Los Angeles Times

It’s Presidents Day — and the race is on

With 623 days to go until the election, what do we want to see in a presidenti­al candidate?

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If today is Presidents Day, a year and nine months out from a presidenti­al election, then the campaign must already be underway. And it is. More than 500 people have filed with the Federal Election Commission to run in 2020. Nearly a dozen have already formally announced. President Trump, who famously submitted papers to run for reelection the day he was inaugurate­d, is expected to run again but has yet to stand in the snow somewhere and make it official. Others are very publicly thinking about it, such as former Starbucks Chief Executive Howard Schultz and former Massachuse­tts Gov. William Weld. Some are rumored to be on the verge of announcing — Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders, for instance. Some, like L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti, have already finished thinking about it and have decided not to run. On Thursday, the Democratic National Committee announced there would be 12 Democratic presidenti­al primary debates. The first one is in June — four months away.

Gone are the days when a campaign was a marathon. Now it’s an ultra-marathon.

Only a fraction of those who have filed papers to run will actually make it to a candidates debate or even a humble coffee klatch in Iowa. And whoever wins the White House has scant chance of making it onto any retooled version of Mt. Rushmore. Not that it is likely to need much retooling, unless a natural disaster decimates the Black Hills of South Dakota. A just-released survey from Siena College shows that all four presidents immortaliz­ed in granite — Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt — remain in the top five most highly esteemed by historians. (The fifth is Franklin Roosevelt.) Not that they didn’t have significan­t failings. Washington and Jefferson were slaveholde­rs. Jefferson, who slept with his slave Sally Hemings, would not have survived the #MeToo era.

Frankly, the odds are long that any of the 2020 challenger­s will unseat the incumbent president, even one whose negatives are as high as Trump’s. Few sitting presidents have lost their bids for reelection.

Still, this cycle could, conceivabl­y, be different. Not only is the sitting president unusually unpopular, but political verities that we’ve come to count on through the years also seem less certain than usual.

So what should America be looking for in a candidate? The scholars who put together the Siena College survey rated the presidents on numerous qualities — including imaginatio­n, integrity, intelligen­ce, willingnes­s to take risks, even luck. Those qualities would be a good start.

What else? Our current president reminds us through his shortcomin­gs of the need for honesty in public discourse. And a measure of civility. Trump didn’t invent the nasty campaign. Starting in the 1800s, candidates and their surrogates have accused opponents of adultery, pimping, drunkennes­s and encouragin­g murder. But the 2016 race, with its tabloid tone, its childish nicknames, its detours into issues like penis size and menstrual blood, and its constant chorus of “lock her up,” was uninspirin­g, to say the least. Candidates should have disagreeme­nts over issues. But it would be nice to keep those disagreeme­nts substantiv­e.

One thing that is extraordin­ary about the campaign so far is the number of women who have announced — six at last count: Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (DHawaii) and the self-help author Marianne Williamson. Also running are Sen. Cory Booker, who is black; former Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Julian Castro, who is Latino; and former tech entreprene­ur Andrew Yang, who is Asian American. How stunning is that? Of course, an array of white male candidates, some poised to be front-runners, may join the race in the weeks ahead. But the historic cultural and ethnic widening of the field was hard-won and is worth celebratin­g on Presidents Day.

These are trying times for democracy. But the nation has proved resilient in the past, through wars, scandals, depression­s and, yes, bad presidents. We believe the United States will weather the current storm as well. If the men and women who hope to be elected president in 2020 would start today trying to prove they are worthy, that wouldn’t be a bad way to spend the next 623 days until election day.

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