Yuma Sun

Democrats are still struggling to tell voters what their party stands for

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House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley hesitated when asked about his party’s core message to voters.

“That message is being worked on,” the New York congressma­n said in an interview this past week. “We’re doing everything we can to simplify it, but at the same time provide the meat behind it as well. So that’s coming together now.”No. that core The his 4 message House admissionp­arty even lacks Democratfr­om amida clear,theRepubli­can — President eight disarray Donald months— Trump highlights the Democrats’ dilemma after andlast because fall’sthe Democratse­lections,GOP dominatedi­n lacked part, a consistent­The message. soul-searching comesto flip at as least Democrats2­4 GOP-held look seats necessary for a House majority and cut into Republican advantages in U.S. statehouse­s in the

2018 midterm elections.

Yet with a Russia scandal engulfing the White House, a historical­ly unpopular health-care plan wrenching Capitol Hill and no major GOP legislativ­e achievemen­t, Democrats are still struggling to tell voters what their party stands for.

Some want to rally behind calls to impeach the Republican president as new evidence indicates possible collusion between Trump’s campaign and the Russian government. Democratic leaders are reluctant to pursue that approach as it only energizes the GOP base. Others want Democrats to focus on the GOP’s plans to strip health insurance from millions of Americans. And still others say those arguments can be fashioned into a simplified brand.

“The Democratic Party needs to up its game,” national Party Chairman Tom Perez said in a speech this week. “What I hear most from people is, ‘Tom, we not only need to organize, but we need to articulate clearly what we stand for.’”

For now, at least, Democrats are waging a tug-ofwar largely between the Russia investigat­ion and the GOP’s attempts to gut the 2010 Affordable Care Act.

Several liberal groups that had been laser-focused on health care have intensifie­d calls for impeachmen­t in recent weeks, including MoveOn.org, Indivisibl­e and Ultraviole­t.

“We need to be talking about impeachmen­t constantly,” said Scott Dworkin, co-founder of the recently formed Democratic Coalition Against Trump. He warned on Twitter, “If you’re an elected Dem & you’re not talking impeachmen­t or 25th amendment then find a new party.”

Yet one of the left’s favorites, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, is focusing almost exclusivel­y on health care.

Sanders, an independen­t who caucuses with Senate Democrats, said in an interview that “there should not be a rush to judgment” after emails released by Donald Trump’s son this week revealed that Trump’s top advisers held a meeting with a lawyer they were told represente­d the Russian government.

Sanders sidesteppe­d questions about impeachmen­t, warning instead that “many, many thousands of Americans” will die every year if the GOP health care plan becomes law. Sanders has hosted swing state rallies focused on health care in West Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio in recent weeks and was in Iowa on Saturday.

Democratic operative Zac Petkanas, who led Hillary Clinton’s campaign war room, agrees that this week’s developmen­ts in the Russia investigat­ion shouldn’t change the party’s focus heading into 2018.

“Candidates need to be saying the word ‘health care’ five times for every time they say the word ‘Russia,’” Petkanas said. He added, “I think it’s a fundamenta­l mistake to make this election a referendum on impeachmen­t.”

It’s not that easy for some elected officials, like Rep. Joe Kennedy III, D-Mass., who says concerns about Russia have caught up to health care as a priority among his constituen­ts. He described the Russian developmen­ts as “a threat to our foundation of democracy” that demands attention.

“Congress has to be able to walk and chew gum. We have to be able to do both,” Kennedy said.

Democrats are naturally playing defense given generation­s of victories that expanded the role of government, from the social safety net of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal to Lyndon Johnson’s landmark civil rights legislatio­n to Obama’s health care law.

But many Democrats outside Washington insist they must go beyond opposing Trump and his policies if they expect to make major gains in 2018 and beyond.

“Democrats would make a mistake if we thought pounding Trump and not having an authentic message of our own is a winning strategy,” said Ohio Democratic Party Chairman David Pepper. “The message of Democrats has to be about issues that matter to people at their kitchen table.”

In South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg said Democrats don’t have to retreat from their opposition to Trump, including talking about Russia, but they must tie it all together with a consistent theme that goes beyond day-to-day news cycles.

“It’s very simple,” he said. “We exist to help people go about their lives, to protect their rights and freedoms and opportunit­ies.”

Jason Crow, a Democrat running for Congress in a Colorado swing district, said voters regularly ask him about the Russia story, which “goes to the core of our institutio­ns and our faith in government.” But he’s anchoring his pitch on issues that “are real and immediate to people’s lives: going to college, paying the bills, financing a house, whether they can go and get the health care they need right now in an affordable and accessible way.”

Meanwhile, Crowley said voters may have to wait a few more months before they hear national Democrats’ new message.

“We’re all working on that,” Crowley said. “We’re hoping to have this up and running and out by this fall.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS FEB. 25 FILE PHOTO, TOM PEREZ, speaks in Atlanta. As Democrats look to reverse Republican­s’ monopoly control in Washington and the GOP advantage in state capitals, the party is still looking for a crisp, simple message for voters.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS FEB. 25 FILE PHOTO, TOM PEREZ, speaks in Atlanta. As Democrats look to reverse Republican­s’ monopoly control in Washington and the GOP advantage in state capitals, the party is still looking for a crisp, simple message for voters.

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