Trump
Updates to the Midterms:
His
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is counting on
Democratic Senators Joe Donnelly (IN), Heidi Heitkamp (ND), and Joe
Manchin (WVA) to provide Trump a cushion for the confirmation of his
upcoming Supreme Court pick. Trump criticized Heitkamp at his North
Dakota rally last week just to let her know he is her “daddy.”
Democrats
have been on a downward spiral since the last year of the Obama
Presidency when the Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell ‘pimp
slapped’ them on Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, for a
seat on the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) by refusing
to even have the Senate’s Judiciary Committee vote on his
nomination. Obama had gone out of his way to put forth a candidate
that he believed was acceptable to McConnell and the Republicans
since they had voted overwhelmingly for Garland when he was confirmed
by a vote of 76-23 to the D.C. Appeals Court by a
Republican-controlled Senate in 1997.
Some
Democratic strategists had urged Obama to nominate his then Attorney
General Loretta Lynch for the post, instead of Garland, knowing that
she would also have been blocked by Republicans but that it would
have angered and energized Democratic turnout among women, especially
African Americans, in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin in the
2016 election and would have likely propelled Hillary Clinton to
victory. But Obama’s attempted appeasement of McConnell was
futile as Republican leaders had begun plotting against him and the
House and Senate Democratic majorities at a Capitol Hill restaurant,
the Caucus Room, on January 20, 2009, the night of his inauguration.
Within
a month, Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced
at a press conference that his primary political objective was to
make certain that Barack Obama was a one-term President which
resonated with an increasingly conservative Republican base.
McConnell systematically led his members back to power during the
next five years.
From
that point on, Republicans obstructed Obama and the Democrats at
every turn, taking back the House in 2010 and the Senate in 2014,
maintaining that control and adding the Presidency with the election
of Donald Trump in 2016. Leader McConnell and his autocratic
wingman, President Trump, have intimidated the Democratic leadership
into normalizing and accepting the abuse heaped upon them and their
constituents: providing rhetorical support to white nationalists and
spewing racist jargon; separating immigrant parents from their
children; attacking African American athletes for social protests and
calling their mothers bitches; revoking the Obama-era affirmative
action guidelines for higher education; attacking and undermining the
Affordable Care Act (ACA); and numerous other obnoxious acts.
As
we approach the 2018 midterm elections, Trump and the Republicans are
steadily gaining ground with the electorate even as several political
polls show the rise of a Democratic blue wave. Trump has doubled
down by feeding his 30-35 percent arch-conservative base with
anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim policies, chauvinistic speeches;
personal attacks on Democrats’ minority and majority
officeholders; voter disenfranchisement; continuing racial
gerrymandering of political districts, all with assists from SCOTUS;
and the stoking of white fears that their communities are being
overrun by MS-13 gangs and other people of color, defiling their
quality of life.
He
is also giving voice to the 10-15 percent of Independents and
Moderates who quietly share his views, and the middle - and
upper-classes and financial elite who have benefitted enormously from
his recent tax cuts. Finally, Trump, like Reagan in 1980 and 1984,
has drawn about 10-15 percent of Democrats who publicly criticize him
and his policies while pulling the lever for him and the candidates
he backs. Out of this mixture, Trump will possibly be able to
generate enough voters to keep the House and modestly expand the
Republican hold on the Senate. His latest gambit is the ratcheting
up of evangelical support for his promise to select a SCOTUS Justice
who will be the deciding vote to overturn Roe v. Wade and to
bend the federal government further toward a homophobic theocracy and
one dominated by business interests.
As
Trump makes his Paul Revere-type run across the country with
escalating hyperbolic messaging to his devotees at huge rallies, he
is also setting up the apparatus to generate a historic turnout at
the polls in November. It will probably far exceed that of Democrats
who have yet to develop a cohesive missive for their voters. But
most troubling is the fact that Democratic Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer is calling for civility and bipartisanship when the Trump
Republican Party has made it abundantly clear they have no interest
in pursuing such a process.
Moreover,
McConnell already has three Democratic Senators’ votes in his
breast pocket who also voted for Justice Gorsuch: Joe Manchin (WVA),
Heidi Heitkamp (ND), and Joe Donnelly (IN) from states Trump won
overwhelmingly, showing Schumer that he cannot keep his fellow
Senators in line. In addition, two-term incumbent Sen. Claire
McCaskill’s (D-MO) race is rated a toss-up against Republican
Attorney General Josh Hawley in a state Trump won by 20 points. She
may well sign on and vote for Trump’s SCOTUS pick in an effort
to retain her seat. Thus, Trump will be able to claim that he forged
bipartisanship heading into the midterms.
But
most troubling for Democrats is that the near landslide victory of
first-time Democratic Socialist candidate, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
over the 4th ranking House Democrat, 20-year incumbent Joe
Crowley, in last week’s New York primary, has revealed how
fragile veteran Democrats are as they go into battle for control of
the House. Many other long-term Democrats won narrow primary
victories against insurgents which suggest that they may be unable to
bring voters to the polls in large numbers when they are desperately
needed in November.
There appears to be no
strategy to address this reality other than to say that Democrats are
ahead in national polls as Hillary Clinton did in 2016 when she went
down to defeat. Poll numbers are not sufficient to defeat Trump
Republican opponents who are marching in unison behind his policies,
no matter how vile and vicious Democrats perceive them to be. Trump
and his allies are marching across the nation like Sherman did
through Georgia towards the end of the Civil War and Hitler through
Europe in World War II. Democrats are in big trouble and refused to
acknowledge their dire straits.
What
can they do? It’s simple: respond to the challenges outlined
above; stop attacking their leadership in the media (they are arguing
over who leads the House majority before they attain it); show some
backbone in opposing Trump’s policies across the board; take a
stand on the issues that their base—millennials, women, people
of color, and the LGBTQ community care fervently about; immediately
involve Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other female insurgent
candidates in the final strategy to take back the House and possibly
the Senate; and pour massive amounts of money into getting out the
Democratic vote.
I
am not optimistic that Democrats will do anything different at this
time, and if lightning does not strike, the Trump Republican Party
prevails, again!
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