Chattanooga Times Free Press

Don’t expect a break from acrimony

- BY DOUG SOSNIK

For the past two years, the United States has been torn by partisan warfare unpreceden­ted in most of our lifetimes. But this will look like a period of relative calm and tranquilit­y, now that Democrats control the House of Representa­tives.

President Donald Trump and the prospectiv­e Democratic presidenti­al candidates are liberated to begin their campaigns for the 2020 election. This full engagement will create an imperative for both Trump and the Democrats to heighten their difference­s. The result will be that an already toxic political environmen­t will become even more poisonous.

While the results from the 2016 election should give anyone pause about making prediction­s, here is what years of working in national politics leads me to believe will happen next:

The incoming class of Democratic members in the House will be among the largest and most consequent­ial since the Watergate class of 1974, and will usher in the most significan­t generation­al, gender, racial and ideologica­l transforma­tion in more than 40 years. Those newly elected members will put added pressure on the Democratic Party to pursue a more aggressive liberal policy agenda to take on Trump and the Republican­s.

A large field of prospectiv­e candidates will begin a race to establish their bona fides and make a case to lead the resistance. They will compete for the votes of a Democratic community that is angry, energized and looking for a leader who is prepared to draw stark policy contrasts with Trump and his administra­tion on economic, environmen­tal and social issues.

Trump can be expected to begin a purge of his Cabinet and staff that will enable him to pursue a more muscular nationalis­tic agenda. He has waited for the conclusion of the midterm elections to dump many of his zombie Cabinet and staff members and replace them with loyalists who will “let Trump be Trump.” This sweep is likely to be broad and deep and go well beyond his chief of staff and attorney general.

Meanwhile, a democratic takeover of the House would lead to two years of investigat­ions, public hearings. Both Democrats and Trump will embrace these investigat­ions as a way to energize their respective bases for the upcoming election.

A Democratic House would give Trump a foil to once again portray himself as an outsider taking on Washington. He has always defined himself by focusing on who and what he is fighting against. Liberated from having to make excuses for the failings of a Republican-led Congress, he will be able to reframe his presidency and reelection campaign as a fight against Washington and the leadership of Nancy Pelosi.

Trump will increase his dominance over Republican members in the next Congress, as their ranks have been purged of many who haven’t fully supported him.

Trump’s hostile takeover of the GOP, and his legal vulnerabil­ities, will likely lead to a 2020 Republican primary. Unlike other sitting presidents, the heavily favored Trump will embrace a primary as a way to further define himself while attacking the opposition. A primary would give Trump the opportunit­y to energize his base by pursuing his red-meat nationalis­t message against a more mainstream and measured primary opponent.

Over the next two years, those series of actions will all feed off each other, fundamenta­lly altering the tone and tenor of the presidenti­al election. Oddly enough, the outcome of the midterms will incentiviz­e Trump and the Democrats to rely on the same tactics to distinguis­h themselves: greater acrimony, more extreme positions and continued efforts to define themselves in stark terms. Before it’s all over, the American public is going to wish for what will seem like the temperate days of political restraint shown by the parties during the first two years of the Trump presidency.

Doug Sosnik is a Democratic political strategist.

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