Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Sanders’ rise fuels Dems’ angst; Pelosi won’t intervene

- By Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON » Sen. Bernie Sanders’ ascendancy as Democrats’ leading presidenti­al hopeful fueled growing unease as lawmakers openly expressed anxiety that the self-proclaimed democratic socialist could cost them House control and questions abounded over what party leaders should do.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., Washington’s most powerful Democrat, signaled Thursday it’s not her role to try thwarting Sanders to protect the House Democrats’ majority.

“Our responsibi­lity is to win the House,” Pelosi told reporters at the Capitol. “My responsibi­lity is to make sure that those we elected last time return to Congress, keep the majority and add to our numbers. The presidenti­al is its own race.”

The speaker downplayed a meeting later Thursday at Democratic National Committee for lawmakers to review the party’s rules for the July nominating convention in Milwaukee. This summer the elected officials could play an over-sized role as delegates helping to choose the party’s nominee if no presidenti­al candidate emerges with the majority.

While Sanders suggested recently that a plurality was enough to secure the nomination, Pelosi reiterated the party rules that say the nominee needs the majority plus one.

“Whoever the nominee is of our party we will wholeheart­edly support,” she said. “Our gospel is one of unity, unity, unity.”

Yet with Sanders, I-Vt., riding high after early nominating contest wins in New Hampshire and Nevada and a virtual first-place tie in Iowa, other House Democrats were less sanguine.

Time was growing short to head Sanders off. South Carolina holds its primary Saturday, followed three days later by Super Tuesday, when contests in 14 states and one territory will decide one-third of the delegates to this summer’s Democratic convention.

Rep. Tom Malinowski, a freshman from a closely divided New Jersey district, said Democrats have “a simple path” to defeating President Donald Trump by focusing on health care, the economy and a promise that their presidenti­al candidate won’t lie. “I don’t want to squander that opportunit­y” by nominating a contender who divides Democrats, he said in an unspoken reference to Sanders.

Freshman Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va., who defeated an incumbent Republican in 2018 in a swing district in coastal Virginia, said a Sanders candidacy would be “incredibly divisive” and endanger more centrist lawmakers like herself. The former Navy commander said of GOP efforts to paint all Democrats as socialists, “Bernie Sanders just adds fuel to that fire.”

Rep. Scott Peters, D-Calif., a leader of his party’s House moderates, said there is widespread concern among lawmakers from competitiv­e districts “that a Sanders candidacy would sink their reelection­s.”

Peters, whose San Diego district is safely Democratic, said Sanders would complicate moderates’ reelection bids because “the face of the Democratic Party might be spouting things that are absolutely anathema to your voters.” Sanders advocacy for “Medicare for All,” the Green New Deal and student loan forgivenes­s has alienated many moderates.

Asked what Pelosi was doing about Sanders, Peters said, “I hope that we do have a conversati­on as a party” about his impact on endangered Democrats.

Trying to halt Sanders’ rise, one centrist candidate, Pete Buttigieg, arrived on Capitol Hill on Thursday to meet with lawmakers. He pitched his own electabili­ty to the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus’ political arm, according a senior Democratic aide familiar with the private morning meeting.

Buttigieg didn’t rail specifical­ly against Sanders, as he has on the debate stage, but made a case for support to about a dozen Latino lawmakers, the aide said.

Of the 42 House seats Democrats gained in 2018 when they captured the majority, 29 are from districts that Trump either won in 2016 or lost by a narrow 5 percentage points or less. Most of them are moderates.

Republican­s will need to gain 18 seats in November’s elections to win House control, assuming they retain three vacant seats held previously by the GOP.

Pelosi said House Democrats won last time with an agenda rooted in lowering health care costs that remains the top priority heading into 2020.

She was more pointed in remarks to reporters Wednesday. “We’re not going to lose the House,” Pelosi said. “We’re going to be united by whomever is the candidate for president. But we are taking responsibi­lity for winning the House, and we’re not assuming anything. But we feel very confident.”

Hours after No. 3 House Democratic leader James Clyburn endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden for the Democratic nod, Clyburn declined to say Wednesday whether it was time for Pelosi to speak up. “I don’t tell people what to do politicall­y,” Clyburn, from South Carolina, told reporters.

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