Senin, 21 November 2016

Democrats ask themselves: Now what? Who'll lead the party from the wilderness, and how? - Los Angeles Times

When Hillary Clinton[1] lost her White House[2] bid, it was a jagged exclamation mark punctuating several painful years for Democrats[3].

Come January, the party will have at least 11 fewer U.S. senators, 63 fewer House seats and perhaps a dozen fewer governors than in 2009, during President Obama[4]'s first year in office. Nationally, there will be about 900 fewer Democratic state lawmakers.

By some benchmarks — the control of state capitols, for instance — the Democratic Party is in worse shape than it has been in more than a century.

But Democrats, after several periods of exile from the White House, are no strangers to the political wilderness — nor fractious infighting over how to find their way back.

The most immediate battle is for leadership of the Democratic National Committee. The contest will pit Washington insiders against Beltway outsiders, liberal backers of Bernie Sanders[5] against more centrist Hillary Clinton holdovers, and advocates of a full-time chairman versus those who feel it is fine to hold another job as well — serving in Congress, for instance.

"We need to open up the whole party, not make this a cabal of insiders who are nostalgic for names from the past."

Reformers also want more open primaries, allowing independents and others to vote for the Democratic nominee, the way they can in November.  

The idea, advocates say, is to better test the party's eventual nominee.

"We need to replicate the battlefield of the general election as closely as possible and nominate candidates who demonstrate they can win in such an environment," said Tad Devine, a senior campaign advisor to Vermont Sen. Sanders, who beat Clinton in Michigan and Wisconsin.

In the past, tinkering with the nominating process hasn't always produced the hoped-for outcome.

In 1972, an effort to reduce the role of party insiders and give voters greater say resulted in the nomination of George McGovern, who was buried in President Nixon's reelection landslide.

After another Republican rout in 1984, when President Reagan carried 49 states, Democrats sought to give party centrists greater influence by creating "Super Tuesday," a day of balloting heavily concentrated in conservative-leaning Southern states. Despite that, the party ended up with Michael Dukakis, a nort heastern liberal, as their nominee.

As for who runs for president in 2020, there are plenty of prospects — leafing through the directory of Democratic U.S. senators offers a good start — none of whom rise to immediate advantage.

Four years before winning the White House, Obama was a state senator from the South Side of Chicago who gained notice for delivering an uplifting speech at the Democrats' 2004 convention. He ran in 2008 as a long-shot against the heavy favorite, then-New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

So the next president of the United States, if a Democrat, could well be someone few today can imagine; even on election day, some of those working hardest for Trump never thought he could pull it off.

mark.barabak@latimes.com[8]

On Twitter @markzbarabak[9]

ALSO

Why California went its own liberal way in the election[10]

What to make of Trump one week in: He's unpredictable and keeping his options open[11]

'We're called redneck, ignorant, racist. That's not true': Trump supporters explain why they voted for him[12]

Texas was Obama's chief antagonist. In Trump's America, California is eager for the part[13]


UPDATES:

5:15 p.m.: This article was updated with a comment by President Obama at a news conference.

The article was originally published at 3:30 a.m.

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar