Trump motivates Democrats to rally behind Biden, Harris

ATLANTA — For the sec­ond time in four years, the Demo­c­ra­t­ic pres­i­den­tial pri­ma­ry pit­ted the expand­ing pro­gres­sive move­ment against an even­tu­al­ly vic­to­ri­ous estab­lish­ment. But as the par­ty gath­ers vir­tu­al­ly this week to nom­i­nate Joe Biden for the pres­i­den­cy, the pos­si­bil­i­ty of Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s reelec­tion has become Democ­rats’ uni­fy­ing and ener­giz­ing force.

“Nobody fits neat­ly and tight­ly into any one buck­et,” said Geor­gia Demo­c­ra­t­ic Chair­woman Nike­ma Williams. “What we all fit into is know­ing that right now we don’t have lead­er­ship in our coun­try, and it’s hurt­ing all of us.”

That’s an impor­tant shift from 2016, when Hillary Clin­ton strug­gled to build a coali­tion between her sup­port­ers and those who backed Sen. Bernie Sanders, who again fin­ished as run­ner-up this year. It reflects both the work Biden has done to court the left and the urgency among Democ­rats to defeat Trump, which has only inten­si­fied amid the coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic, eco­nom­ic tur­moil and a nation­al reck­on­ing on racism.

Still, the party’s ide­o­log­i­cal splits haven’t van­ished. There are dis­agree­ments over how to achieve uni­ver­sal health care, make high­er edu­ca­tion afford­able, over­haul law enforce­ment prac­tices and reen­gage with coun­tries that are ques­tion­ing America’s role in the world.

Lead­ers on the left warn that Biden must still keep their inter­ests in mind, offer­ing a reminder that even a Novem­ber vic­to­ry won’t guar­an­tee a unit­ed front dur­ing a Biden presidency.

“Pro­gres­sives are going to vote against Trump,” said Stephanie Tay­lor, co-founder of the Pro­gres­sive Change Cam­paign Com­mit­tee, but she called it “demor­al­iz­ing and wrong” for Biden and the Demo­c­ra­t­ic Nation­al Com­mit­tee to give con­ven­tion air­time to fig­ures like bil­lion­aire Mike Bloomberg, the for­mer New York City may­or who spent more than $500 mil­lion of his own mon­ey run­ning for the nomination.

Tay­lor nod­ded at Biden’s pick of Kamala Har­ris as his run­ning mate, the first Black woman on a major party’s tick­et. But she cast the Cal­i­for­nia sen­a­tor, who is also of Asian descent, as an estab­lish­ment politi­cian along­side Biden, a for­mer vice pres­i­dent first elect­ed to the Sen­ate in 1972.

“If Biden and Har­ris want to ener­gize pro­gres­sives to donate and vol­un­teer,” Tay­lor said, “they need to ele­vate lead­ers like Alexan­dria Oca­sio-Cortez and Julián Cas­tro, and poli­cies like can­cel­ing stu­dent debt and Medicare for All. Pro­gres­sive ener­gy mat­ters, and vot­er ener­gy mat­ters. We’re fight­ing Trump as hard as we can right now — just don’t take that for granted.”

In fact, Oca­sio-Cortez, the New York con­gress­woman and a face of young pro­gres­sives, and Cas­tro, who set the 2020 pres­i­den­tial field’s left flank on immi­gra­tion, will speak dur­ing the four-night con­ven­tion. But Taylor’s sen­ti­ment under­scores the com­plex­i­ty in Biden’s effort to cor­ral the spec­trum of vot­ers dis­sat­is­fied with Trump.

Despite Biden’s five decades at the core of the Demo­c­ra­t­ic Par­ty, he’s not a nat­ur­al fit for every fac­tion in 2020.

As younger activists gain clout in shap­ing the party’s pri­or­i­ties, Biden will be 78 on Inau­gu­ra­tion Day, mak­ing him the old­est per­son to assume the pres­i­den­cy if he’s elect­ed. As a white man, his core con­stituen­cies are white mod­er­ates and Black women, who revived his cam­paign in part because of their appre­ci­a­tion of Biden’s ser­vice as vice pres­i­dent to Barack Oba­ma, the first Black pres­i­dent. And his rev­er­ence for insti­tu­tions such as Con­gress is at odds with the most intense voic­es of both polit­i­cal par­ties, where activists often put a pre­mi­um on out­siders and aren’t eager to compromise.

To a large degree, Biden is com­fort­able with the chal­lenges. From its start, his cam­paign has been as much a moral argu­ment against Trump as about set­tling an absolute iden­ti­ty for his par­ty. He’s said plain­ly he wouldn’t have run if Trump weren’t pres­i­dent. Two of his three cam­paign themes are aimed square­ly at the incum­bent: “restore the soul of the nation” and “unite the country.”

On pol­i­cy, Biden did take a side in Democ­rats’ iden­ti­ty bat­tle, run­ning as a prag­mat­ic alter­na­tive to Sanders and Eliz­a­beth War­ren in the pri­ma­ry. He wants a “pub­lic option” gov­ern­ment health insur­ance plan, not their pre­ferred sin­gle-pay­er insur­ance sys­tem that would scrap pri­vate insur­ance alto­geth­er. He wants to offer con­sid­er­able aid for col­lege tuition and to ease stu­dent debt, even widen­ing his pro­pos­als since cap­tur­ing the nom­i­na­tion. Yet he still doesn’t go as far as Sanders.

He’s pitched tril­lions in spend­ing to com­bat the cli­mate cri­sis but doesn’t ful­ly embrace pro­gres­sives “Green New Deal.” Biden wants a range of tax hikes on cor­po­ra­tions and the wealthy, and since the pan­dem­ic has ratch­eted up his rhetoric on the deep-seat­ed inequal­i­ties in U.S. soci­ety. He’s adopt­ed Warren’s pro­posed over­haul of U.S. bank­rupt­cy laws to make them more con­sumer friend­ly, but he also goes out of his way not to vil­i­fy busi­ness and wealth.

A deal-mak­er from his 36 years in the Sen­ate, Biden spent his months as pre­sump­tive nom­i­nee work­ing with pro­gres­sives on var­i­ous pro­pos­als. He calls him­self the “most pro­gres­sive” nom­i­nee in the mod­ern era and says his agen­da, if enact­ed, would rank along­side sem­i­nal Demo­c­ra­t­ic Pres­i­dents Franklin Roo­sevelt and Lyn­don John­son. But he’s nev­er express­ly retreat­ed from a core mes­sage he wield­ed against Sanders: “Peo­ple are look­ing for results, not a revolution.”

All that leaves Biden and the par­ty wide lat­i­tude to solic­it vot­ers — but also to leave some disillusioned.

“We are a big par­ty,” said Demo­c­ra­t­ic Nation­al Chair­man Tom Perez, argu­ing that a con­ven­tion line­up that ranges from Sanders, a demo­c­ra­t­ic social­ist, to a con­ser­v­a­tive Repub­li­can like for­mer Ohio Gov. John Kasich, still speaks to “com­mon values.”

When talk­ing more broad­ly, Demo­c­ra­t­ic lead­ers and activists inter­viewed ahead of the con­ven­tion most often men­tioned three qual­i­ties: the party’s diver­si­ty, sup­port of work­ers and Biden’s rep­u­ta­tion for empathy.

“The Demo­c­ra­t­ic Par­ty is a micro­cosm of the Unit­ed States of Amer­i­ca,” said House Minor­i­ty Whip Jim Clyburn, a South Car­oli­na Demo­c­rat whose endorse­ment of Biden was a turn­ing point in the nom­i­nat­ing fight.

Williams, the Geor­gian who is also the Demo­c­ra­t­ic nom­i­nee to suc­ceed the late Rep. John Lewis, cel­e­brat­ed Har­ris’ nom­i­na­tion, regard­less of any hand-wring­ing over the senator’s record as a pros­e­cu­tor or how she treat­ed big banks as Cal­i­for­nia attor­ney gen­er­al. “That moti­vates me to get out there and work my butt off,” she said.

Perez called Biden an ide­al fig­ure to tie dis­parate fac­tions togeth­er with Trump as the oppo­nent. “Joe Biden is a fun­da­men­tal­ly hon­est and decent per­son,” he said.

Among many pro­gres­sives who didn’t want him as nom­i­nee, those per­son­al char­ac­ter­is­tics and the pre­sump­tion they attract inde­pen­dents and Repub­li­cans in the vot­ing booth is enough to war­rant support.

Lar­ry Cohen, a promi­nent Demo­c­ra­t­ic nation­al com­mit­tee­man, Sanders con­fi­dant and labor leader, point­ed to Democ­rats on Capi­tol Hill as the guide for the par­ty. Democ­rats won the House major­i­ty in 2018 large­ly on the strength of more mod­er­ate nom­i­nees run­ning in sub­ur­ban and exur­ban swing dis­tricts. But sev­er­al young pro­gres­sives, includ­ing Oca­sio-Cortez, won seats, as well, across bat­tle­grounds and safe Demo­c­ra­t­ic districts.

Democ­rats’ hopes to retake the Sen­ate and, in turn, move any sig­nif­i­cant agen­da depends first on a sim­i­lar­ly var­ied slate win­ning enough seats. Even then, Cohen said, Democ­rats will have to nav­i­gate inter­nal par­ty fights, almost cer­tain­ly includ­ing whether to abol­ish the fil­i­buster, so that major leg­is­la­tion doesn’t require 60 votes.

“When I look at the tick­et, I see two experts on the Sen­ate, on get­ting things done,” he said, invok­ing a per­son­al mot­to: “For­ward ever.” “The rest of that line that I don’t always use,” Cohen said, is “‘back­ward never.’”

Asso­ci­at­ed Press writer Meg Kin­nard in Colum­bia, South Car­oli­na, con­tributed to this report.



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