Trump Gave Democrats a Huge Opportunity, and They’re Blowing It
Trump Gave Democrats a Huge Opportunity, and They’re Blowing It · The Fiscal Times


When a political party is cast into the wilderness the way the Democrats were last fall, the road ahead isn’t always clear. It took Republicans some time to find their footing after the 2008 elections when voters handed Barack Obama’s party complete control of the levers of power in DC, along with a large reservoir of public goodwill and a clear mandate for change.

The GOP had to come to grips with the fact that it had not just lost the White House in a rout but had also taken a drubbing in both House and Senate elections. In 2008, the Democrats gained 21 House seats and collectively won 13 million more votes than the GOP candidates. In the Senate, a net gain of eight seats gave the Democrats a veto-proof majority, and their candidates won nearly 5 million more votes than Republicans.

Related: 3 Ways Trump’s Tax Proposal Could Change the Economy

In the two years between Obama’s election and the 2010 midterms, the internecine battle in the GOP had the feel of a purification by fire. The party decided that it was a lack of ideological rigidity that was to blame for its disastrous 2008 showing, and the Tea Party movement arose to purge it of those seen as insufficiently committed to conservative principles. In the end, it was that movement that eventually swept the party back to control of the House in 2010.

Now, there are signs that Democrats, some of them at least, are beginning to turn against one another in the way Republicans did in 2008.

Last week, newly elected Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who challenged Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016, undertook an awkward unity tour.

The object was to try to accelerate the healing of a wound first opened during the presidential primary when the party split between the centrist Clinton and the more progressive Sanders. That wound was reopened during the election for the DNC chairmanship when Sanders, who had run a much more left-wing campaign than Clinton, did not support Clinton ally Perez.

Related: Why Trump May Be Better Off With Another Obamacare Repeal Failure

Their joint appearances often felt stiff and awkward, but things became difficult when the tour reached Omaha, Nebraska. Both Perez and Sanders came out in support of Democrat Heath Mello, who is running for mayor there. Their decision to embrace Mello, who opposes abortion and had voted for restrictions on it while serving in the state legislature, drew immediate fire from members of the party most dedicated to its pro-choice platform.