Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bennet for president — and he could win

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DOESN’T have a chance? When the public says they’re looking for that so-called generic Democrat whom they would overwhelmi­ngly favor over President Donald Trump, they mean Michael Bennet. They just don’t know it yet.

In 2013, he was one of the “Gang of Eight” — four Democrats and four Republican­s — who crafted an immigratio­n reform bill (including a path to citizenshi­p) that won support in the Senate but couldn’t get a vote in the House.

He was the superinten­dent of Denver’s public schools, credited with increasing enrollment, decreasing dropout rates, more kids’ going to college, engaging with the community and, in the words of

The Denver Post, acting as “a force — pushing reforms and steering (the school system) to a culture of success.”

In any other year, he would be considered a progressiv­e Democrat able to

win in the states that don’t have first-in-the-nation caucuses.

He is pro-gay marriage. He supported Obamacare and supports a public option — not the abolition of all private options. He co-sponsored the DREAM Act and opposes open borders. In his last election, Bennet received more votes than any other Democrat has in Colorado — 30,000 more votes than Hillary and with more votes in rural counties than any other Democrat in statewide history.

His father is Christian. His mother is a Jewish survivor.

Can he win? Against Donald Trump? Yes.

Can he beat a crowd of socialists, spirituali­sts, serious academics, political newbies and oldies in a process dominated by people disappoint­ed by Barack Obama? Imagine Trump twisting those words against them.

Only in processes dominated by minorities of minorities in multicandi­date fields in which “blocs” the size of my neighborho­od command the attention of the press corps could it make political sense to claim that Obama was too conservati­ve.

So what does a great candidate such as Bennet do when he could beat Trump but is polling zip in Iowa? He does what insurgents have always done. Today, he is the insurgent, and Iowa is for insurgents. The liberal litany must be getting tiresome. Mayor Pete Buttigieg is too young, still. Iowa wants a grown-up, a man who has done things.

Move to Iowa, Mike. Go from town to town, dawn to dusk. Sign people up. Create an organizati­on. When you’re not there, head to New Hampshire — back and forth. Send the family. Send people who know you. The rest of the candidates are locked up by the teachers unions. You get to speak for the kids and their parents. People there listen. They ask questions, take this business seriously. That’s why everyone pays attention.

So be the insurgent. Take on the convention­al fringe wisdom about what the party must be for and against. Have the courage to stand up for what still is the heart and soul of the Democratic Party: equality and justice, not open borders and the end of private insurance.

The thought of Trump defending Obama against the Democratic attacks leaves me shaking my head. Someday, they will understand just how amazing a president Obama was — amazing enough that they actually thought it was easy. It isn’t. But it’s not impossible.

Michael Bennet for president. He could win, and for all the right reasons.

Susan Estrich is a USC law professor and Democratic activist.

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