Los Angeles Times

DEMOCRATIC DESPAIR

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — Miami is not where Jon Cowan expected to be on Inaugurati­on Day.

He was certain he would be toasting the nation’s first female president at Elephant & Castle, a pub on the inaugural parade route. “It was this unbelievab­le space where we were going to have this large gathering of Democrats,” said Cowan, who runs the left-ofcenter think tank Third Way.

But instead, he found himself at a South Florida resort, offering straight talk about the state of the Democratic Party to elite donors and strategist­s who were also driven by President Trump’s election win over Hillary Clinton to cancel long-held bookings in Washington. Instead of celebratin­g a new Clinton era, they were hundreds of miles away, picking apart where they went wrong and plotting a comeback.

Friday was a reality check for Democrats and progressiv­es, still shell-shocked Trump is taking power. His failure to so much as shake Clinton’s hand as he strode to the stage riled them. The images of her stoically watching Trump assume the role that nearly 2.9 more million Americans voted to give Clinton were like a gut punch.

They took little comfort in the sparse attendance at the event compared with President Obama’s first inaugurati­on.

“He has no kind of decency left in him,” said Beritu Haile-Selassie, a 62-year-old retiree from Washington holding a sign that said “fake president.” “You have no idea what he is going to do.”

Disgust over Trump’s actions through the transition drove many Democrats to deny him the usual grace period given a new president. They seized on the inaugurati­on as a galvanizin­g moment, assembling in Washington and around the country to send a loud message of resistance and map their resurgence. The women’s march that anti-Trump forces have planned for Saturday was preceded by pockets of protest on the streets Friday. Some windows were broken. Arrests were made.

“We must not despair,” Sen. Kamala Harris of California tweeted Friday morning. “We must not be overwhelme­d or throw up our hands. It is time to roll up our sleeves and fight for who we are.”

Speaking up was more complicate­d for some than others. Dozens of other members of Congress struggled to find the appropriat­e form of protest. They anguished over the idea of boycotting, which threatened to undermine a pillar of democracy lawmakers hold sacred: the peaceful transfer of power. Harris joined all the other senators in attending the swearing-in, though more than 60 Democrats in the House stayed away.

“I am sad not to be attending this ceremony,” said Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael), who was among the first lawmakers to announce a boycott. “It takes an extraordin­ary set of circumstan­ces for someone like me to say they can’t be part of this. If any other Republican who ran were being sworn in, I would be there.”

But, Huffman said, Trump’s pattern of “scorched earth, chaos and boorish behavior” persuaded him to spend the week volunteeri­ng with his Northern California constituen­ts and presiding over a citizenshi­p ceremony for hundreds of immigrants.

Democratic Rep. Tony Cardenas of Los Angeles spent the swearing-in hour elsewhere, meditating. Fellow Angeleno Rep. Ted Lieu decided to serve his Air Force Reserve duty in California.

Union leaders who went to both of Obama’s inaugurals instead mapped out their message for taking on Trump. At Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, an organizati­on representi­ng a large number of Latinos, leaders worked on redoubling their advocacy for workers in the U.S. illegally, in defiance of a new president planning to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and restrict Muslims from entering the country.

“We are not going to allow extremists to divide us with their mythology that immigrants are taking away our jobs,” said Mary Kay Henry, president of the union, who attended Obama’s second swearing-in. As with other progressiv­e advocacy groups, the union has seen interest surge since election day. Earlier plans to increase the number of members contributi­ng $10 monthly to half a million have been revised. SEIU officials are confident membership will reach the 1-million mark.

Others grabbed the moment in their own way.

Estefania Garcia, wrapped in a Mexican flag, took advantage of the free marijuana passed out by pot legalizati­on advocates as she protested Trump’s immigratio­n policies. “Wanted to see history, have my voice heard and get some free pot,” said Garcia, who became a U.S. citizen two years ago.

Democratic mayors who had planned to hit the inaugural party circuit after this week’s U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting in Washington instead packed up and left. Many went back home to begin the work of countering the incoming Trump administra­tion.

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg says officials in his city will explore how to update their decades-old sanctuary city law to provide protection to immigrants in the U.S. illegally who could be targeted by the new administra­tion. “We will stand with people who feel threatened,” Steinberg said in an interview as he prepared to fly home.

Another disappoint­ed Northern California­n, business mogul Susie Tompkins Buell, hopped a flight heading in the other direc- tion. Buell, a longtime friend of Clinton and one of her biggest donors, is still registerin­g the shock of Trump’s win. “It’s so crazy,” she said. “It is hard to believe what is happening. I said to my husband this morning, ‘This is worse than it would have been to lose to a legitimate candidate.’ ”

Buell said she and other Clinton friends and donors had been “all making plans to find each other” at what they expected would be Clinton’s inaugurati­on. She considered coming to Washington anyway, to join the march Saturday. But she headed to Miami, where her friend and fellow Clinton loyalist David Brock is convening the conference at which Cowan is a panelist.

The lineup also included Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, former U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman was to educate the group on leveraging disruptive technology, and a panel that includes a Harvard lecturer and Russian journalist was planning a deep dive on “The Road to Fascism.”

“There will be a lot to learn looking back, and looking forward,” Buell said. “It will be good to be with like-minded people. We need to get shored up and reinvigora­ted and find our source of trust again.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? FIRST LADY Melania Trump and President Trump with former President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. The day prompted soul-searching for Democrats.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times FIRST LADY Melania Trump and President Trump with former President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. The day prompted soul-searching for Democrats.

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