Los Angeles Times

Lieu charts path for Democrats

Torrance lawmaker is building a reputation for taking on Trump, one tweet at a time.

- By Javier Panzar

Torrance lawmaker is building a reputation for taking on Trump and his allies, one tweet at a time.

Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) spent close to a decade as a legislator in Sacramento after a stint on the Torrance City Council. He has kept a relatively low profile since being elected to Congress in 2014 as the successor to longtime Rep. Henry Waxman.

Lieu is a new darling among Democrats in the Trump era, building a reputation for brash tweets regularly challengin­g the president and his allies.

Lieu also has a new role as one of the regional vice chairs on the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, the party’s campaign arm dedicated to winning control of the House in 2018.

Lieu was the main attraction at an Aliso Viejo town hall organized by liberal activists in Orange County who are working to oust Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r (RCosta Mesa).

The Times sat down with the Democrat to talk Twitter, 2018 and politics in the era of Donald Trump. This interview has been edited for brevity. Why come to another member’s district and hold a town hall?

What I am doing is not unique. It is happening in other districts. Linda Sanchez is going to Ed Royce’s district. This is happening in different parts of the country. One of the points is to highlight that you’ve got certain members of Congress who are afraid to hold town halls.

I think that is unfortunat­e. I think they should hold town halls and answer questions of their constituen­ts and address their constituen­ts directly. But if they are not going to do that, then I think Democrats should step in and do the town halls for them.

I think there is a lot of activism and energy from people all over America, and some of them are being represente­d by members that appear to be ignoring their constituen­ts. And this is a way to answer questions and to provide updates and informatio­n about what’s happening in Washington, D.C. Have you talked to candidates in the 48th Congressio­nal District?

I haven’t endorsed any of them, but I have talked to many of them. There are 23 seats in America that Hillary Clinton won that have a Republican incumbent. Seven are in California, five are in Southern California. One of the reasons this happened is, last term in many of these districts, we didn’t have a top-tier candidate [and] we didn’t have a second-tier candidate. We largely ignored many of these districts. That’s not happening this time.

We have actually the opposite problem. We have a huge amount of enthusiasm and a lot of high-quality candidates. We are going to have a lot of messy primaries in a lot of these districts. But at the end of the day, there will be a strong general election candidate going into November in every single one of these targeted districts. We are going to have a very different field of candidates than last term. What do you mean, “messy”?

We are going to have five, six candidates running in the primaries — maybe more — [and] some districts with double-digit numbers of Democrats running. Is that a problem for Democrats?

No, I think it is actually a reflection of their energy and activism that we are seeing among many Americans. And I believe competitio­n is healthy and is good. At the end of every primary, there is going to be a strong, tested Democrat running. What do you tell these candidates?

I tell them don’t go negative. You should talk about yourself and what you want to do for the community. Especially if there is multiple candidates running because then it is not even clear what happens when you go negative. So let’s say you go negative on candidate A, maybe that’s helping candidate C instead of yourself. And … it’s hurting Democrats if you do really go profoundly negative in the primary. Most of them don’t. They actually realize the most effective use of their money is to make sure they stand out in front of the voters and the voters understand their story. Do you think Clinton’s winning in a GOP district is a strong enough metric to go for a seat?

There are different structural things happening specifical­ly in California. One of which is there is a very interestin­g governor’s race. And there is going to be a very interestin­g lieutenant governor’s race. A lot of statewide races for Democrats are of very low interest to Republican­s because historical­ly Republican­s understand they just don’t win statewide races. So you have a bunch of Democrats being drawn out next November in a way that Republican­s will not be. Second, I supported what is now a law, which is if you go to the DMV, you are automatica­lly registered to vote unless you specifical­ly opt out. That will go into effect … around spring of next year.

Which means by [next] November, we are going to have hundreds of thousands of new voters, many of whom skew younger.

And third, when you don’t have a presidenti­al election, you can run 100 different congressio­nal campaigns. In a presidenti­al, all the oxygen is sucked up by two candidates .... But individual congressio­nal races, it is very hard for them to get their message out. Now, next November, you can run all these different congressio­nal races.

So the candidate running in Dana Rohrabache­r’s seat is going to have different issues than a candidate running in Wisconsin. And you can get that message out to local media because you don’t have two presidenti­al candidates dominating the whole election cycle. So that, I believe, is helpful for challenger­s. Is it hard dealing with all the groups and activists that have sprung up?

Democracy is messy. And I actually think it is good that we have so many different groups that are not necessaril­y coordinate­d because to me, we are in such an abnormal time in our nation’s history. To me, it has moved beyond the realm of not normal. I think we are actually moving into the realm of criminal. You have certain actions by this administra­tion that appear to me to violate federal laws. My view is this is an allhands-on-deck moment for Americans, and everyone should want to get involved. And they can get involved in their own way. I am glad there are so many different groups. I think it is OK it is not coordinate­d. javier.panzar@latimes.com

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? REP. TED LIEU addresses the Democratic National Convention in 2016. He has a new role as a regional vice chair on the party’s congressio­nal campaign committee, which is working to win control of the House in 2018.
Alex Wong Getty Images REP. TED LIEU addresses the Democratic National Convention in 2016. He has a new role as a regional vice chair on the party’s congressio­nal campaign committee, which is working to win control of the House in 2018.

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