Los Angeles Times

Have Democrats finally stopped wimping out?

- JACKIE CALMES @jackiekcal­mes

For years now, the single most common complaint I’ve heard from Democrats is that their party doesn’t fight as hard, and never dirty, like Republican­s do — they don’t bring guns to a gunfight. Since 2016, I’ve heard that rap from Republican­s too: Never-Trump types express surprise and exasperati­on that their Democratic comrades in arms against the former president don’t, well, take up arms politicall­y.

Democratic pols will concede as much: They worry about how they might come off to the poli-sci profs, pundits and civicminde­d idealists. Their good-government bent is commendabl­e. But getting bested repeatedly by the likes of Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell is not.

”One of us is playing with a rolling pin, and the other is fighting with a gun,” an aide to Senate leaders once told me, frustrated that Democrats were adhering to Marquess of Queensberr­y rules as Republican­s busted norms to pack the federal courts. “We always bring a butter knife to a gunfight,” longtime Democratic strategist Brian Fallon similarly groused not long ago.

Fallon felt that so strongly that Democrats were wimping out that in 2017 he co-founded a liberal activist group, Demand Justice, to give the left a more combative approach in judicial confirmati­on contests. He recently left the group for a job in the Biden campaign, as the communicat­ions director for Vice President Kamala Harris. That’s good: Democrats need scrappers, lots of ’em, and the ever-cautious Harris in particular needs communicat­ions firepower.

Even better signs of a more fired-up Democratic Party have emerged lately, just as Biden and Trump each secured their respective parties’ nomination­s Tuesday with wins in several states’ primary contests.

One sign was Biden’s plucky State of the Union address last week, in which he took a baker’s dozen shots at “my predecesso­r” and parried House Republican­s’ taunts like a smiling Dark Brandon come to life, shooting red lasers from his eyes. To hear Republican­s carp afterward that Biden was too partisan gave new meaning to the pot calling the kettle black.

Another indication of an amped-up Democratic offense was news of a big $30-million Biden campaign ad buy, along with the president’s busy stumping schedule in battlegrou­nd states and the campaign’s plans to hire hundreds of aides. The first ad was a good one, too, featuring a lively Biden poking fun at his age, noting his achievemen­ts, drawing contrasts with Trump and, appropriat­ely, promising “to fight for you.”

And on Tuesday came some evidence that other Democrats will have Biden’s back. Those on the House Judiciary Committee came loaded for bear to the hearing that the majority Republican­s held showcasing Robert Hur, a Republican and the former special counsel whose recent report on Biden’s handling of classified materials included damaging commentary about the president’s age and alleged “diminished faculties.”

The committee’s Democrats, notably California Reps. Ted Lieu, Adam B. Schiff and Eric Swalwell, appropriat­ely focused less on Hur’s asides about mental lapses and more on his report’s conclusion­s that “no criminal charges are warranted” against Biden (compared to 41 felony counts against Trump). And that despite Republican­s’ claims to the contrary, what Biden did with top-secret documents was in no way comparable to the far more serious allegation­s against Trump for conspiracy and false statements.

The committee Democrats didn’t ignore the issue of age and mental acuity; they simply turned it against Trump. Several of them came, yes, armed — with video montages of the former president’s verbal flubs, slurred words and non sequiturs at recent MAGA rallies.

But Democrats’ more typical lack of fight explains why Hur, a former Trump Justice Department official, was tapped as special counsel — by Biden’s Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland — in the first place. Democrats, wanting to be seen as fair, keep giving Republican­s a virtual monopoly on independen­t counsel jobs each time Washington decides it needs another high-profile investigat­ion. Whether the person being investigat­ed is a Democrat (Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton) or a Republican (Donald Trump), Democrats have supported having a Republican prosecutor.

Republican­s don’t reciprocat­e. David Brock, now a Democratic operative but notorious in the 1990s as a ruthless, right-wing scourge of the Clintons, a few years ago confessed to me his occasional irritation with his new party for its punch-pulling, say, by rejecting a line of attack as somehow unfair.

“Now, that’s nothing that I ever experience­d as a young conservati­ve,” he told me. “There’s a different ethic.”

“Republican­s just want the result, they just want to get there, they want the win,” Brock added. Democrats, on the other hand, “do a lot of hand-wringing about how to get there,” about whether they are being respectful of the “process.”

And yet, ask most Republican voters and they’ll tell you that it’s Democrats who are the dirty fighters, cheating in elections and weaponizin­g the government against their foes, chiefly Trump. Because that is what Trump tells them.

That’s Republican­s’ dirtiest play of all. Lying to their own voters.

This election year will likely be as mean as any in memory. Here’s hoping I’m correct that Biden and the Democrats have sheathed the butter knives and shelved the rolling pins. It’s not like Trump hasn’t given them the ammunition for a gunfight.

 ?? Nathan Howard Associated Press ?? REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF, backed by a photo of classified documents that Donald Trump kept at Mar-a-Lago, questions special counsel Robert Hur.
Nathan Howard Associated Press REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF, backed by a photo of classified documents that Donald Trump kept at Mar-a-Lago, questions special counsel Robert Hur.
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