Dayton Daily News

A presidenti­al candidate who believes in what he has lived

- George F. Will He writes for the Washington Post.

The world’s oldest political party has developed an aversion to discretion. The Democratic Party is manacled to an over-caffeinate­d base that believes that deft government can deliver parity of status to everyone while micromanag­ing the economy’s health care sector, which is larger than all but three other foreign nations’ economies. Inconvenie­ntly, the party must appeal to voters who, living in dread of their next interactio­n with the department of motor vehicles, yearn only for government­al adequacy.

Which is why John Delaney, who is ending a three-term tenure as a Democratic congressma­n from Maryland, is seeking his party’s presidenti­al nomination. His quest will test whether Democrats’ detestatio­n of Donald Trump is stronger than their enthusiasm for identity politics: A white male businessma­n, Delaney comes to bat with three strikes against him.

His grandparen­ts, he says, “made pencils and worked the docks.” He did not become wealthy, as today’s businessma­n-turned-president did, through a father’s largesse supplement­ed by tax chicanery. Neither of Delaney’s parents went to college. His father was a 60-year member of the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers. An IBEW scholarshi­p, and support from the American Legion, VFW and Lion’s Club, helped Delaney through Columbia University. After Georgetown Law School, where he met his wife, he founded a financial company and became the youngest-ever CEO on the New York Stock Exchange. In 2017, Fortune magazine included him among the “World’s 50 Greatest Leaders.”

Solidly built and impeccably tailored, Delaney, 55, is a Democrat who believes in what he has lived: upward mobility, with assistance. He recognizes the obvious, that globalizat­ion has been “extraordin­arily positive” for billions more people than it has injured, but its American casualties are real and deserve government help. He speaks with the calm confidence of one who understand­s, as the man he hopes to displace does not, that the lungs are not the seat of wisdom. He checks various boxes that might mollify all but the most fastidious progressiv­es: He likes early childhood education, a carbon tax, a $15 minimum wage and extending the Social Security tax to higher incomes. He dislikes the NRA, the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, high interest rates on student loans and “outrageous” drug prices. He would achieve “universal” health care by offering Medicaid for all, and for those who choose to opt for private programs, as he thinks most people would, there would be federal subsidies for those who need them.

Delaney illustrate­s the reason for tolerating what Iowa considers a Mandate of Heaven — its entitlemen­t to begin the nomination process. Iowans are so thin on the ground that relentless retail politickin­g can give a dark horse candidate a fighting chance.

In the 10 presidenti­al cycles since Jimmy Carter’s 1976 win in Iowa made the caucuses important, six Democrats have won competitiv­e caucuses and then their party’s nomination: Carter (defeating Ted Kennedy) in 1980, Walter Mondale in 1984, Al Gore in 2000, John Kerry in 2004, Barack Obama in 2008, Hillary Clinton in 2016. Delaney in 2020? Democrats could do much worse. They generally do, and probably will. As in 2016, Trump is counting on it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States