Houston Chronicle Sunday

Democrats searching for the perfect Trump antidote

- By Gail Collins

Perhaps you think New Hampshire sent us a mixed message. After all, Bernie Sanders won but the moderates got more votes, and Tuesday night three different candidates seemed to be giving victory speeches.

What does the Democratic rank-and-file really want? Well, the answer is: Ralph in Michigan.

Ralph is the symbol of all the people in swing states who went for Barack Obama and then turned Republican in 2016. Democrats want him back! They care way less about finding a candidate with the perfect health care plan than finding one who can rid the world of President Donald Trump.

And who does Ralph want?

Somebody who looks more reasonable than the current occupant of the White House?

Well, that’s all the Democratic candidates. And pretty much every other elected official in recent memory.

OK, maybe not the senator who got arrested for lewd conduct in a men’s restroom. But even the congressma­n who used campaign donations to fly around his pet bunny can’t compare to a president who bills the government $650 a night for putting up the agents who have to provide security when he goes to Mar-a-Lago.

Getting rid of Trump is everything. While nobody in either party has ever described him as restrained, he’s gotten worse since he skittered past the impeachmen­t crisis. A normal unhinged president might, say, fire a Cabinet member on a whim. Trump preferred to can a distinguis­hed military officer for being the brother of an officer who testified about the Ukraine situation under subpoena.

How do you think Ralph would react if a Democratic candidate connected the brothers’ story to Trump’s draft-dodging bone spur? Pete Buttigieg, who served in Afghanista­n, is definitely into bringing up that bone spur.

We’re presuming Ralph is a non-crazy, non-racist average person who thought it was time for a change when Hillary Clinton was the Democratic nominee. And liked Trump’s, um, spunkiness. Now he’s begun to worry that there’s a tad too much spunk in the current

White House.

Who do you think he’d be looking at now? Probably not Joe Biden anymore.

Although Biden is certainly

holding out hope. “It is important that Iowa and Nevada have spoken, but, look, we need to hear from Nevada and South Carolina,” the former vice president said, in what would have been a New Hampshire concession speech if he had not forgotten the name of the state he just lost.

Biden has now run for president three times and he’s never won a primary. Or come in second. Or third. Ralph cannot possibly be impressed.

Elizabeth Warren’s only possible consolatio­n for her poor showing was that she came in ahead of Biden. But she was spunky even in defeat. Warned the party against “harsh tactics” and then posed for a ton of selfies. Kudos.

And what about Bernie Sanders? He won, but he beat Buttigieg by fewer than 4,000 votes — out of nearly 300,000 cast. And although Sanders does do well with working-class voters, I doubt Mrs. Ralph is going to come around unless he learns how to talk about, say, eliminatin­g college tuition without shouting and scowling.

The big winner in New Hampshire was Amy Klobuchar, who came in a rather impressive third. Now she’s a very serious candidate, and it will be interestin­g to see how Trump decides to attack her. Sanders has already entered the president’s rally speeches as Crazy Bernie, and Trump has devoted quite a bit of time to making fun of Buttigieg’s name. Klobuchar hasn’t really come up much, except for a tweet in which he referred to the Minnesota Democrat as “Snowman (woman)!”

If Klobuchar keeps climbing, soon the Trump crowds will be chanting “Lock her up!” Really, any woman will do. This week, they did it for Nancy Pelosi. Any minute now, it’ll be Oprah Winfrey.

But back to Ralph the target swing voter. We have not discussed how old he is. That matters a lot. Sanders, 78, has huge support from younger Democrats, but in New Hampshire he got only 14 percent of the voters over 65. Buttigieg, 38, got nearly a quarter of those older voters. What’s the story?

A) Mayor Pete reminds them of their grandchild­ren.

B) Bernie reminds them of the guy at their coffee shop who never treats and won’t stop complainin­g about the weather.

C) Millennial­s hear Sanders speeches and think he’s rapping.

Right now, Michael Bloomberg is pretty darned popular. Most people don’t know much about him except his ads — he’s sort of the political equivalent of Geico. But we’ll have much more opportunit­y to be snide about his campaign once we get to Super Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Ralph hasn’t made up his mind. But we’ve come a long way. Hopes soaring, hopes crushed. And if we ever get Iowa totally straighten­ed out, the Democrats will have allocated nearly 2 percent of the delegates to the convention.

 ?? Joe Buglewicz / Bloomberg ?? Will Pete Buttigieg bring up the story of Donald Trump’s draft-dodging bone spur?
Joe Buglewicz / Bloomberg Will Pete Buttigieg bring up the story of Donald Trump’s draft-dodging bone spur?
 ?? Matt Rourke / Associated Press ?? Bernie Sanders, 78, has huge support from younger Democrats, but in New Hampshire he got only 14 percent of the voters over 65.
Matt Rourke / Associated Press Bernie Sanders, 78, has huge support from younger Democrats, but in New Hampshire he got only 14 percent of the voters over 65.

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