Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tennessee’s Bredesen downplays ties to party

- JULIE PACE

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Phil Bredesen is a Democrat. But he’d rather you not mention that.

“I need to make clear to everybody my independen­ce from all of the national Democratic stuff,” said Bredesen, the former two-term governor of Tennessee who is now running for the U.S. Senate.

So far, his strategy appears to be working. According to internal polling by both parties, Bredesen has a narrow lead over Republican Rep. Marsha Blackburn in a state that President Donald Trump won by 26 points, and capturing the open seat would strengthen Democrats’ chances of taking back control of the Senate in the November elections.

Bredesen, a 74-year-old white man, is an unlikely vessel for the hopes of a national party increasing­ly reliant on younger voters, women and members of minority groups — and nominating more candidates that fit that same profile. He says Democrats wouldn’t be able to reliably count on his vote in the Senate, and foresees playing a role like that of Maine Sen. Susan Collins, who has broken with the GOP on several high-profile issues.

Bredesen represents the irony facing Democrats this fall. The party is moving to the left but its prospects of regaining the Senate hinge on decidedly moderate candidates running in states Trump carried by a wide margin.

With just over six weeks until Election Day, one of Bredesen’s biggest challenges may be divorcing his race from Democrats’ overall Senate chances.

“A lot of conservati­ves in Tennessee really like Phil Bredesen and really don’t want [New York Democratic Sen.] Chuck Schumer to be majority leader,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster. “How they wrestle with that tension likely determines the outcome of the Senate race.”

Democratic incumbents in Indiana, Missouri, North Dakota and West Virginia are facing a similar challenge as they try to hold on. In Arizona, Democratic Rep. Kyrsten Sinema hopes to win a Senate seat by positionin­g herself as a centrist, despite starting her career as a Green Party activist.

Among this group of Democrats, Bredesen has been the most overt in distancing himself from his own party. He pans Democratic leaders for being “elitist” and bemoans efforts to win elections through “demographi­c partitioni­ng.” While he’s consistent­ly favored allowing access to abortion during his political career, he speaks openly about how that is not a defining issue for him.

“I believe that if this race is a race between me and Congresswo­man Blackburn, I win,” Bredesen said. “If it’s a race between Democrats and Republican­s, I lose.”

That’s why Blackburn is trying at every turn to remind voters of the “D” that will be next to Bredesen’s name on the ballot.

“He could have run as a Republican, he could have run as an independen­t,” she said. “He chose to run as a Democrat.”

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