The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Milwaukee will host Democratic convention

The gathering is scheduled for July 13-16, 2020.

- By Bill Barrow, Scott Bauer and Ivan Moreno

MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee will host the 2020 Democratic National Convention, party leaders announced Monday, highlighti­ng the battlegrou­nd state of Wisconsin that helped elect President Donald Trump and now will launch an opponent who could oust him.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez chose Milwaukee over Houston and Miami after deliberati­ons lingered longer than party leaders or officials from the three finalist cities had expected.

“This choice is a statement of our values,” Perez said in a statement. “The Democratic Party is the party of working people, and Milwaukee is a city of working people.”

The convention is scheduled for July 13-16, 2020.

It will be the first time in over a century that Democrats will nominate their presidenti­al candidate in a Midwestern city other than Chicago. Instead, the political spotlight will shine for a week on a metro area of about 1.6 million people. Once dubbed as “The Machine Shop of the World,” the working-class city also is known for its love affair with beer and as the birthplace of Harley-Davidson motorcycle­s.

Republican­s are set to gather in Charlotte, the largest city in battlegrou­nd North Carolina, on Aug. 24-27, 2020.

Democrats see plenty of symbolism in Milwaukee after a bitter 2016 election defined by Hillary Clinton being nearly swept in what her campaign aides had confidentl­y called a “Blue Wall” across the upper Midwest and Great Lakes region. That band of states twice sided with President Barack Obama, but Clinton held only Minnesota, ceding Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia — a combined 64 of the necessary 270 electoral votes — as white working-class voters flocked to Trump.

The president won Wisconsin and its 10 electoral votes by about 23,000 votes out of almost 3 million cast, the first time since 1984 that Republican­s claimed the state in a presidenti­al election. Afterward, Clinton took withering criticism for not once visiting Wisconsin as a general election candidate.

Since then, Wisconsin voters have re-elected Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin and ousted Republican Gov. Scott Walker in favor of Democrat Tony Evers and the state’s first black lieutenant governor, Mandela Barnes.

“There is no better place to showcase the Democratic Party’s vision for the future than in Wisconsin,” Baldwin said in a statement.

Wisconsin Democrats pointed to those midterm election results as they lobbied Perez and DNC officials, and presidenti­al candidates already are paying attention. Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota came to Wisconsin in one of her first trips as a declared candidate.

In a political twist, Milwaukee officials have credited Walker for supporting the convention bid. Democratic Party proceeding­s will play out in the new 17,500seat arena that Walker helped build for the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks by securing public financing from state lawmakers. Walker later lobbied GOP-leaning business leaders and donors to support Milwaukee’s effort to land the DNC.

“When it comes to a big convention like this, it’s not red, it’s not blue, it’s green,” Walker told The Associated Press. “It’s the money that will come into the state.”

While Democrats expressed enthusiasm, Walker said hosting the convention may result in previously complacent Wisconsin Republican­s paying more attention and getting motivated to vote for Trump.

“I think you’d be hardpresse­d to find anyone who leans Democrat who wasn’t already motivated in the city or the state against the president,” Walker said.

Wisconsin’s Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson concurred with Walker, saying having the convention in his state will help motivate GOP voters by revealing Democratic “socialist tendencies.”

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