Starkville Daily News

Democrats, though not all, learn how to win elections

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We hear that

Democrat Ralph

Northam’s decisive win in the race for

Virginia governor was extra extraordin­ary in that he was a weak candidate. Voters, the story goes, seriously rejected

Trumpian politics, an especially nasty brew that Republican Ed Gillespie had channeled in end-of-race desperatio­n.

Has anyone considered the possibilit­y that Northam ran a smart campaign? A 9-point win is not a squeak-through. Furthermor­e, the notion that Trumpism without Trump is not a powerful strategy greatly overestima­tes Trumpism with Trump.

Do recall that Donald Trump lost to Hillary Clinton in Virginia by over 5 points. And that was 12 long months ago, before Trump proved how ineffectua­l and unpresiden­tial he could be.

Northam clearly understood the first commandmen­t of winning elections: Thou shalt not repel the voters.

Democrats prevailing in purple or even red areas of the country have found a formula for bringing more moderate voters over to their side. (Trumpism does get credit for turning many nonpartici­pants into voters.)

These savvy politician­s are creating safe spaces for parts of the electorate that dislike what Republican­s are doing but have felt culturally abandoned by Democrats. That’s why Northam denounced the ad by the Latino Victory Fund showing a pickup truck with a Confederat­e flag running over children of color.

Many white Virginians who are not particular­ly racist and were distressed by the recent right-wing spectacle in Charlottes­ville nonetheles­s feel tarred by such imagery. Those dynamics went completely over the head of the progressiv­e Democracy for America. It abruptly rescinded its Northam endorsemen­t. Meanwhile, Our Revolution, allied with Bernie Sanders, took its own whack at him.

Northam also said he is against sanctuary cities, which A) Virginia doesn’t have anyway and B) 80 percent of voters, including most Democrats, are against. Opposition to sanctuary cities mirrors opposition to illegal immigratio­n, not necessaril­y to immigrants.

In a statement taking back its support for Northam, Democracy for America declared, “We refuse to be silent any longer and even remotely complicit in the disastrous, racist, and even voter-turnout-depressing campaign Ralph Northam appears intent on running.”

Some turnout depression. AfricanAme­rican turnout swelled Tuesday. And Northam took the black vote by 75 percentage points. Women gave him a

22-point lead.

Certain “progressiv­e” groups, it appears, were willing to throw the election to Trumpism rather than back a Democrat who objected to messaging that, actually, was quite objectiona­ble.

One recalls Larry David’s only funny line as recent host of “Saturday

Night Live.” Impersonat­ing Sanders as a contestant on a game show, he declared, “We’re gonna win this thing the Bernie way, which means if I lose, I’ll bring everyone else down with me.”

The audience laughed nervously. Many were no doubt aware that after his burnt-earth campaign against Clinton, 1 in 5 Sanders supporters didn’t vote for her.

Tom Perriello, by contrast, rose to the occasion. A Bernie-backed progressiv­e who lost the primary to Northam, Perriello enthusiast­ically campaigned for the centrist Democrat. This show of unity may have contribute­d to the Democrats’ swamping victories in the Virginia House of Delegates.

Every activist group — on the Democratic and Republican sides — wants

the party to be a reflection of itself. Northam understood that a party has to be a reflection of those voters open to its message. To win seats held by Republican­s, Democrats obviously have to make room for people who formerly voted Republican, as well as get their natural constituen­cies to the polls.

Trumpism is losing bigtime nationally, especially in the suburbs. Northam

showed how a Democrat can prevail in a purple state. Suffice it to say, he didn’t do it by being a poor candidate. On the contrary.

Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarro­p. She can be reached at fharrop@ gmail.com. To find out more about Froma Harrop and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators webpage at www.creators.com.

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FROMA HARROP SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

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