Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Klobuchar offers a return to normalcy in the White House

- Steve Chapman Steve Chapman, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs at www .chicagotri­bune.com/chapman. schapman@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @SteveChapm­an13

“My best judgment of America’s needs is to steady down, to get squarely on our feet, to make sure of the right path. … Let us stop to consider that tranquilit­y at home is more precious than peace abroad, and that both our good fortune and our eminence are dependent on the normal forward stride of all the American people.”

— Warren G. Harding, 1920

In the presidenti­al election that took place 100 years ago, the winning candidate ran on a slogan that might have been soporific: “Return to normalcy.” But for a country that had experience­d the traumas of World War I, labor strife, a Red Scare and race riots, it promised a welcome respite. Harding got 60% of the popular vote.

Americans often gravitate to the opposite of what they have. Harding was nothing like his predecesso­r, Woodrow Wilson, whose visionary ambitions included remaking the entire world order. George W. Bush promised to “restore honor and dignity to the White House,” an allusion to Bill Clinton’s lechery. Barack Obama, a former law school professor with a gift for inspiring oratory, was a departure from the folksy, inarticula­te scion of a famous Texas political family.

Donald Trump, a thin-skinned narcissist with the vocabulary and impulse control of a 10-year-old, could hardly be more different from Obama. If Americans are weary of the turmoil that Trump has made the organizing principle of his presidency, they may be looking for a president they can occasional­ly forget about.

In that case, Democratic voters would do well to take a long look at Amy Klobuchar, whose restrained policies and unflappabl­e manner are dull only in the best sense of the word. The qualities that make it hard for her to stand out in a crowded debate might endear her to anyone suffering from a four-year spell of jangled nerves.

Klobuchar, 59, is in her third term as a senator, and as Democratic members go, she leans toward the center. The website GovTrack reports that in 2018, 33 of the 47 Democratic senators were more liberal than she is.

She favors expansion of health insurance coverage but opposes “Medicare for All.” She has proposed to make community college tuition-free but says bluntly, “I am not for free four-year college for all.”

Klobuchar is a former county prosecutor who had the support of the police union but also won praise from the Innocence Project for pushing to videotape interrogat­ions and reform eyewitness identifica­tion procedures. Her views on military action abroad — for leaving Afghanista­n, but also for creating a no-fly zone in Syria — are down the middle.

In her 2018 Senate race, she carried 42 counties that had gone for Trump. She’s well-positioned to appeal to the 35% of Americans who call themselves moderates.

The same can’t be said of her chief rivals. Bernie Sanders is at the far left edge of the Democratic Party, proudly identifyin­g himself as a socialist — a label that is a deal breaker for many Americans.

Elizabeth Warren insists she is “a capitalist to my bones,” but the website Progressiv­e Punch gives her a lifetime score higher than Sanders’. Her spending plans, PolitiFact reports, would cost $7 trillion over a decade — not counting “Medicare for All,” which would probably exceed $30 trillion.

Like Sanders, she promises major changes, and she uses the word “fight” in every other sentence. But drastic measures and militant rhetoric are not the ideal prescripti­on for an electorate depleted by the incumbent’s extreme policies and nasty tweets.

Joe Biden is the most popular centrist so far, but he’s dangerousl­y prone to verbal gaffes. More worrisome is that come Inaugurati­on Day, he’ll be 78 years old. Trump, the oldest person ever to become president, was a mere 70.

One rival for the middle Democratic lane is Pete Buttigieg, 37, who would be the youngest president ever — and one of the least experience­d. Then there is his sexual orientatio­n. A Morning Consult/Politico poll found that only 26% of Americans think their neighbors are ready for a gay president.

Klobuchar would be the first female president, but Hillary Clinton already proved that a woman can win the popular vote. Klobuchar’s virtues are precisely the ones that Trump utterly lacks.

Anyone who wants four more years of pointless bedlam in the White House will want to keep the Trump clown car. Klobuchar is the Honda Accord of the field: reliable, practical, affordable — and unlikely to drive you into a ditch.

 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN/GETTY-AFP ?? Presidenti­al hopeful Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar on stage at the sixth Democratic primary debate at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles last month.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/GETTY-AFP Presidenti­al hopeful Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar on stage at the sixth Democratic primary debate at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles last month.
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