Ottawa Citizen

Democrat victory in U.S. Senate opens new doors

- ANDREW COHEN Andrew Cohen is a journalist, a professor at Carleton University and author of Two Days in June: John F. Kennedy and the 48 Hours That Made History.

On a crisp night in December five years ago, Alabama sent Douglas Jones, a crusading civil rights prosecutor, to the United States Senate. He was a Democrat.

It was a miracle of Hanukkah in a special election in a red state in the Deep South. Like the candles on the menorah, though, his went out when he failed to win a full six-year term three years later.

This December, we bear witness to another supernatur­al phenomenon from a Democrat in the Deep South. This is less miraculous but more enduring. Having unseated the incumbent Republican in a special election in Georgia two years ago, Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, also sought a full term. Unlike Jones, though, he has won.

Warnock's narrow victory on Tuesday closes this political season and opens another. This is the way in the United States, which goes from one election to the next — mid-terms, off-year, presidenti­al — in what has become an endless campaign.

You know the next round has begun when pundits are already calling Warnock a presidenti­al prospect. He does have star quality, a charisma and confidence that was on display in his victory speech. His remarks to his ecstatic supporters were honeyed with the cadences of the southern clergyman — Rev. Warnock preaches Sundays in Atlanta — with hopes, prayers and vows evoking Martin Luther King, Jr., John Lewis and Barack Obama.

His election has consequenc­es for Democrats, as well as Republican­s, for the Senate and the presidency.

The obvious: As their 51st senator, Warnock assures the Democrats of a working majority. It means they can control committees and conduct business free of the obstructio­nism that has defined Mitch Mcconnell, the Republican minority leader.

It means Joe Biden can continue his record-setting pace of appointmen­ts to the federal courts, one of the unsung successes of his productive presidency. It means an easier time confirming other appointmen­ts, such as ambassador­s. It means an insurance policy if the Democrats lose a senator over the next two years. Politicall­y, it's more than that. With a one-seat majority, the Democrats no longer rely as heavily on the votes of senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona. Had both agreed to suspend the filibuster, the Democrats would have passed voting-rights legislatio­n.

Indeed, for Manchin and Sinema, there is an irony. Either can now vote against their party — at least one at a time — when it suits them, with impunity. This will be particular­ly important for Manchin, who represents rock-ribbed Republican West Virginia. Manchin has survived as a Democrat by bucking his own party. Now he can do more of that, with his party's encouragem­ent, without sinking its agenda.

The biggest dividend of the election is Warnock himself. His stature strengthen­s the bench of the Democratic Party. Defeating Herschel Walker — a dumb, troubled former college football star who was exploited, as a Black man, by white conservati­ves — vaults Warnock into the stratosphe­re.

He joins a new cohort of Democrats elected to state and national office in the last three elections. They include Gretchen Whitmer, Gavin Newsom, Josh Shapiro, John Fetterman, Wes Moore, Maura Healey and Marie Gluesenkam­p Perez of Washington State, who defeated a hard-right conservati­ve in the House, the biggest upset of 2022. The Democrats will need all of them to weather the assault on democracy from Donald Trump and his army. For all the triumphali­sm of Democrats this year, the House of Representa­tives will be controlled by radical Republican­s, whose agenda is revenge and disruption.

While the Democrats dominate one chamber, this means nothing legislativ­ely if the House passes bills the Senate cannot support. The Republican­s will launch investigat­ions, deny funding to Ukraine, try to shut down the federal government and threaten to impeach cabinet secretarie­s, and perhaps Joe Biden.

These volleys will die in the Senate. But they will create noise, poison the climate and fuel the fire burning in the house of American democracy. Stopping this insanity, finally and fully, will take another miracle of Hanukkah.

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