Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Republican gives one cheer for Josh Shapiro, who loses one for cynicism

- Kyle Sammin Kyle Sammin is editor-at-large at Broad + Liberty.

If you believe President Joe Biden, democracy itself was at stake in the midterm elections earlier this month. This theme was more than just a new variation on the “most important election of our lifetimes” line that politician­s trot out every two years. It was a cynical attempt to distract voters from the administra­tion’s many failures on jobs, on inflation, on Afghanista­n, on crime, on schools, and everywhere else they might look.

And, for a wonder, it worked. As a party, Republican­s have to look hard at these results and realize that voters saw all the problems plaguing this country, said overwhelmi­ngly that they thought the president and Congress were doing a bad job, that the nation was headed in the wrong direction — and then voted for the Democrats anyway. When the status quo is objectivel­y awful, how bad do a party and its candidates have to be for people not to see them as a viable alternativ­e?

It varied race to race, state to state. Nationwide, Republican­s appear to have taken the socalled national popular vote in House races. They have secured a narrow majority of House seats. But in many marginal districts, they fell short in ways that did not match the national trends. Conversely, in many governors’ races, Republican­s succeeded well beyond what national trends would suggest.

Pennsylvan­ians know by now how that shook out in their commonweal­th. The Democrats’ “save democracy” gambit worked here especially well, and part of that was because one of the victorious candidates, Josh Shapiro, sometimes acted like he really meant it.

There have been times when the nation’s fate really did hang on the results of an election. The 1864 presidenti­al contest is the best example of this. With the nation divided militarily by the Civil War and internally by disagreeme­nts on how to conduct that war, incumbent Abraham Lincoln worked to build the strongest coalition he could, gathering people from across the political spectrum and uniting them in pursuit of that paramount goal: preserving the union.

Any other disagreeme­nts were put to one side while this existentia­l fight played out. Lincoln even ran under the “National Union” banner, putting aside the name of his Republican Party. It worked: Lincoln won, and the union was preserved.

So if our situation now is as perilous as the one in 1864, surely Democrats would do the same, wouldn’t they? Moderating their positions to attract independen­ts and moderates to a party that was ordinarily too extreme to win their votes — that would be worth doing, wouldn’t it, if the national fate hung in the balance?

But, of course, almost no one did that. Across the country, Democratic candidates told voters that the choice was between their own extreme views and the death of the republic. It’s not a great way to attract voters, but it worked well enough — especially against Republican nominees who were themselves fairly extreme. Where it failed, it failed against Republican­s untainted by the January 6 riots.

One Democrat who defied this trend was Pennsylvan­ia’s governor-elect, Josh Shapiro. Already something of a moderate owing to his support of law enforcemen­t throughout his career, Shapiro reached out to conservati­ves by promising to continue the fiscally conservati­ve policies he had followed as a Montgomery County commission­er. To the consternat­ion of his erstwhile supporters in the teachers’ unions, he even pledged support for expanding school choice in the state.

On everything but abortion, Shapiro ran as a moderate. It was enough for many Republican­s to take his effort seriously. Shapiro sounded more like Tom Ridge than John Fetterman, the U. S. Senate candidate who squeaked to victory by following the more typical, radical progressiv­e playbook. Shapiro won by 14 percentage points, a crushing victory that shows his wide appeal in this closely divided state.

So: three cheers for Shapiro? Not so fast. He may have acted as if the threat posed to democracy by his opponent, Doug Mastriano, was severe, but he also helped Mastriano triumph over his more normal Republican opponents in the primary election. That was in line with another Democratic stratagem this year: interferin­g in Republican primaries to help select the most extreme opponents.

As a strategy, it worked like a charm in Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere, and we should expect to see similar chicanery on both sides in the future. But as a moral matter, it betrays a deep cynicism about the electoral process and casts doubt on the Democrats’ claims of wanting to do anything to “save democracy.”

Still, in an election full of extremists on both sides, Shapiro stands out for seeking common ground. If he holds to those promises, his term as governor could be a productive one.

 ?? Matt Slocum/Associated Press ?? Pa. Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Josh Shapiro speaks at an election event, Nov. 8, in Oaks, Pa.
Matt Slocum/Associated Press Pa. Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Josh Shapiro speaks at an election event, Nov. 8, in Oaks, Pa.

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