The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dems highlight diversity, but face gap with white men

Party ‘abandoned’ large bloc, says political strategist.

- By Bill Barrow MARY ALTAFFER / AP

The Democratic National Convention lineup of speakers has highlighte­d an increasing­ly diverse country that could soon elect the first female president to succeed its first black chief executive.

Yet the stream of women, African-Americans, Latinos, gay Americans — U.S. senators, celebritie­s, activists and, tonight, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton herself — also serves as a reminder of Democrats’ struggles to connect with most heterosexu­al white men.

“It’s just sad,” says Dave “Mudcat” Saunders, a Democratic strategist turned Donald Trump supporter who maintains that his party “has abandoned” culturally conservati­ve white men like himself.

Even Vice President Joe Biden offered a noteworthy, if more muted, assessment Wednesday. Democrats have “done the right thing” for white working-class voters, he said on MSNBC, but the party hasn’t “spoken to them.”

It’s a long-developing gap that bolsters Republican control of Congress and most statehouse­s. It could play into the hands of Republican Trump, whose path to victory depends on whites drawn to his blistering critiques of elitism and “political correctnes­s” in the America of Clinton and Barack Obama.

White men still make up about a third of the typical presidenti­al electorate and will be crucial to Trump’s fortunes in Rust Belt states that have seen a declining middle class. They also could tip the balance in battlegrou­nds like Virginia and Florida, states Obama won twice.

Saunders says both parties play “wedge and identity politics” on guns, gay rights and other issues.

Republican­s emphasized “law and order” at their Cleveland convention, while Democrats on Tuesday welcomed “Mothers of the Movement,” black moms whose sons died at the hands of police. Republican­s heard National Rifle Associatio­n leaders; Democrats are featuring families of gun violence victims.

Democratic pollster Mark Mellman described “a cultural gap,” with both parties playing to their advantages. But Saunders says Trump taps into a “legitimate” frustratio­n acute among smalltown and rural white men whose fathers and grandfathe­rs once helped elect Democrats.

“They see no opportunit­y, no hope,” says Saunders, who advised John Edwards’ presidenti­al campaigns and Jim Webb’s brief 2016 bid. “Then they see Democrats up there talking about diversity and trends and what we’ll be like in 40 years. This country needs help now.”

Democrats insist they understand the sentiment.

Former President Bill Clinton, speaking Tuesday on his wife’s behalf, told of campaignin­g this year in West Virginia — a now heavily Republican state that Clinton won twice in the 1990s — in front of coal miners who blame job losses on Democrats’ policies.

“Hillary sent me to tell you that if you really think you can get the economy back you had 50 years ago ... vote for whoever you want to,” the 42nd president recalled telling miners. “But if she wins, she is coming back for you to take you along on the ride to America’s future.”

Robby Mook, Clinton’s campaign manager, said at a convention lunch that Clinton will address working-class issues in her speech.

In 2012, exit polls showed Republican Mitt Romney won 62 percent of white men to Obama’s 35 percent. Measured another way, white men made up less than a quarter of Obama’s national vote, compared to about 44 percent of Romney’s total.

Current polls suggest a more pronounced gap this year, a trend evident on the ground.

In St. Clairsvill­e, Ohio, not far from where both Clintons campaigned this spring, barber shop owner Kent Jenewein estimates that “more than 90 percent” of his clients, nearly all white men, back Trump — in a county Obama won in 2008. Clinton, Jenewein says, “doesn’t understand us.”

Mellman, the pollster, says Democrats can make “marginal gains” among non-urban whites, including men, in the same way Republican­s are seeking marginal upticks in support from African-Americans and Latinos. Trump could also drive up his support among white men only to see Clinton buoyed with better support than Obama had from white Republican women who dislike Trump.

Clinton insisted during the primaries that she won’t overlook white men. “Let’s be honest,” she said in her own Appalachia­n campaign stop. “Some (of you) find it hard to think about voting for any Democrats . ... But I’m going to keep trying to convince people otherwise.”

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, with vice presidenti­al candidate Sen. Tim Kaine, speaks in Miami. She has insisted during the primaries that she won’t overlook white men.
Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, with vice presidenti­al candidate Sen. Tim Kaine, speaks in Miami. She has insisted during the primaries that she won’t overlook white men.
 ?? AP ?? Bill Clinton talked of appearing before miners who blame job losses on Democrats’ policies.
AP Bill Clinton talked of appearing before miners who blame job losses on Democrats’ policies.

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