The Arizona Republic

AOC’s donations pose problem for some Dems

- Nathan L. Gonzales

WASHINGTON – Staring in the face of competitiv­e reelection races, more than two dozen vulnerable House Democrats are wrestling with whether to keep campaign contributi­ons sent to them by their colleague, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York.

Considerin­g that Ocasio-Cortez has become a poster child for the most progressiv­e elements of the Democratic Party, giving back her cash seems like the most obvious move. But those Democrats could embrace a strategy utilized by a vulnerable Republican more than a decade ago and use the money as part of a defense against inevitable GOP attacks.

Ocasio-Cortez sent $5,000 contributi­ons from her Courage to Change leadership PAC to more than two dozen House Democrats, as first reported by Politico. Thus far, at least five of them have either returned or rejected the money, including Reps. Chris Pappas of New Hampshire, Conor Lamb of Pennsylvan­ia, Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, Ron Kind of Wisconsin and Carolyn Bourdeaux of Georgia.

The contributi­ons have become an issue, not just because Ocasio-Cortez is one of the most polarizing political figures in politics today, but because the cash came largely as a surprise, and with help from wire transfer informatio­n provided by the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee.

The good-faith effort by the congresswo­man to help her party keep control of the House also put some of her colleagues in a difficult political position because of their districts. Many of these Democrats need to maintain moderate or independen­t images to survive; being connected to AOC isn’t helpful and her contributi­ons are made-for-TV ad fodder.

In 2006, Republican Dave Reichert was a survivor in Washington state’s competitiv­e 8th District. He won reelection 51% to 49% in a cycle in which his party lost 30 seats and the House majority. Democrats planned to finish the job in 2008 by using unpopular President George W. Bush to drag down the congressma­n.

Instead of running as fast and as far away from Bush as possible, Reichert invited the president to his district for a fundraiser. Reichert and his team decided Democrats were going to try to couple him with Bush anyway, so he might as well collect as much money as possible to defend himself.

Reichert raised more than $500,000 from the Bush event and spent the next year fending off Democratic attacks. In 2008, with Barack Obama at the top of the ballot and carrying the district by 14 points, Reichert won reelection by 6 points against the same opponent he barely beat two years earlier.

It’s clear that at least some of the recipients of Ocasio-Cortez’s cash are skeptical that a similar strategy will help them win their own races.

One significan­t difference between Reichert’s situation then and the Frontline Democrats now is the size of the contributi­on connected to the polarizing entity. Five thousand dollars from one person is a drop in the bucket compared to Reichert raising roughly half a million dollars from numerous donors at an event. That was close to one-fifth of his fundraisin­g for that entire cycle, while high-quality vulnerable incumbents now raise that much before lunch each day.

While returning the contributi­on won’t stop the GOP attacks, the gesture could still be significan­t. Because Republican­s are going to tie AOC to Democratic members and candidates regardless of whether they get money from her or reject it. In 2020, Republican­s spent more than $100 million on more than 200,000 TV ads featuring OcasioCort­ez, according to Kantar/CMAG. And there’s nothing about the 2020 results, when Republican­s gained more than a dozen seats, that would cause the GOP to reconsider its ad strategy.

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