Rome News-Tribune

Democrats formalize Jaime Harrison as national party chair

- By Meg Kinnard and Bill Barrow

COLUMBIA, S.C. — The Democratic National Committee elected Jaime Harrison of South Carolina as chair on Thursday, signifying an early alignment between newly inaugurate­d President Joe Biden and state party leaders around the country.

The party’s post-inaugurati­on meeting, with election of a full slate of new officers, took place virtually, reflecting continued concerns over the coronaviru­s pandemic. Vice chairs on the roster include Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth and U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela Jr. of Texas.

Harrison — a former chair of South Carolina’s Democrats who proved his mettle as a fundraisin­g powerhouse in his 2020 challenge to Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham — already has been anointed by Biden, continuing the tradition of sitting presidents choosing their own party’s chair.

“We are all a part of a movement that you all started, and we are nowhere near done,” Harrison said Thursday, thanking the party’s outgoing leaders. “I have no intention of letting victory turn into complacenc­y . ... There is important work ahead of us.”

A Yale and Georgetown Law graduate, Harrison succeeds Tom Perez, who won an unusually contentiou­s open election in 2017, when Democrats were out of power. After Harrison dropped out of that race to back him, Perez tapped him as a deputy chair. Harrison was a key liaison with state party leaders with whom Perez sometimes had rocky relationsh­ips.

“I am confident that Jaime will ... take us to even higher heights,” Perez said during Thursday’s meeting, noting that the slate passed on a vote of 407-4.

Harrison, 44, comes into the job with overwhelmi­ng support from state party leaders, making his elevation a sign of relative unity in a party organizati­on often beset by infighting among state leaders and Washington power players.

Rome City Commission­er Wendy Davis, who has been a member of the Democratic National Committee since 2012, said she is excited to see Harrison in the position.

“He understand­s as Democrats we need to make a concerted effort to reach out to rural areas and small towns,” Davis said.

Biden has committed to supporting state parties, with his inner circle assuring Democrats he won’t let infrastruc­ture wither after his victory over President Donald

Trump. Many rank-and-file party leaders remain wary after the down-ballot beating Democrats took even as President Barack Obama, with Biden as his running mate, won two national elections.

During their eight years in the White House, Democrats lost control of the House and Senate and lost nearly 1,000 legislativ­e seats around the country.

Jen O’Malley Dillon, a deputy White House chief of staff and Biden’s campaign manager, pointed to Democrats’ recent Georgia Senate runoff victories as proof Biden will not preside over a repeat. Georgia Democrats had been building their own infrastruc­ture for years, but DNC aid boosted efforts heading into the presidenti­al election.

To help Raphael Warnock’s and Jon Ossoff’s runoff bids, Biden’s team helped fund at least 50 staff positions, worked closely with the campaigns’ digital teams on voter contact strategy and messaging. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris also each made trips to Georgia.

Party building, O’Malley Dillon said in an interview before the inaugurati­on, “is part of who he is.”

Harrison also comes in with the backing of House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, a close Biden ally and the top-ranking Black member of Congress, who has said Harrison’s experience­s “have uniquely prepared him for this moment and this mission.” Harrison, who is also Black, found his footing in national politics as a top Clyburn aide on Capitol Hill and has often referred to Clyburn as his “political dad.”

The pick is also in part a nod to South Carolina, where Black voters make up a majority of the Democratic electorate and which played a major role in Biden’s win. Following lackluster performanc­es in the other early voting contests, and a key endorsemen­t from Clyburn, Biden won the firstin-the-South primary by more than 30 points, a victory that helped propel him to big wins on Super Tuesday and rack up the votes needed for the nomination.

“My buddy, Jim Clyburn, you brought me back,” Biden said after his South Carolina victory, acknowledg­ing the lifeline.

Sure to be up for debate among Democrats in the coming months is the early voting calendar and whether the lineup of states might be shuffled after an Iowa caucus fiasco. Party leaders said bad decisions, technologi­cal failures and poor communicat­ions created a mess that humiliated Democrats, undermined confidence in the outcome and threatened to end the tradition of Iowa getting to pick first.

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