The Record (Troy, NY)

Dems must beware Berning out

- Columnist

Things could go well for the Democrats in next year’s midterm elections

-- if they don’t Bern out.

President Trump is woefully unpopular, feuding with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and other Republican­s. The GOP can’t manage to repeal Obamacare or do much of anything. Voters say they’d like Democrats to run Congress.

But here come the Bernie Bros and sisters to the Republican­s’ rescue: They’re sowing division in the Democratic Party and attempting to enact a purge of the ideologica­lly impure — just the sort of thing that made the Republican Party the ungovernab­le mess it is today.

Bernie Sanders’s advisers are promoting a “litmus test” under which Democrats who don’t swear to implement single-payer health care would be booted from the party in primaries. Sanders pollster Ben Tulchin penned an op-ed with a colleague under the headline “Universal health care is the new litmus test for Democrats.” Nina Turner, head of the Sanders group Our Revolution, told Politico this last week that “there’s something wrong with” Democrats who won’t “unequivoca­lly” embrace “Medicare-for-all.”

That notion — not just taking a stand but excommunic­ating all who disagree — is what Republican­s have done to themselves with guns and taxes, and it would seriously diminish Democrats’ hopes of retaking the House next year.

At the same time, Our Revolution has stepped up its attack on the Democratic Party. Turner this week sent an email to supporters complainin­g that she and others attempted to deliver a petition to Democratic National Committee headquarte­rs but “were shut out.” In a followup interview with BuzzFeed, Turner expressed particular outrage that the DNC offered her ... donuts. “They tried to seduce us with donuts,” she said, calling the gesture “pompous” and “arrogant” and “insulting.”

It’s not just about breakfast confection­s. The Bernie crowd has begun accusing freshman Sen. Kamala D. Harris (Calif.), a rising Democratic star, of being beholden to corporate money. Also in California, Kimberly Ellis, who ran for state Democratic chairman with the support of Sanders and lost in a close race to a former Hillary Clinton delegate, is refusing to concede and threatenin­g to sue. Ellis told the New York Times that the “Democratic Party is in many ways right now where the Republican Party was when the tea party took over.”

And that’s a good thing? Republican fratricide, instigated by tea-party purity police, made Trump possible and left the GOP unable to govern. This is what Sanders’s people would emulate.

Fortunatel­y, Sanders seems to have lost clout. Candidates backed by Our Revolution have lost 31 races in 2017 and won 16, and the wins include “Portland Community College Director, Zone 5” and “South Fulton (Ga.) City Council 6.”

Candidates endorsed by Sanders have struggled in highprofil­e races. Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) lost the DNC chairman race (he was appointed deputy chairman). Sandersbac­ked Tom Perriello lost the Democratic gubernator­ial primary in Virginia, and a Sanders campaign official was blown out in a California congressio­nal primary. Neither did the Sanders magic get the job done for Democrats in special congressio­nal elections in Kansas, Georgia or Montana, and his candidate lost the Omaha mayoral race.

Yet the attempt by the Sanders movement to impose a health-care litmus test on Democratic candidates shows their destructiv­e potential within the party. Support for single-payer health coverage has been growing, and it would become a real possibilit­y if Republican­s sabotage Obamacare but don’t help the tens of millions who would lose insurance.

But to force Democrats to take some kind of single-payer purity oath would set back the cause. Democrats need to pick up 24 seats to take control of the House, yet there are only 23 Republican­s in districts won by Clinton — and only eight of those were won by President Barack Obama in 2012. There are a dozen Democrats in districts Trump won. In such swing districts, it would be suicidal to pledge support for something Republican­s will brand as socialism.

A Pew Research Center poll in June found that while a majority of Democrats (52 percent) favor single-payer health care, only 33 percent of the public does overall. A Kaiser Health Tracking poll in June had better results: 53 percent of the public favored single-payer coverage. But Kaiser found that opinions were “malleable.”

If recent trends continue, and particular­ly if Republican­s undermine Obamacare without an adequate replacemen­t, the time for single-payer will come, and soon. But the litmus test distracts Democrats from protecting Obamacare, diminishes their chances of retaking the House and chops up the party over something that has zero chance of becoming law under Trump.

That Berns.

Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

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Dana Milbank

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