‘A lot of people are jaded’: Dems despair amid
D.C. gridlock
Five months into the post-Trump era, the promise of
Democrat-occupied Washington is crashing into reality.
By DAVID
SIDERS
06/24/2021
04:30 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/24/dems-disillusion-dc-gridlock-495682
Efforts to
forge a bipartisan gun control deal in the Senate have fallen apart. A sweeping
Democratic elections reform bill has failed. A self-imposed White House
deadline for a police reform bill has come and gone. And while there was a
breakthrough on infrastructure talks on Wednesday evening, the fate of that
legislation remains unclear.
Five months
into the post-Trump era, the promise of Democrat-occupied Washington is
crashing into reality. Donald Trump may be gone, but the sense of hope that
permeated the Democratic Party’s rank-and-file after his defeat — and the
accompanying capture of Congress — is being replaced by a haze of
disillusionment that threatens the party’s prospects of generating enthusiasm
in the run-up to a critical midterm election.
Biden and
his major spending plans remain popular, according to most polling, with Biden’s
job approval rating still holding above 50 percent. But even Biden’s marks have
inched down in the FiveThirtyEight polling average from a high of about 55
percent in March to about 52 percent today.
More
significant, the number of Democrats who say things broadly are heading in the
wrong direction is ticking up. The percentage of Americans who believe the
country is off on the wrong track hit 57 percent in a Monmouth University poll
last week, and that includes nearly a third of Democrats. An Economist/YouGov
poll found one-fifth of voters who cast their ballots for Biden last year now
think the country is heading in the wrong direction.
And though
Democrats are still broadly behind Biden, they are souring significantly on
Congress. A Gallup poll on Tuesday put Congress’ approval rating at 26 percent,
the lowest level since January, the month Biden took office. That swing was
driven largely by Democrats, whose support for Congress plummeted 16 percentage
points from last month, to 38 percent.
“It’s just
frustration,” said Kelly Dietrich, a former Democratic fundraiser and founder
of the National Democratic Training Committee, which trains candidates across
the country. “Even us realists want it to move faster.”
The
frustration isn’t just showing up in polling. Progressive Democrats have become
increasingly vocal in recent weeks, popping off at Biden for relying too
heavily on negotiations with Republicans to pass infrastructure spending or for
making too little use of his bully pulpit to support elections reform.
Rep.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) called Vice President Kamala Harris’ comments
in Guatemala on immigration “disappointing,” while Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.)
chose even harsher words, rebuking Sen. Joe Manchin, the moderate Democrat from
West Virginia, as the “new Mitch McConnell.”
On Tuesday,
10 people were arrested outside Arizona Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s
Phoenix office during a protest of her opposition to abandoning the filibuster.
“A lot of
people are jaded,” desperate to see Washington “actually start to move some
stuff,” said Yvette Simpson, chief executive of the progressive political action
committee Democracy for America.
Ever since
Congress passed Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill earlier this
year, Simpson said, “we’re flatlined. There’s no real significant change that
we can see for anything else on the horizon.”
If Democrats
can’t break the logjam, she said, the party will pay for it in 2022. “I think
it hurts the energy. I think it hurts the momentum.”
In part,
Biden and the Democratic Party are suffering from a hangover after sweeping
Trump from office and emerging from the worst of the coronavirus pandemic. Doug
Herman, who was a lead mail strategist for Barack Obama's 2008 and 2012
campaigns, described the moment as little more than a “natural dip” following
the initial euphoria surrounding a new administration and a pandemic whose
response “Biden nailed.”
Despite
acknowledging on Tuesday that it will likely miss its goal of vaccinating 70
percent of the nation’s adults against Covid-19 by July 4, cases and deaths
have declined sharply, and much of the country is opening up. The Biden
administration estimates that for people aged 27 and up, it will hit the 70
percent vaccination threshold by July 4.
“Look,
we’re six months into the administration,” Herman said. “Isn’t that when we
always write these stories?”
Others are
equally sanguine, pointing to the political realities currently confronting the
party — among them, razor-thin Democratic majorities in Congress, and the
effectiveness of blockades that have been thrown up by the GOP.
Joseph
Foster, chair of the Democratic Party in suburban Philadelphia’s Montgomery
County, said of the party’s legislative setbacks, “We have this tiny, thin
majority … It’s not as though the party’s at fault.”
Still,
Foster said he has been hearing more and more frustration from fellow Democrats
recently.
“They feel
as though the party has not come through,” he said.
It’s not
just that the Biden honeymoon is coming to an end, as happens in every
presidency. It’s that, for Democrats, the expectations for Biden were so much
higher in comparison to Trump — and the reality so difficult to swallow.
Democrats turned out in historic numbers in the presidential election last year.
That was in large part a repudiation of Trump, but it was also based on Biden’s
promise of an expansive agenda.
Democratic
organizers and activist groups spent months registering and turning out young
people and people of color who powered Democrats to victories in key swing
states on the promise not just of outlasting Trump and surviving the pandemic,
but of emerging better for it.
Today,
reality has set in. In the most recent Monmouth survey, 32 percent of Democrats
said things in the country were off on the wrong track, compared to 12 percent
in the same poll in April, a 20 percentage point swing.
That’s a
reflection of “angst that [Biden] won’t get everything done that they thought
he might be able to get done at the beginning of this term,” said Patrick
Murray, who oversees the Monmouth poll.
“It’s more
of his own base becoming less enthusiastic because they might not get
everything they thought they would get down the road,” he said. “The problem
for that for the midterms is a less enthusiastic base hampers turnout.”
Even
moderate Democrats are growing worried about stasis in Washington — and what it
could mean for upcoming midterm elections, where historical trends suggest the
party could lose its House majority in the absence of a robust turnout.
“You’ve got
to make the case that Biden and the Democrats are doing everything they
possibly can to move the country forward, and they’ve got more work to do to
make that case,” said Matt Bennett of the center-left group Third Way.
Bennett
said Democrats need to do a better job reminding voters about the massive scale
of Biden’s coronavirus relief package Congress passed. Still, Bennett said,
“What I worry about most is that if that’s the only major legislation that gets
done in this Congress, and I’m not convinced it will be … [but] if it’s the
only thing, I worry that we won’t be able to weave that into a compelling
story, even though we should be able to.”
One
Democratic strategist who works with major party donors said bluntly that the
party is “f----- in the midterms if we don’t get s--- done soon.”
After
Republicans blocked the voting rights bill Tuesday, Biden vowed that “this
fight is far from over,” and his still-high approval rating among Democrats
suggests that many are still willing to give him time.
Larry
Cohen, the former Communications Workers of America president who now chairs
the Bernie Sanders-aligned group Our Revolution, described the state of
politics in Washington as “tragic.” But he insisted that Biden and Democrats in
Congress still have time to make headway on Democratic priorities, including
through executive actions and with a second spending package using budget
reconciliation, the process by which Democrats can pass major budget-related
measures on a simple majority.
“The
question is going to be what does get done,” he said, “and is it enough to make
a difference in people’s lives.”
The party’s
success in bringing Manchin, a late holdout, on board for the voting rights
bill unified the caucus, allowing Democrats to lay blame for that defeat
explicitly at the feet of Republicans. Dietrich said Republican obstructionism
is something that resonates with Democrats, and it’s the reason he’s not
worried about intraparty frustration spilling into the midterms.
“Democrats
understand the problem’s not with other Democrats,” Dietrich said. “The problem
is we don’t have enough Democrats in the Senate right now.”
Like
Bennett, Dietrich said Democrats are “accomplishing some pretty good stuff.”
The
problem, he said, is “It’s not going to be the landslide we were hoping.”
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