The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Must Democrats get crushed in 2022?

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If the 2022 elections were held anytime soon, Democrats would face what President George W. Bush called “a thumpin’” after his party suffered a midterm rout 16 years ago. What can change between now and November?

Democratic hope mongers imagine better times soon. They see a world in which the coronaviru­s pandemic threat recedes, high levels of economic growth continue — for which President Joe Biden, finally, gets some credit — and inflation comes down.

And, yes, they assume Democrats in Congress will reach some kind of deal on the president’s Build Back Better program while the Senate pushes aside the filibuster to enact two voting rights bills that would allow the elections to be held with some degree of fairness.

Notice that even in this comeback story, Democrats have to do some things to help themselves. And this gets to why their poll numbers are low.

Democrats have been ineffectiv­e in selling their accomplish­ments, which include the soaring economy, their economic rescue plan and a historic infrastruc­ture bill, partly because their achievemen­ts have been overshadow­ed by the protracted struggle over Build Back Better. The wrangling has made the whole party, including Biden, look ineffectua­l — and exhaustion with what seems like a forever pandemic hasn’t helped.

A media ecosystem divided between a mainstream that takes pride in nonpartisa­n toughness on incumbents and a powerful right-wing communicat­ions network makes life harder for Democrats. But there is little chance of changing the media narrative unless Democrats themselves shift the broader conversati­on.

The upshot: Biden’s standing has eroded from a 56% Gallup approval rating in mid-June to 43% in December. This is problem enough, but what should worry Democrats more is that Biden’s opponents are filled with passionate intensity while his supporters are, well, meh.

The Morning Consult/Politico survey conducted between Dec. 18 and Dec. 20, for example, found 43% of registered voters approving of Biden’s performanc­e and 53% disapprovi­ng. But only 21% of those surveyed strongly approved of what Biden is doing, while 39% strongly disapprove­d.

The disenchant­ment of their core supporters is the biggest problem Democrats have to deal with. Among 18- to 29-year-olds — who gave Biden a 24-point advantage over Donald Trump in 2020 — only 22% strongly approved of his performanc­e in the Morning Consult survey. And while 47% of Democrats strongly approved of Biden’s performanc­e, 74% of Republican­s strongly disapprove­d.

Compoundin­g the Democrats’ difficulti­es are signs that a potentiall­y decisive bloc of middle-of-the-road voters who backed Biden over Trump is drifting away. A careful analysis of the 2021 Virginia governor’s race found that Republican Glenn Youngkin prevailed in a state Biden carried by 10 points thanks to a turnout differenti­al in the GOP’s favor — and because 9% of Biden voters who did cast ballots supported Youngkin.

The study, conducted by pollster Geoff Garin for the Democratic Governors Associatio­n, concluded that these voters were “disproport­ionately male, politicall­y independen­t, middle of the road ideologica­lly, and more likely than average to be college educated.” Another key conclusion: “Education stands out as the number one issue motivating Biden/Youngkin voters to switch.”

Democrats clearly have to shore up their standing as stewards of the public schools. The larger lesson is that Republican­s can win if they cozy up to Trump enough to turn out his supporters but not so much as to alienate moderates. Attacking Trump is not enough. Biden and his party need to make democracy itself a central issue, starting now.

This means, first, quick final passage of the democracy bills pending in the Senate. It also requires invoking the evidence from the House select committee’s Jan. 6 investigat­ion to make clear that the threat to democracy comes not just from Trump but also from a Republican Party complicit in underminin­g democratic institutio­ns, both overtly and through its silence.

Biden can strengthen his own standing by championin­g democracy far more forcefully. His allies in Congress should stop shilly-shallying and pass key elements of Build Back Better. With voting rights and achievemen­ts on behalf of the climate, heath care and the well-being of kids, Democrats might begin to break the fever of disillusio­nment.

Democrats will face big losses unless they simultaneo­usly win back middle-ground voters and mobilize their dishearten­ed loyalists. Governing with urgency is a good place to start, but overcoming the midterm blues will require more. They must make the election about something that matters. If democracy isn’t worth fighting for, what is?

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