The Day

Be resolute Democrats, but don’t be afraid

- Tribune Content Agency

A Pew poll found fewer than half of Democrats are confident of victory this fall. The great and powerful President Trump, they moan, cannot be beaten. Pathetic.

Here’s some advice for Democrats. Stop whining. Seems like everywhere you go among the party faithful these days, pessimism is all you hear. You can’t shop, turn on the television, fire up social media or just poke your head out of your front door without risk of drowning in Democrat tears. A Pew poll released in January quantifies this. It found fewer than half of Democrats are confident of victory this fall. The great and powerful President Trump, they moan, cannot be beaten.

Well, not with that attitude he can’t.

Look, I spend my days writing about social, moral and cultural issues, not the nuts and bolts of politics. I am no one’s idea of a campaign strategist. So feel free to take what follows with whatever amount of salt — a grain, a box — that feels appropriat­e. But to me, this narrative of Trumpian invincibil­ity seems wildly overblown.

As has been noted ad infinitum, Donald Trump’s 2016 victory, that win he did not expect to get, hardly reflected dominance in the popular vote, where Hillary Clinton trounced him by nearly 3 million. No, Trump’s win was a quirk of America’s antiquated Electoral College system, which allowed him to eke out excruciati­ngly close wins in a handful of key states.

He took Florida’s 29 electoral votes by a margin of just 113,000 out of 9 million ballots cast, nabbed Pennsylvan­ia’s 20 electoral votes by a margin of just 44,000 out of 5.9 million and won Michigan’s 16 electoral votes by a paltry 10,704 out of 4.5 million. So, but for fewer than 170,000 votes in three states, we would have been spared the angry tweet storms, the resurrecti­on of Frederick Douglass, the 16,000 lies, Sharpies on weather maps, good people on both sides, I would like you to do us a favor though, Brett Kavanaugh, Stephen Miller, Steve Bannon and all the other covfefe of the last 38 months.

Consider that, and then ask yourself: How many Democrats do you figure stayed home in 2016, whether because they were angry Bernie Sanders got hosed or sanguine after polls said Hillary Clinton had the election all sewn up? Do we really believe Democrats can’t turn out a measly 170,000 votes?

Granted, Trump also lost a few states that could’ve gone either way. But note, too, that he has been the most consistent­ly unpopular president in modern history. In an analysis of polling by the authoritat­ive FiveThirty­Eight blog, he is the only one in 70 years whose approval rating has never — not ever, not once — cracked 50 percent. Invincible? Hardly. It is understand­able that Democrats are jittery. As was the case in the elections of 1860, 1932 and 1940, nothing less than national survival is on the ballot this year. The machinery of authoritar­ianism is assembling itself before our eyes, and this is our one chance to stop it. The stakes are unfathomab­ly high.

But that is a cause for determinat­ion, not an excuse for pessimism.

Not to trivialize any of this, but I keep coming back to a speech thenLos Angeles Lakers coach Pat Riley gave his demoralize­d team after a humiliatin­g 148-114 shellackin­g at the hands of the despised Boston Celtics in the first game of the NBA Finals. Riley, now president of the Miami Heat, recounted advice his late father gave him on what turned out to be the last time the coach ever saw him.

“Somewhere, someplace, sometime,” Lee Riley told his son, “you are going to have to plant your feet, make a stand and kick some ass. And when that time comes, you do it.” For Riley’s team, that time was the 1985 NBA Finals.

For Democrats, that time is now.

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