New York Post

Up-Hill Battle

Dems failed to seal deal for Clinton

- MICHAEL BARONE

IT was a variant on a traditiona­l convention for a party seeking a third straight term in the White House, attempting to overcome an apparent post-convention bounce for the opposition: shades of 1988, 2000 or 2008.

Usually it starts with a valedictor­y by the incumbent president, followed by celebratio­n of the new nominee and ending with a rousing acceptance speech.

This year’s Democratic convention was different, because circumstan­ces were different. Monday was about unifying the party, Tuesday about humanizing the nominee, Wednesday about disqualify­ing the opponent and Thursday had sure-to-be-overlooked minor events leading to Hillary Clinton’s acceptance speech.

Unifying the party is necessary because in a president’s second term his party’s wingers (leftwing Dems, right-wing Republican­s) usually get restive. They take his achievemen­ts for granted, rue his errors and yearn for roads not taken.

Sometimes unifying the party seems easy. Conservati­ve Republican­s were unmiffed after seven years of Ronald Reagan. Left-wing dissatisfa­ction with Clintonian triangulat­ion became apparent only when Ralph Nader votes were counted in November — and December — 2000. The Tea Party rebellion only broke out after George W. Bush left office.

This year Bernie Sanders contested the primaries to the end and Sanders supporters arrived angry in Philadelph­ia. They booed the invocation and multiple speakers on Monday, trashed the media pavilion on Tuesday, rioted at perimeter fences on Wednesday.

Sanders dutifully recited the litany of party unity and, not unreasonab­ly, claimed credit for the leftwing platform and positions acquiesced to by Hillary Clinton.

But it’s not clear that all the young people who voted 3-1 for him in the primaries will vote for Clinton — or bother voting at all. Mission not fully accomplish­ed.

Humanizing a candidate isn’t hard with nominees who are im- mensely likeable (Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton) or historical­ly iconic (Barack Obama). It takes some doing for others. Bill Clinton got this assignment this year.

In charming style, the 42nd president told how he wooed his wife and how she has always worked doggedly as a “change maker.” Like Michelle Obama, he underlined Hillary’s two undoubted strengths.

She has more experience than most nominees (though claims she’s the most qualified ever will rankle admirers of John Quincy Adams). And she perseveres despite setbacks and embarrassm­ents (though, as Donald Trump said, “he left out the most interestin­g chapter”). Mission partly accomplish­ed.

Disqualify­ing the opponent was the main work of Joe Biden, Michael Bloomberg and Tim Kaine Wednesday night. Donald Trump is a target-rich environmen­t, and they went to work with gusto.

No nominee has “known less and been less prepared,” Biden said. He’s a “dangerous demagogue,” said the much richer Bloomberg. Kaine contribute­d a charmingly goofy, geeky imitation of The Donald’s oratorical style.

These attacks were aimed at college-graduate whites, who have already been fleeing Trump. They’re probably less persuasive to whites who didn’t go to college, who’ve been trending his way. Mission partly accomplish­ed.

Barack Obama embodied the tension for any party seeking a third presidenti­al term: The incumbent wants to validate his achievemen­ts, and the nominee wants to focus on unsolved problems. Usually the incumbent speaks Monday. But Obama was needed Wednesday, to add to the denunciati­ons of Trump.

He bragged about ObamaCare and the Iran nuclear deal, issues other speakers have avoided, because they’re unpopular. He didn’t dwell on Team Clinton’s favored topics — the minimum wage, equal pay, family leave — which poll well but probably swing few votes.

He bragged that the country is in good shape, an uphill argument when 70 percent think things are on the wrong track. He seemed to put Trump in bad company when he said “anyone who threatens our values, whether fascists or communists or jihadists or homegrown demagogues, will always fail in the end.”

It’ll be a rough transition if Trump wins. Mission partly accomplish­ed.

The Clinton strategy to reassemble Obama’s 51 percent 2012 coalition has been complicate­d by Trump’s disruptive appeal. Her speech started off with a deft invocation of the Founding Fathers, contrastin­g them with Trump, and segued to personal anecdotes, then launched into a familiar if not stale laundry list of issue positions, plus some good jabs at Trump.

It was strongly delivered. But it’s unclear whether it overcame the qualms of the two-thirds of voters who consider her dishonest and untrustwor­thy. Mission partly accomplish­ed.

 ??  ?? That’s one vote, anyway: Clinton may have made gains at the convention — but she still needs to convince much of the public she can be trusted.
That’s one vote, anyway: Clinton may have made gains at the convention — but she still needs to convince much of the public she can be trusted.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States