USA TODAY International Edition

Our view: Democrats have time to check out the 2020 field

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Going into the 2020 election, President Donald Trump looks vulnerable. He faces an impeachmen­t inquiry in the House. He has the lowest average approval rating in polling history. And his standing among independen­ts is awful, especially for a Republican.

In other words, Republican­s should be panicking or scouting around for another candidate, or both. But they know they have an ace in the hole: the Democratic Party.

To win in 2020, all the Democrats might need is a capable, relatively uncontrove­rsial candidate within shouting distance of the political center, someone who can be competitiv­e in the key battlegrou­nd states such as Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. But, at least so far, Democratic voters have been gravitatin­g toward candidates who lack some of these qualities.

Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders — who have led national polls — aren’t the only hopefuls who deserve considerat­ion. A hint that the race is fluid came Monday in the form of a Suffolk University/ USA TODAY poll of Iowa voters. It showed that Pete Buttigieg had moved passed Sanders into third place in the first caucus state.

Amy Klobuchar did not see her numbers go up, but the senator from Minnesota has seen a big fundraisin­g bump after her favorably reviewed debate performanc­e last week. Several others in the field of nearly 20 are plausible general election candidates.

Biden’s experience and decency might well make him the most electable of the bunch. But his halting performanc­es on the campaign trail and in the debates, coupled with his fundraisin­g struggles, have party insiders doubting whether, at 76, he meets the capability threshold.

Warren and Sanders, the two other septuagena­rians who routinely poll in double digits and have fervent supporters, have espoused massively costly policies on health care and education that have little buy- in outside the Democratic Party’s progressiv­e wing.

Their hostility to corporatio­ns is understand­able, considerin­g the damage some companies have done to public health and the environmen­t. Even so, the two senators’ anti- corporate mantras have an over- the- top quality that would play into the hands of Trump, who would love nothing more than to run as the free- enterprise candidate saving the nation from socialism.

Given Trump’s abuse of power, chronic dishonesty and incompeten­ce, the stakes in the 2020 election could not be higher. What’s more, the Republican Party’s embrace of Trumpism gives the Democrats the chance to claim the mainstream and become the ascendant party. But for these things to happen, the Democrats would do well to field a candidate who can’t be characteri­zed as too far left or too far beyond their prime.

Primary races often go through multiple phases. At this point in the 2004 election cycle, the top rated Democrat was Howard Dean. Four years later, Hillary Clinton had a more than 25- point lead, while the top Republican­s were Rudy Giuliani and Fred Thompson. None of them has a presidenti­al library.

Democrats still have time to check out the field before they settle on Mr. or Ms. Right.

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