Los Angeles Times

Where does Beto stand?

O’Rourke’s vague positions let Democrats project their views on him

- DOYLE McMANUS Doyle McManus’ column appears on Wednesday and Sunday.

The most striking thing about the Democrats’ newest presidenti­al candidate is that he’s so hard to pin down.

Even though Beto O’Rourke spent six years as a congressma­n from El Paso, he has offered few specific positions on issues. Instead, he mostly deploys sunny attitudes; he’s for unity, bipartisan­ship and everyone pulling together.

“Let us not allow our difference­s to define us,” he told voters in Iowa. He’s a lanky, toothy Rorschach test; Democrats can project almost any view onto him they like.

That’s unlikely to work long in a tough primary contest, when more than a dozen other candidates will be vying to pin O’Rourke down and expose his soft spots. He’d better come up with some specific proposals and be ready to defend them.

His fans, and they are many, often compare him to Barack Obama. But Obama had a compelling story and a signature issue. The story was his biography as the first African American to have a real shot at the nomination; the issue was his early, prescient opposition to the Iraq war.

O’Rourke’s story is a bit thinner: He skateboard­s, plays the guitar and came close to beating Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in November. His issue, at least so far, seems to be his buoyant optimism and bipartisan goodwill — and those may prove out of step in these combative times.

During his six years in the House, O’Rourke joined the New Democrat caucus, which favors “pro-economic growth, pro-innovation and fiscally responsibl­e policies” — the wing of the party that used to be known as Clinton Democrats.

But describing where the 46-year-old belongs on the Democratic spectrum now is an exercise in approximat­ion.

He’s a liberal on social issues; he’s for abortion rights, legalizing marijuana and easier immigratio­n. But he’s a centrist on economic issues; he was a relatively business-friendly member of Congress (especially on oil and gas; he’s from Texas).

He voted to reduce some financial regulation­s, and he steers well clear of the plutocrat-bashing rhetoric of candidates like Elizabeth Warren.

Instead of taking specific positions, O’Rourke has issued lists of “ideas” — proposals “we ought to be debating.”

These include granting immediate citizenshi­p to “Dreamers,” immigrants who entered the country illegally as children. The mainstream Democratic position is to offer Dreamers “a path to citizenshi­p,” not grant it automatica­lly.

He also suggests expanding the Supreme Court to 15 seats, with five seats chosen by each major party and five chosen by the justices themselves, which would require rewriting the Constituti­on.

That’s “an idea we should explore,” O’Rourke said in Iowa. Some voters may find his invitation to a national conversati­on on notions such as rewiring the nation’s highest court beguiling. Others will find it annoying.

Like most politician­s, O’Rourke has changed some of his views over time. In his 2012 race for Congress, he ran against a more liberal Democratic incumbent, and he was funded partly by local business leaders.

He suggested then that he would have voted against Obamacare, then only two years old and less popular. He mused about raising the Social Security retirement age to 69 to reduce the federal deficit. He seems to have abandoned both ideas.

Progressiv­e voters — the ones who know they want “Medicare for all” and free college tuition — are likely to find O’Rourke wanting. He’s closer to being a young Joe Biden than a young Bernie Sanders.

When a reporter asked last week whether he considered himself a progressiv­e, his answer was, “I don’t know…. I’m not big on labels.”

The bigger question is whether he’s prepared for the intense scrutiny a presidenti­al candidate must handle.

In January, when a reporter asked how he would address the problem of foreign visitors who overstay their U.S. visas — which O’Rourke had said is more urgent than building a wall on the border — his answer was, again, “I don’t know.” (He eventually suggested improved tracking of visa holders.)

His biggest success last year was winning a national fan base and an impressive list of financial donors in his unsuccessf­ul Senate race in Texas. But he was running against Cruz, a Republican Democrats love to hate.

Will his charisma work when he’s running against Biden, Sanders, Warren, Kamala Harris and the rest of the Democratic field?

I don’t mean to sell O’Rourke too short. Optimism can be a winning theme in political campaigns; it worked for Ronald Reagan. It could be just the antidote voters seek to defuse the anger and fear that have dominated the Trump era.

O’Rourke can be eloquent off the cuff, as he was last year when he defended NFL players’ right to take a knee.

His goofy, freewheeli­ng verbal style is fun to watch. He handles questions about whether Democrats want another white male candidate gracefully, acknowledg­ing that it’s a reasonable concern.

And now that he’s in the race, he has begun to offer a bit more substance on his views. He told Iowa voters last week that he thinks global warming requires putting a price on carbon. He wants universal healthcare, but isn’t sure how to get there.

But he’s playing in a tougher league than he has before. He’ll face a lineup of equally ambitious (and, in most cases, more experience­d) rivals in monthly debates that begin in June.

Part of the drama of the next six months will be seeing whether Beto O’Rourke can grow into the role of a presidenti­al candidate — and whether he can take a punch.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? “I DON’T KNOW…. I’m not big on labels,” presidenti­al hopeful Beto O’Rourke said when asked whether he considered himself a progressiv­e. He has a variety of ideas he’d like to explore, but few concrete positions.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images “I DON’T KNOW…. I’m not big on labels,” presidenti­al hopeful Beto O’Rourke said when asked whether he considered himself a progressiv­e. He has a variety of ideas he’d like to explore, but few concrete positions.
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