The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

For Democrats, it’s winnowing time

- George Will Columnist

Winnow: verb. To expose (grain or other substances) to the wind or to a current of air so that the lighter particles (as chaff or other refuse matter) are separated or blown away.

— Oxford English Dictionary

It is time to dust off this marvelousl­y appropriat­e verb for its quadrennia­l use to describe the thinning of a field of presidenti­al aspirants. After two rounds of quasi-debates — “10-participan­t debate” is a quasioxymo­ron — the Democratic field is well on its way to contractio­n.

Joe Biden survived his second debate, but did not dispel the impression that the brittlenes­s of his candidacy is more important than his double-digit lead in a field the congestion of which is, for now, his friend. Biden’s neon smile is a nice contrast with the snarl that defines the leader of the other party, but Democrats must consider this: If they nominate Biden, they will be hostages to his health, and if he catches a cold or develops a cough in October 2020, the electorate might get chills.

There is not room for both Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders in the lane reserved for those who think, eccentrica­lly, the government is a tool of rapacious factions and that the government should be made much more powerful.

If Warren can be more of a happy warrior, and less of the faculty-club know-it-all scold who showed up in Detroit, she should send Sanders packing.

Florid, arm-waving, shouting Sanders will only become president if Americans do something they have not done since they reelected Andrew Jackson in 1832 — vote for a thoroughly angry man.

Did they do this in 2016? No, Trump’s anger shtick was performanc­e art. Genuine political anger presuppose­s genuine political conviction­s. It is as mistaken to accuse Trump of anything other than synthetic anger as it is to accuse him of racism. He is not complicate­d enough for either.

Regarding John Delaney, Steve Bullock, John Hickenloop­er and some others who are still a far cry from double digits in polls, remember this: In January 1972, South Dakota Sen. George McGovern’s support was around 3%, which means he was within the margin of error of zero. Six months later he clinched the nomination.

Many Democrats, who understand that their policies will remain mere aspiration­s if Republican­s retain control of the Senate, are exasperate­d that three of their aspiring presidents are not seeking Senate seats next year.

Hickenloop­er, a former twoterm Colorado governor, could be trying to deny a second term to Sen. Cory Gardner, the most vulnerable Republican incumbent.

Bullock, having won Montana’s governorsh­ip twice in a state Trump carried by 20.6 points, would be a strong opponent against Sen. Steve Daines.

But Hickenloop­er and Bullock probably know that former governors, having had the exhilarati­ng experience of wielding executive power, often are unhappy senators. Today, senators who are contented with their roles in a body that is both turgid and paralyzed are apt to be regrettabl­e because they are in politics only for status — to be something, not to do something.

Some Democrats wish that former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke would run against three-term incumbent Sen. John Cornyn, but O’Rourke, the incredibly shrinking candidate, always has been a figment of his and others’ imaginatio­ns. In 2018, $80 million bought for him a somewhat close — 2.6 points — loss against Sen. Ted Cruz.

In that year, when Donald Trump was not on the ballot, some voters whose political interests span the spectrum from Trump to Trump, stayed home.

Many of them probably will reappear when their messiah re-summons them.

Although Cornyn’s approval rating is not markedly better than Cruz’s was, some of those who disapprove of Cornyn are more conservati­ve Republican­s who will neither stay home nor vote for a Democrat next year.

This might be 2020’s decisive paradox: The safer that continuing Republican control of the Senate seems on Election Day, the better are the Democrats’ chances of winning the White House.

Many voters, perhaps a decisive number, will be willing to put a progressiv­e in the presidency if, but only if, they know that they can count on that which they too often deplore: gridlock.

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