Houston Chronicle

Recent losses by Sanders supporters show Democratic voters are moving to the center

Carl P. Leubsdorf says the last thing the party needs to do is veer too sharply left to counter Trump’s extreme turn to the right.

- Carl P. Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of the Dallas Morning News. Readers may write to him via email at: carl.p.leubsdorf@gmail.com.

Sen. Bernie Sanders is back at the same old stand, railing against Republican health care proposals before cheering crowds and television audiences. But beyond the attention and the adulation, the fiery Vermont independen­t has been encounteri­ng resistance from the voters.

Since the start of Donald Trump’s presidency, Sanders has compiled an even worse electoral record than House Democrats have in losing four of five special congressio­nal elections. And now he faces a potential legal problem in his home state of Vermont.

Sanders supporters lost three special congressio­nal elections, in California, Kansas and Montana. Backers of his 2016 insurgency lost heated fights to chair the national and California Democratic parties. And so did Tom Perriello, for whom Sanders campaigned in Virginia’s high profile Democratic gubernator­ial primary.

Besides, Sanders was hardly helpful in the Georgia congressio­nal race, giving Democrat Jon Ossoff a halfhearte­d endorsemen­t after complainin­g he was insufficie­ntly progressiv­e. His only victories have been in scattered local contests.

The irony is that, at a time Democratic grass roots are aflame with desire for even stronger stands against Trump, Democratic voters may be confirming the more centrist course they took in rejecting Sanders for Hillary Clinton in 2016.

In so doing, they may be sending a positive signal for the future, since the last thing Democrats probably need is to veer too sharply left to counter Trump’s extreme turn to the right.

And while Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren have advocated a more reflexivel­y ideologica­l course, two Clinton White House veterans, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Bruce Reed, are arguing persuasive­ly that a more pragmatic response would help Democrats repeat their 2006 success of retaking the House during a Republican presidency.

Democrats, they wrote in The Atlantic, must not only pick their fights carefully, “they also need to choose credible candidates who can win them.” That means “candidates who closely match their districts — even if they don’t perfectly align with the national party’s activist base.”

Some such candidates may face liberal challenger­s. For example, some activists have talked of primary contests against Sens. Claire McCaskill of Missouri and Joe Manchin of West Virginia on grounds they are insufficie­ntly liberal, though a more liberal candidate would likely have less chance of winning their relatively conservati­ve states.

As for himself, Sanders has foresworn any talk now of a 2020 presidenti­al rerun, when he will become 79. No serious rival has yet emerged to his 2018 re-election in Vermont. But he faces possible homestate problems stemming from a simmering investigat­ion of his wife Jane’s management of the college she once ran.

According to the independen­t VTDigger, the FBI is looking into allegation­s initially made by a top Vermont Republican that Sanders’ office pressured a local bank into granting a $6.7 million loan for Burlington College to purchase a lakefront campus. The paper said three donors said their pledges were misreprese­nted in the loan documents; the college closed in 2016 with officials citing its debt from the land purchase.

Sanders told Burlington, Vt., television station WCAX last month that any suggestion his office applied pressure was “nonsense” and has repeatedly said the investigat­ion was “initiated by Donald Trump’s campaign manager,” a reference to attorney Brady Toensing, vice chair of the state GOP.

When CNN’s Erin Burnett raised it Tuesday night, Sanders declined to discuss details, angrily defending his wife as “about the most honest person I know” and adding, “When they go after your wife, people’s wives, that is pretty pathetic.” VTDigger and Politico reported Bernie and Jane Sanders have hired two attorneys to represent them in the probe.

The FBI probe could have additional political fallout for Sanders. His office declined to say if his wife’s financial dealings were one reason he has been so reluctant to issue his annual tax returns. That had little impact in 2016 but could become a bigger issue if he runs again, especially if Trump continues to withhold his tax returns. Sanders released a summary of his 2014 return but never fulfilled a promise to issue his 2015 return.

And pending California legislatio­n would require candidates to release tax returns for the five most recent years to qualify for the presidenti­al primary ballot.

Meanwhile, Sanders continues to expand his political efforts, adding a think tank called The Sanders Institute to the political organizati­on, Our Revolution. Both are headed by Sanders loyalists from his 2016 campaign.

But his ultimate success will depend on being able to persuade Democratic voters. That’s a fight he lost in 2016 and one where he is still encounteri­ng some resistance.

 ?? Stephen Crowley / New York Times ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders’ revolution will fizzle out if the Democrats don’t find candidates who compromise.
Stephen Crowley / New York Times Sen. Bernie Sanders’ revolution will fizzle out if the Democrats don’t find candidates who compromise.

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