent in much the same way that young libertaria­ns and conservati­ves viewed the Republican establishm­ent in the last political cycle:

As corrupt, cynically self-serving and in the way.

Those who understand politics know that Trump was a symptom, not a cause.

And so is Alexandria the Great.

To their peril, Republican­s mock her without understand­ing. Democrats understand but can’t help bobbing like corks at sea in the wind.

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