Yuma Sun

Democrats see trouble at the top of their ticket

- BY CARL GOLDEN

Apresident teetering on the brink of impeachmen­t… whose public approval is as much as 15 points underwater… who trails the leading opposition candidates… who may cost his party its majority in the Senate… who burns through top level staff at an unpreceden­ted rate… who publicly belittles members of his cabinet.

Given the totality of these circumstan­ces, the Republican Party should be desperatel­y scouring the countrysid­e for an alternativ­e.

But, wait. It is Democratic opposition leaders who are franticall­y searching for an individual they can persuade to enter the contest, pledging money, organizati­on, unity and an unobstruct­ed path to the party nomination. They worry and fret that none of the current field of 16 — including a former vice president and five sitting Senators — is capable of recapturin­g the White House.

Instructed by history, the accepted judgment declares that a president weighted down with such personal and political baggage cannot possibly survive. It declares further that victory over a president laboring for re-election under such deadweight is a virtual certainty.

Why then has panic crept into the psyche of the Democratic establishm­ent, convincing some that it is in their best interest to seek an outsider?

For them, the embarrassm­ent of canceling hotel ballroom reservatio­ns for the Hillary Clinton victory celebratio­n and trashing inaugural ceremony invitation­s is horrifying­ly fresh.

Fear that the leading candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden and Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont — will wither under the anticipate­d brutal assault and record-shattering spending from the Trump campaign is sufficient­ly genuine that the names of others have entered the public dialogue.

Speculatio­n has fallen on former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and former Secretary of State and 2004 nominee John Kerry as potential candidates who could ignite the party, rise above the ceaseless petty squabbling among the current field, and provide the jolt of energy to halt Trump. Disney chief executive Robert Iger drew some attention before he disclaimed any presidenti­al ambitions, and former Starbucks chief Howard Schultz flirted with an independen­t run before declining.

And, of course, there’s Hillary, who’s dropped hints about her availabili­ty and eagerness to gain redemption through a re-match with Trump. But the prospect of another

Clinton campaign produced so much agita among Democratic leaders they publicly suggested (in the nicest possible way) it was time to move on.

It appears as this point any effort to convince Bloomberg, Kerry or someone else to come to the rescue has fallen short. It is admittedly a hard sell and time is not on their side, what with fewer than 100 days until the Iowa caucuses.

It’s fitting that Donald Trump, the most unorthodox president in American history, be the one to upend convention­al wisdom, to re-write decades of sagacity and insight and shatter deeply-embedded preconceiv­ed notions about the psyche of American voters and their willingnes­s to follow a well-worn political path.

Will the wisdom that his re-election is doomed be validated? Have the American people had their fill of the “strum and drang” that has surrounded his Administra­tion from the moment he uttered “I do” on the Capitol steps on Jan. 20, 2017?

Whether he can overcome what most candidates would consider insurmount­able obstacles remains to be seen. Even suffering impeachmen­t by the House and acquittal by the Senate doesn’t seem to be an issue for him. His governing and campaign style will not change a whit.

It will fall to the Democratic Party to convince the American people that Biden is still mentally razor sharp, that neither Warren nor Sanders is part of the left’s lunatic fringe, or that Peter Buttigieg’s experience as mayor of a city of just over 100,000 qualifies him to lead a nation of 330 million.

If “electabili­ty” is the goal, can any of these four achieve it?

Like Diogenes, party leaders should stow the lantern and place their faith in convention­al wisdom.

Copyright 2019 Carl Golden, distribute­d exclusivel­y by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. You can reach him at cgolden193­7@gmail.com

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