(Reuters) |
“If you're confused about what to
do, it's a sign that your enemy is winning.”
-Toba Beta
The general consensus in the liberal
media was that the Democratic Party squandered an important opportunity during
the recently televised debates to show voters outside of their base that they
have nationally electable candidates. The party instead seemed to move further to the left in the first debate, and spent much time infighting
during the second, only serving to highlight that they are a deeply divided and
leaderless party. I fear that this observation, made
by the most supportive news outlets and friendly commentators is correct and
unless the party works to remedy their current trajectory, they are likely to
face another humiliating defeat in 2020.
Here are five things Democrats need
to do if they are serious about defeating Trump.
One: Democratic National Committee
Must Wrest Control of the Debate Process
It is wonderful that the party wants
to show that it supports a transparent and democratic process, after the cloak and daggers they
were caught doing with Hillary Clinton,
but this does not mean that they should have a free-for-all circus. Part of the
issue is that to stand out in such a crowded field the candidates have no
choice but to resort to positing extremist views.
To remedy this, the DNC needs to
change the criteria for the next round of debates, so that only a handful of
the candidates are able to qualify. Further, they should hold one debate with
the frontrunners - candidates who record double digit support in the polls -
and a second for the next five contenders. This way they would ensure a more
substantive debate, covering a wider range of issues in more depth than will
ever be possible with ten candidates on stage.
The DNC also needs to take control
of the format, rather than allow news outlets to determine it. This will
prevent juvenile hand raising questions that oversimplify complex issues or childish
ones, like CNN’s moderators kept
asking in a bid to get candidates to
attack each other.
Two: Stop Crying for Impeachment
Saying that she is going to Clorox
the Oval Office before moving in certainly provided Kirsten Gillibrand a viral
moment, but it did nothing to win middle and low-income
voters in Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin, who voted twice for Mr. Obama before turning to Mr. Trump. Neither
will hysterically pushing the case for impeachment, in a partisan manner.An NBC News poll found that the support for impeachment had steadily declined among registered voters before Mr. Mueller’s testimony, with just “21 percent of registered voters saying there is enough evidence for Congress to begin impeachment hearings.” After Mueller’s testimony, which many Democrats had hoped would be a watershed moment, an ABC News/Ipsos poll found that little had changed in voters’ minds on the issue”.
Even if Democrats in the House find the votes to impeach (they don’t currently have them), the GOP-controlled Senate will likely exonerate the President. Both Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are acutely aware that such an outcome, while placating a minority in their base, will also play right into Mr. Trump’s hands. The President has claimed all along that this is nothing more than a naked partisan witch hunt and a Senate trial clearing him will be the final vindication he needs to claim his false victimhood.
Democrats would be wise to stop
publicly calling for impeachment and focus instead on the pocketbook issues
that people vote on. Privately, they should absolutely continue to pursue the
numerous investigations already under way into the Trump administration and his
family business and allow these to reach their natural conclusions. There is
nothing protecting a President from prosecution once he leaves office.
Three: Build a Rational Case against
Trump (not a moral one)
Democrats need to understand that
the people did not elect them to be the moral guardians of this country. So
instead of feigning outrage and trying to be the moral police, they need to
focus their energies more on holding the President accountable for his actions
and lack thereof, and less on offensive tweets and insensitive words.
To defeat Trump they should
focus on both his numerous broken promises to the working
class and farmers, and on his routinely erratic behaviour. They
should build a non-partisan case explaining how the President is putting every
American’s national and economic security at risk with his shoot-from-the-hip,
go-with-his-gut policies.
He has dangerously conflated trade
and national security issues with the Huawei case in
a bid to score easy concessions in his ill-conceived trade war. The issue is
not that he is being tough with China, but that he has picked a fight with the
second largest economic and military power in the world without a plan or a
long-term strategy, which makes it likely that the outcome will be damaging
for American manufacturers and consumers.
Also, why aren’t Democrats
questioning the invisible line between affairs of state and the President’s
personal business? It is clear that Mr. Trump draws no distinction between
self-promotion and official business; family members regularly accompany him on
state visits to places where the Trump enterprise has business interests. This
should be a legitimate concern for all Americans, who need to understand that
when foreign policy decisions are made based on personal motives, they will
never align with the interests of the country and its citizens. So much for America
first because it seems more like Trump first.
Another issue Democrats should be
raising is the fact that there has been a marked drop in the number
of warning letters issued by the FDA under
this administration. These letters have long been considered a vital tool to
protect consumers from unsafe drugs and food products, and a way to ensure the
safety and quality of medical devices. At a time when we are facing rising
healthcare costs and increasing corporate abuse, peeling away these protections
will likely lead to dangerous health and safety consequences for all
Americans.
Even our foreign policy is in
complete disarray. From Venezuela to Iran and Syria to North Korea, beyond
bullying allies, touting his personal charm and creating photo ops, it is clear
the President again has no game plan. Democrats would do well to remind
Americans that the last time a US president winged it and went it alone on foreign
policy; we wasted trillions of taxpayer dollars on two wars with no tangible
results.
Four: Present a full-throated
defense of Capitalism
If government were in the business
of running businesses, we would all be raving about the DMV’s ease and
efficiency, and the TSA’s world-class customer service. Visit any government
website - federal, state or local and let me know how simple the language is,
and how easy the process to do anything is - from registering a small business
to filing a claim.
Take the example of the US
department of education. Their stated mission is to promote student
achievement. In the thirty-six years they have been a cabinet-level agency,
their taxpayer funded total annual budget has increased from approximately $14 billion in 1980
to $70 billion in 2018, while improvement in student test results has been
negligible. “For 17-year-olds, math
scores have improved by only 1.6 percentage points from 1982 to the most recent
test. In reading, scores are up 0.4 percentage points since 1980.”
Now think about who finances all
government enterprise and consider how much accountability, transparency and
results we get for our tax dollars from federal, state and local agencies – do
you truly believe that MORE government is the answer to our problems?
There is no question that there are
many things that are broken with our current system
of Capitalism, but the solution is not to throw
the baby out with the bath water. Instead, we need to focus our efforts on
improving the systems and processes that are not working and to rebuild trust in public
and private institutions by
creating greater transparency and demanding more accountability from elected
and unelected officials. We also need to use the law to prosecute those who
have misused power; from abusive cardinals to errant CEO’s.
John Delaney put it best when he
suggested in the first debate that Democrats should be the party “that keeps
what’s working but fixes what’s broken”.
Five: Don’t Ignore a Winning
Strategy
Winning more votes in California is
completely pointless. The path to defeating Trump requires winning the
Electoral College and the only way for Democrats to do this is by appealing to
a broader cross-section of voters beyond their base. Consider that 35% of
Americans describe themselves conservative, 34% moderate and 4% refuse to
identify themselves according to Gallup. Only 26% call themselves liberal. Given this, I cannot
fathom why the majority of Democratic candidates seem hell-bent on alienating
76% of the voting population.
As I have written before, the most
valuable lesson learned from the 2018 midterms is that Democrats can
successfully flip Republican districts and turn red strongholds blue when
they campaign as centrists. The majority of Democratic newcomers who scored surprising
victories in historically red districts said they were tired of the partisan
gamesmanship. They promised to solve problems like healthcare costs and income
inequality by reaching across the aisle, not by going it alone. Importantly,
not one of these candidates ran on the promise to remove the President from
office. The majority of them won.