Los Angeles Times

Trying to ride ‘blue wave’

Democratic wins give progressiv­es hope for 2020, but victors took largely moderate tack.

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — Days after Democrats won back the House, Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren stood confidentl­y before Democratic activists and pitched a half-trillion-dollar plan — reminiscen­t of the New Deal — to build millions of homes in low-income neighborho­ods.

The expected 2020 presidenti­al hopeful vowed to pay for it all with a new estate tax on America’s wealthy families.

“Who is government supposed to work for?” she asked. “Is it supposed to work for the 10,000 richest families or is it supposed to work for the rest of America? We are a democracy. There are a whole lot more of us than there are of them.”

There was just one hitch. Such costly progressiv­e policy proposals were not the winning formula for most Democrats in the midterm.

In the purple and red districts where Democrats picked up new seats, many of the candidates who won avoided talking about Medicare for all, free college tuition, abolishing the immigratio­n enforcemen­t agency and Warren’s plan to subsi-

dize 3.2 million new homes. Instead they typically focused on more moderate themes, such as promising to protect Obamacare.

Yet little about the way Democrats are positionin­g for the upcoming presidenti­al primary reflects that formula. The candidates are already looking to outdo one another with proposals to upend the economic and social order.

“A lot of the candidates who won in the midterms avoided making extravagan­t promises,” said Will Marshall, president of the centrist Progressiv­e Policy Institute. “We saw in this election that voters are looking for changes. But there was nothing about it that would support the conclusion that there is a big public appetite for a statist agenda or a massive redistribu­tion of wealth. At least not in the areas where Democrats made inroads.”

Marshall and other centrists in the party note that the swing-state Democrats who most prominentl­y identified with the left wing of the party fell short.

Andrew Gillum narrowly lost the governor’s race in Florida, robbing progressiv­es of an opportunit­y to demonstrat­e that their agenda can win in the fractured political regions most crucial for Democrats to take back. In Texas, Rep. Beto O’Rourke’s $69-million campaign, with all the energy and enthusiasm it sparked, ultimately failed to unseat Sen. Ted Cruz.

One notable exception was Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown, a progressiv­e and unyielding champion of organized labor who won reelection in one of the toughest states for Democrats. But he focused his message not on ambitious new programs and entitlemen­ts, but on the value of work and the erosion of opportunit­ies for voters willing to put in a 40hour workweek to earn a secure middle-class living.

It’s a familiar and predictabl­e postelecti­on debate, with business-backed center-left groups such as the Progressiv­e Policy Institute and the think tank Third Way clashing with activist flanks of the Democratic Party.

In many ways, presidenti­al candidates have little choice but to embrace the more progressiv­e messages because that’s increasing­ly what is needed to win the party’s nomination, as seen by Hillary Clinton’s struggle in 2016 against progressiv­e firebrand Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

The stakes are even higher at a time the national party is so adrift, with no clear leader, no clear vision for the future, and a presidenti­al primary that is more up for grabs than any in recent history.

“Politics is complicate­d and every district is different; I am not going to deny that,” Sanders said.

Even as he points to polls showing the idea of Medicare for all is popular with voters, he acknowledg­es that many of the Democrats who flipped House seats in the party’s favor didn’t crusade on it, saying, “In some districts, a set of policies will work better than others.”

But he uniformly rejected the prospect that making it a campaign centerpiec­e for Democrats in 2020 could cost them the suburban Republican­s and independen­ts who propelled the midterm victory. He said O’Rourke and Gillum lured masses of new voters to the polls, expanding the base for Democrats in a way centrist candidates could not, which played a crucial role in the many GOP House seats that f lipped to blue in Florida and Texas this year.

“The establishm­ent is fighting hard, telling us we have to go back to the good old days when Republican­s captured the House and Senate, not to mention the White House, and Democrats lost 1,100 state legislativ­e seats,” Sanders said. “Look at the polling. Seventy percent of the American people believe in Medicare for all. Why wouldn’t we move forward?”

The idea does poll well. The details, not always. The nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation probed deeper into public attitudes last year. Its survey found broad support for the general concept of Medicare for all, but the support plunged as voters were presented with descriptio­ns and opposition arguments stressing the huge price tag and the expanded role government would have in managing the healthcare system.

Sanders argues that it will be easy for Democrats to win on the issue because the bottom line is that less money will come out of Americans’ pockets to pay for healthcare.

But some of the candidates who emphasized Medicare for all in the midterm found articulati­ng the details a challenge. That became a potent weapon for GOP attacks, which warned voters they would have to give up their employer-provided health coverage for a government plan.

“This issue is just a complete dead weight for Democrats,” said Lanae Erickson Hatalsky, vice president for social policy and politics at Third Way. “It is why only two of the 92 House candidates running in red districts targeted by Democrats ran ads touting it.”

On Capitol Hill, a proxy war has broken out as Third Way presents Democratic lawmakers — especially potential presidenti­al candidates — with polling and other data suggesting moderation won out in the midterm.

The million-member Progressiv­e Change Campaign Committee, which brands itself the “Elizabeth Warren wing of American politics,” is circulatin­g its own white paper that accuses Third Way of distorting the facts to serve the interest of the think tank’s Wall Street donors.

The committee plowed through reams of campaign material published by midterm candidates to produce a spreadshee­t showing the overwhelmi­ng majority of them pledged support for ideas such as Medicare for all, even if they didn’t make such themes centerpiec­es of their general election campaign.

“It is inarguable that the people who won homed in on pro-working people, economic populist issues,” said Adam Green, co-founder of the committee. “So many of the candidates who won got attacked by [House Speaker] Paul D. Ryan’s super PAC, with millions of dollars in ads saying they believed in Medicare for all. They won anyway.”

In this frenzied moment in Democratic politics, some potential presidenti­al candidates are claimed by both the left and the center of the party. Brown’s emphasis on work and opportunit­y while still embracing some of the programs championed by activists has some prominent Democrats from across the ideologica­l spectrum encouragin­g him to mount a White House run. He’s considerin­g it.

But if he goes that route, he probably won’t be leading with Medicare for all. “Medicare for all is a down-theroad question for a different day,” Brown said in an interview. He said Democrats should be running on a theme that emphasizes work and opportunit­y.

That could prove a hard sell to a restive base, which still holds that Democrats lost the last presidenti­al election because their candidate failed to offer a bold, new vision and embrace game-changing ideas.

California billionair­e donor and activist Tom Steyer, who launched the political organizati­on Need to Impeach and is himself considerin­g a White House run, says that “people are begging for … a compelling vision for what should happen and how to get there.”

His network of nonprofits helped inspire millions of disaffecte­d voters to go to the polls for Democrats by talking with them not just about impeachmen­t, but also promoting progressiv­e ideas like Medicare for all.

“American politics is failing,” he said, “except where people are actually willing to tell the truth about what is going on on the ground.”

‘It is inarguable that the people who won homed in on pro-working people, economic populist issues.’ —Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressiv­e Change Campaign Committee

 ?? Shawn Thew EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? COSTLY New Deal-esque policy plans like one recently presented by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), pictured with fellow progressiv­e Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), were not the winning formula for many Democrats in the election, moderate Democrats argue.
Shawn Thew EPA/Shuttersto­ck COSTLY New Deal-esque policy plans like one recently presented by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), pictured with fellow progressiv­e Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), were not the winning formula for many Democrats in the election, moderate Democrats argue.

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