Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Clyburn key for his party

- By Lynn Schmidt St. Louis Post-Dispatch Lynn Schmidt is a columnist and Editorial Board member of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

The Democratic Party has a real gem right within its midst. It would do Democrats well to pay attention. That gem is Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, who, as majority whip, is the third-ranking Democrat in the House of Representa­tives. Clyburn is also a retired educator. He has been using his prodigious skills at perception of the American electorate. When Democrats listen to Clyburn, they tend to win. Some call Clyburn a kingmaker. I prefer to think of him as the Voter Whisperer.

Clyburn almost single-handedly changed the trajectory of the 2020 presidenti­al election after he endorsed then-candidate Joe Biden ahead of the South Carolina primary in February 2020. Following that endorsemen­t and Biden's win in the South Carolina primary, the former vice president surged past Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and eventually won the Democratic nomination.

Earlier this year, Clyburn rallied behind another centrist Democrat, Troy Carter, in a special election for Louisiana's 2nd Congressio­nal District. Clyburn's endorsemen­t helped Carter defeat the more liberal, progressiv­e state Sen. Karen Carter Peterson. Carter won with 55.2% of the vote.

Clyburn's ability to understand an electorate and the power of his endorsemen­t also became evident on Aug. 3 during a special election in Ohio's 11th Congressio­nal District to replace Marcia Fudge, the former representa­tive who was confirmed on March 10 as Biden's secretary of housing and urban developmen­t. The special election was between former Ohio state Sen. Nina Turner and Cuyahoga County council member Shontel Brown.

Clyburn got involved in the special election after Turner appeared onstage with rapper and activist Killer Mike at an economic town hall back in June. Turner agreed with Killer Mike when he called Clyburn “incredibly stupid” for backing Biden. Clyburn shared he had no plans to go to Cleveland or to get physically involved in the campaign until the Turner campaign invited him in. “That's the kind of BS that sent me to Cleveland,” he said.

Clyburn endorsed Brown, went to Cleveland and campaigned with her. Turner's spokespers­on revealed that her campaign raised roughly $5.7 million, while the Brown campaign took in about $2.6 million. The progressiv­e Turner lost to Brown by six points. Perhaps Clyburn's endorsemen­t is worth more than $3.1 million.

To bring this story a little closer to home, just one day after the Ohio election, Missouri's Bush went out on the steps of the Capitol yet again and told reporters: “I'm going to make sure I have security because I know I have had attempts on my life, and I have too much work to do. There are too many people [who] need help right now for me to allow that. So, if I end up spending $200,000, if I spend 10 more dollars on it — you know what? I get to be here to do the work. So suck it up, and defunding the police has to happen. We need to defund the police and put that money into social safety nets.” Bush may have been emboldened after her “win” regarding the eviction moratorium. Biden was pressured into issuing a revised eviction moratorium by progressiv­es like Bush, even after he had questioned his power to do so. Biden admitted that what he was about to do was probably unconstitu­tional.

After the 2020 election, Clyburn was outspoken about how the “defund the police” slogan cost Democrats House seats. Clyburn said, “These headlines can kill a political effort.” Clyburn shared more of his wisdom last week when he said, “I want to make it very clear what I think is necessary for us to be successful in these elections, and I've made it very clear that all of this slogan, headline-seeking doesn't do the future of our party or our country any good.”

Clyburn knows that a majority of Democratic voters, center-left and even some center-right independen­ts, are looking for pragmatic problem-solvers and less for ideologica­l purists. The progressiv­e left may be outspoken on social media and popular with their constituen­ts, but they do not seem to speak for the majority of Democratic voters, and Clyburn knows this. Clyburn has an uncanny ability to read the American electorate and isn't shy about speaking out and getting involved.

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