Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Despite Biden, Dems flail on Election Day

-

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday that this election gives Joe Biden a “strong mandate” as president to implement the Democratic agenda. Perhaps the speaker should worry about keeping her job rather than promoting partisan blather.

Despite claiming the presidency — assuming the failure of Trump legal challenges — Democrats woefully underperfo­rmed in Tuesday’s balloting.

They still have an outside shot at a tie in the Senate — with the vice president breaking deadlocks — although that will depend on Democrats prevailing in two January runoffs in Georgia, an unlikely scenario. As Nov. 3 approached, the party had hopes of flipping as many as 10 GOP Senate seats. Progressiv­e groups that profess a distaste for money in politics dumped hundreds of millions into efforts to take the upper chamber, far outspendin­g Republican incumbents and even targeting Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Oops. They might as well have left those greenbacks in the vault and put a torch to them.

Ms. Pelosi fared worse in the House. Democrats confidentl­y predicted a pickup of more than a dozen GOP seats to solidify their majority. They smirked in anticipati­on of making inroads in traditiona­lly Republican stronghold­s in Texas and other areas. The speaker’s arrogant swagger resulted in her putting the kibosh on a new coronaviru­s relief bill in an effort to hinder President Donald Trump politicall­y. The move proved a colossal miscalcula­tion.

They’re still counting in many states, but Republican­s defeated at least seven Democratic House incumbents, including one longtime committee chair. If remaining ballots fall their way, the GOP could gain as many as 15 House seats, significan­tly narrowing their disadvanta­ge. Democrats, on the other hand, failed to defeat a single GOP incumbent. It turns out that wide swaths of the country aren’t jumping to dismantle capitalism, defund the police, nationaliz­e health care or cheer on rioting and looting. In other words,

as reason.com’s Robby Soave put it, they aren’t eager to be led by “a Democratic Party held hostage by liberal arts graduates who write their preferred pronouns on their name tags.”

The frustratio­n boiled over last week during a party conference call on the election results. One shellshock­ed House Democrat told CNN that Ms. Pelosi’s overconfid­ence had consequenc­es: “She made everyone walk the plank on qualified immunity, didn’t cut a deal on COVID. Thank God for Biden, or we would have gotten wiped out.” A recurrent theme emerged, according to various media reports: The high-profile and radical progressiv­e caucus now dominating the House was making it more difficult for many party moderates. “Don’t say ‘socialism.’ Don’t say ‘defund the police’ when that’s not what we mean,” said Rep. Abigail Spanberger, a Virginia Democrat whose re-election bid has yet to be decided, CNN reported.

During the call, Democrats questioned “why the party’s brand wasn’t strong enough to withstand attacks labeling candidates as socialists,” The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The speaker “didn’t immediatel­y provide an answer,” the paper noted.

What could Ms. Pelosi say? The Democratic “brand,” in many places, is fast becoming synonymous with the “S” word because the speaker has, with few exceptions, indulged the most extreme members of her caucus — and few of those House Democrats now complainin­g were eager to stray from the pack, no matter where they now point the finger. Witness the impeachmen­t fiasco. If more moderate House Democrats — including Nevada’s Susie Lee and Steven Horsford — don’t want to be eventually dragged down by their militant leftist colleagues, perhaps they should be more willing to leave the herd in service to their supposed independen­ce.

Democrats have allowed a one-term congresswo­man from the Bronx who embraces corrosive identity politics and central planning and has more regard for Venezuela than the United States to become the modern face of their party. How can they then be surprised that millions of independen­t voters across the nation prefer to leave that “brand” on the shelf?

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Many House Democrats are frustrated with Speaker Nancy Pelosi over election results.
The Associated Press file Many House Democrats are frustrated with Speaker Nancy Pelosi over election results.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States