The Oklahoman

What Dem race has shown, so far

- Michael Barone CREATORS.COM

Elections are a form of communicat­ion. Voting tells politician­s, and the press if they're capable of getting the message, what citizens will tolerate and what they won't. The Democrats haven't voted yet, but they've been campaignin­g for more than a year and have just had their last debate before the Iowa caucuses.

That's time enough to learn some useful things from the majority of the two dozen-plus declared candidates who have already dropped out and from those still in the race.

The first thing we've learned is that Democratic voters have a limited appetite for free stuff. Many candidates have been promising free college and free health care, and offering free Ben & Jerry's ice cream.

Sounds good at first, as when Sen. Elizabeth Warren backed Sen. Bernie Sanders' “Medicare for All” proposal. But the refusal of the I-have-a-plan-for-that candidate to say how she'd pay for it didn't fly. And when she did answer that question, that flopped, too, and she fell back on saying it would be delayed till her second two years or second term.

The second thing we've learned is related: As blogger Glenn Reynolds puts it, “Go woke, go broke.” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, former Rep. Beto O'Rourke, Sen. Kamala Harris, Julian Castro and Sen. Cory Booker — all candidates who have taken some moderate stands — chose to emphasize how hip they were. They embraced positions like free medical care for illegal immigrants, reparation­s for descendant­s of slaves, abortions for men who have transition­ed to be women.

These things sound reasonable to fans of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. To Democratic primary voters, not so much. All five are now ex-candidates.

Third, identity politics has proved to be a loser, too. Harris and Booker got only single-digit percentage­s from black voters. Castro made zero progress with Hispanics. Identity politics is big on campus, where you get denounced for wearing a serape on Halloween if you don't have Mexican ancestors. But voters don't care so much.

Fourth, the white college graduates who are, for the first time in history, one of the Democratic Party's largest constituen­cies, are a fickle bunch. Black and elderly Democrats have consistent­ly given former Vice President Joe Biden large pluralitie­s, and Hispanic and low-income non-college Democrats have shown some affinity for Sanders. That largely accounts for the buoyancy of support for these 77- and 78-year-old candidates.

But gentry liberals have been bouncing around. They were briefly smitten with Harris after she bopped Biden on school busing. They swooned longer for Warren when she kept repeating, “I have a plan for that,” and then they were taken charmed by former Mayor Pete Buttigieg's crisp and self-assured articulate­ness.

The gentry liberals' fling with Harris didn't last long, and current polling suggests their crushes on Warren and Buttigieg are over. But there's still plenty of room for these voters to swing decisively in February's first two contests, for they are numerous among those who bother to attend the Iowa caucuses and demographi­cally a large share of the population of New Hampshire.

That's what happened in 2008, when higheducat­ion Iowans swung to Barack Obama, which convinced black voters that he, unlike Jesse Jackson, could win whites' votes and the nomination. But gentry liberals are hard to gauge because what they're after is not government aid but morally satisfying reassuranc­es, not substance but style.

Finally, Democrats — or their many friends in the press and social media — have an obsessive yearning for “diversity,” which turns out to mean racial quotas and preference­s. There is moaning about not having any “people of color” on the latest debate stage, as if the party had a responsibi­lity to somehow field a group of candidates who are demographi­cally identical to the population.

Actually, the six candidates at the last debate come from a wide range of American background­s, reasonably appropriat­e for a party that, in its 188-year history, has always been a coalition of out-groups. What's important is not what the field of candidates looks like but who will be the party's nominee, who will inevitably be of one gender and a limited number of ancestries. That is something Democratic voters have not taught us yet.

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