Baltimore Sun Sunday

Democrats gather to regroup

Candidates to head the DNC offer visions of the future at Baltimore forum

- By Yvonne Wenger and John Fritze ywenger@baltsun.com twitter.com/yvonneweng­er john.fritze@baltsun.com twitter.com/jfritze

Candidates vying to lead the Democratic National Committee said Saturday that the party can capitalize on the election of President Donald Trump by communicat­ing its values in the face of the chief executive’s offensive rhetoric.

Ten candidates to chair the DNC appeared at the Baltimore Convention Center to lay out their visions for a party reeling from an election that cost them the White House and exposed deep divisions over its direction.

Democrats will choose new leaders this month who will be charged with crafting a national economic message and, perhaps more importantl­y, rewiring how the party organizes for elections.

The Baltimore forum, the last of four such meetings, drew the two candidates considered the front-runners for that job — former U.S. Labor Secretary Tom Perez of Maryland and Rep. Keith Ellison of Minnesota — the chairs of two state Democratic parties, and six others.

Democrats on Capitol Hill have been forced to adjust to a more vocal base in the wake of Trump’s surprise election victory over Hillary Clinton. Spontaneou­s protests in response to the president’s temporary travel ban from predominan­tly Muslim nations and a flurry of calls to congressio­nal offices about his nominees have changed dynamics within the party.

Some are calling for aggressive opposition, such as filibuster­ing the confirmati­on of Judge Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s nominee to serve on the Supreme Court, and slowing his legislativ­e agenda.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi indicated at the beginning of a caucus retreat in Baltimore this week that the message is being heard by House leaders.

“As long as the president continues down this path, there is nothing Democrats can work with him on,” Pelosi said.

Ellison, in an interview before the forum, said the question should be flipped around to whether Trump can work with Democrats. “The framing that Democrats won’t work with Trump is actually ridiculous,” he said. “He has come out against everything we stand for, guns ablazing. He’s the one who got elected and said he wants to work with people.”

Ellison said Democrats should filibuster Gorsuch’s confirmati­on after Republican­s refused to consider Merrick Garland, President Barack Obama’s nominee for the seat.

“We have to oppose Gorsuch at every millimeter, and the reason why is Republican­s stole a Democratic seat,” he said. “We cannot capitulate to that kind of bullying. They’re the ones who broke the rules.”

Not everyone is convinced that an all-or-nothing approach is the best path forward for Democrats. In 2018, the party will defend 10 Senate seats in states Trump won, including Florida, Indiana and Ohio.

Perez said Trump’s presidency has been marked by “carnage and chaos.” To turn anti-Trump energy into votes, he said, the party must be transparen­t, fair and inclusive. “The culture of the DNC has been far too secretive,” Perez said.

During much of the 90-minute forum, New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Ray Buckley said Democrats lost in 2016 because the party was too focused on responding to Trump and did not speak to everyday Americans.

The candidates said the anti-Trump energy presents an opportunit­y for the next Democratic leader, assuming that that person can unite the party. Perez and Ellison hold widely different views on how to accomplish that.

Some view Perez as more of an insider, given his work at the Labor and Justice department­s under Obama.

Perez, a Takoma Park resident and former Maryland state official, recently won the backing of former Vice President Joe Biden.

Ellison is supported by Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who captured the support of young voters by running to the left of Hillary Clinton in the race for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination.

Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Ind., said during an interview he would make cybersecur­ity a top issue for the party. Buttigieg, who has been endorsed for the chairmansh­ip by former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, highlighte­d his counterter­rorism experience as an officer in the U.S. Navy Reserve.

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