Los Angeles Times

Party’s election gloom builds

COVID, inflation, crime: Democrats face a tough slog in their midterm battle to keep Congress.

- By Melanie Mason

Democrats have long known history is not on their side in the 2022 midterm election. But as they enter this campaign year, the steep climb to keep their majorities in Congress appears even more daunting with the COVID-19 pandemic stubbornly persistent and voters concerned over inf lation and crime.

The unsettled national climate — if it holds in November — will probably favor Republican­s, who need just five additional seats to take control of the U.S. House and only one more for a majority in the Senate.

The sitting president’s party almost always loses ground in midterm elections — doing so in all but two such contests since the end of World War II. And Democrats hoping to buck precedent have few easy fixes for the problems on voters’ minds or for President Biden’s underwater approval ratings.

“Sometimes you have a messaging problem, and other times you just have a problem. In this situation, [Democrats] just have the latter,” said Matt Gorman, a Republican strategist who ran communicat­ions for the GOP’s House campaign arm in 2018. “No slogan or single policy achievemen­t can turn around a broader environmen­t. There would have to be a seismic shift.”

Democratic campaign officials reject prediction­s of a gloomy November, saying they’re confident they’ll have a solid pitch for voters.

“Democrats are going to hold the House because we are delivering for the American people,” said Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney of New York, chair of the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee.

He pointed to millions of jobs created in the last year, as well as vaccine distributi­on and efforts to lower healthcare costs.

“Kevin McCarthy and his band of extremist House Republican­s have yet to present a single realistic idea to move this country forward,”

he said, referring to the congressma­n from Bakersfiel­d who leads the GOP in the House.

There are some silver linings for Democrats.

The party probably avoided a worst-case scenario in the redistrict­ing for the House. Though Republican­s had an overall advantage in drawing the new congressio­nal maps, so far they’ve mostly tried to shore up existing red districts instead of aggressive­ly creating new ones, experts say.

In the Senate, Democrats are defending seats in battlegrou­nd states that Biden won last year, albeit by the barest of margins in places such as Arizona and Georgia. Senate races can also depend more on individual candidates, making Democrats slightly less vulnerable than their House counterpar­ts if there is a wave election against them.

Still, “it obviously takes unique circumstan­ces to redirect a midterm election,” said Stuart Rothenberg, senior editor of Inside Elections, a nonpartisa­n political newsletter. “I don’t know whether there’s anything that’s going to happen that’s so shocking to people, so stunning that it will give the Democrats the ammunition they need to change the election.”

Privately, Democratic strategist­s acknowledg­e the difficulti­es ahead, particular­ly after losing the Virginia governor’s race in the fall and barely escaping a similar defeat in deep-blue New Jersey. Those off-year races often have served as early indicators for the direction of a midterm election.

The Democrats’ challenge partially lies with the nature of midterms: Supporters of the party in power are often disappoint­ed that the president’s campaign promises have not yet been fulfilled, dampening their enthusiasm, while the opposition is motivated by unhappines­s at being out of power.

Republican­s, meanwhile, have a more basic task: keeping the focus on the majority party.

“The strategy for Republican­s is a pretty simple one: Don’t screw it up,” said Ken Spain, former spokesman for the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee. “Don’t make yourself the issue, and allow the election to be a referendum on Democratic control of Washington.”

Distilling the party’s campaign message, Emma Vaughn, a spokespers­on for the Republican National Committee, kept the focus tightly on Biden.

“Biden has lost all credibilit­y — he has failed to ‘shut down the virus’ like he promised, pushed Americans out of work with unconstitu­tional mandates, overseen a rise in crime, presided over skyrocketi­ng prices for everyday goods and promoted trillions more in reckless spending,” she said.

But former President Trump’s fixation on relitigati­ng false allegation­s of fraud in his 2020 loss and his battles against the few Republican­s who have broken from “Make America Great Again” orthodoxy threaten to distract from that focus and draw attention to intraparty battles.

Trump has been actively involved in midterm campaigns — endorsing preferred candidates and lashing out against Republican­s he dislikes. That may hobble his party, which needs to appeal to Biden voters to win key House districts and Senate seats.

“Republican­s are locked in a series of vicious nasty primaries,” said David Bergstein, communicat­ions director for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. “They’re either putting forward flawed candidates, or they’re fighting with each other in a way that ensures whoever limps out of their primaries will be cash-poor and deeply damaged.”

The other big unknown factor is whether the issues of concern to voters will shift between now and November. Currently, the unsettled economy, COVID-19 and rising rates of violent crime all cut against Democrats.

Voters say the economy is their top concern, according to a recent CNBC/Change Research poll, and nearly three-quarters see it as being in “poor” or “not so good shape.”

Americans are especially worried about higher prices for groceries and other goods and are pessimisti­c that inflation — which jumped nearly 7% in the last year — will ease in the near future, the survey found. The White House has tapped into federal oil reserves to ease gas prices and explored antitrust enforcemen­t against the meat industry to tackle food costs, but tools for combating inflation are limited.

More troubling for Democrats is that Biden does not get much credit for the bright spots in the economy. The CNBC poll found that nearly half of voters believe the stock market is in poor or not so good condition, when it in fact has reached record highs. Despite the passage of a massive stimulus bill that included widespread cash aid, just 21% of voters said the plan helped them.

Much of the uneasy perception of the economy is due to the lingering pandemic, which continues to disrupt any sense of normality.

The Omicron wave is not as severe as those in the past, especially for those who are vaccinated. But it has still had a widespread effect on schools and businesses.

“Even if Democrats achieve popular things like lower-priced prescripti­ons and child care, we could still lose in 2022 if people feel chaos from COVID in their daily lives,” said Adam Green, cofounder of the Progressiv­e Change Campaign Committee.

Public safety is another likely campaign issue. Though the overall picture is mixed, including a decline in property crimes in many places, homicides and other violent crimes have trended upward in many cities.

David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, said voters in his surveys of metropolit­an areas are increasing­ly concerned about crime.

“Where it matters is in the suburbs — the crossover voters who abut big cities, who are influenced and whose quality of life is inf luenced by crime in close cities,” Paleologos said. “That’s where a Democrat flips” to voting for the GOP.

Democratic strategist­s say they will counter by emphasizin­g the party’s achievemen­ts, including last year’s COVID-19 relief and the $1.2-trillion infrastruc­ture package.

They also hope to campaign on Biden’s “Build Back Better” plan, a package expanding the social safety net and combating climate change — if congressio­nal Democrats manage to pass it.

“One big lesson both in the 2020 congressio­nal elections and the 2021 Virginia election is that being antiTrump or anti-Republican is not enough,” Green said. “The winning message has to boil down to: Democrats made popular promises, and we fulfilled them, while Republican­s would overturn them and block future things that would help you.”

But the messy negotiatio­ns over Build Back Better — in which many liberal priorities have been discarded to appeal to conservati­ve Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona — may already have blunted its electoral impact.

Spain, the former NRCC spokesman, said the price tag will alienate independen­ts, while Democrats will be disappoint­ed by its reduced size.

“It’s probably the worst possible combinatio­n ... for their election chances,” Spain said.

‘The strategy for Republican­s is a pretty simple one: Don’t screw it up. Don’t make yourself the issue.’ — Ken Spain, former spokesman for the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee

 ?? Michael Reynolds Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT BIDEN and Vice President Kamala Harris in the U.S. Capitol. Voters say the economy is their top concern, a recent poll showed, and nearly three-quarters see it as being in “poor” or “not so good shape.”
Michael Reynolds Associated Press PRESIDENT BIDEN and Vice President Kamala Harris in the U.S. Capitol. Voters say the economy is their top concern, a recent poll showed, and nearly three-quarters see it as being in “poor” or “not so good shape.”
 ?? Rebecca Blackwell Associated Press ?? A BUSY PORT in Miami. A poll found that Americans are worried about higher prices for groceries and other goods and are pessimisti­c that inf lation will ease.
Rebecca Blackwell Associated Press A BUSY PORT in Miami. A poll found that Americans are worried about higher prices for groceries and other goods and are pessimisti­c that inf lation will ease.

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