Moderate House Democrats Are at Risk, Putting the
Majority Up for Grabs
Several Democrats elected in 2018 with an anti-Trump
message in conservative-leaning districts are centering their closing argument
on protecting democracy as they try to buck national trends.
Luke
Broadwater
By Luke
Broadwater
Nov. 4,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/04/us/elections/moderate-democrats-house-election.html
NORFOLK,
Va. — In her final campaign ad, Representative Elaine Luria, a Democrat and
Navy veteran who sits on the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on
the Capitol, practically dares her constituents to replace her in Congress with
her Republican opponent, who has refused to condemn former President Donald J.
Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was stolen.
Representative
Abigail Spanberger, a former C.I.A. officer, has blanketed her central Virginia
district with ads portraying her challenger as a supporter of the rioters who
stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
In
Michigan, Representative Elissa Slotkin, herself a former C.I.A. analyst, has
been campaigning with Representative Liz Cheney, a Wyoming Republican who is
the vice chairwoman of the Jan. 6 committee and has made combating threats to
democracy the focus of her final year in Congress.
The three
Democrats, all of whom are in difficult re-election races in swing districts
with conservative leanings, are at risk of being swept out in next week’s
midterm elections, possibly costing Democrats the House majority.
They are
part of a class of moderates — many of them women with national security
credentials who ran for Congress to counter the threat they saw from Mr. Trump
— who flipped Republican districts in the 2018 election, delivering Democrats
the House majority. Now they are centering their closing campaign argument on
protecting democracy.
For two
election cycles, these Democrats have largely managed to buck Republican
attempts to brand them as liberal puppets of Speaker Nancy Pelosi, but the
challenge has grown steeper in 2022.
President
Biden’s popularity has sagged. State redistricting has shifted some of their
districts, including Ms. Luria’s on the eastern shore of Virginia, to include
higher percentages of conservatives. And polls indicate that the issues at the
top of mind for voters across the political spectrum are inflation and the
economy, even though they overwhelmingly believe that American democracy is
under threat.
“This is
the first time they’ve had to run in a hostile political environment,” David
Wasserman, the House editor of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report, said of
the group. “The class of 2018 — we’re going to see some losses this year. But
it’s remarkable that many of them are doing as well as they are given the
president’s approval rating.”
A dozen of
Ms. Luria’s 2018 classmates lost their bids for re-election in 2020, and as
many as a dozen more are at risk of being swept out next week. Two of them — Representatives
Cindy Axne of Iowa and Tom Malinowski of New Jersey — are behind in the polls,
and analysts believe more are headed for defeat.
But these
frontline Democrats believe if anyone can buck the national trends, it is them.
“It’s a lot
of pressure,” Ms. Luria said of holding onto a pivotal seat. A recent poll from
Christopher Newport University showed her tied with her Republican opponent,
Jen A. Kiggans.
As they
battle for political survival, they have worked to dramatize the stakes for
voters.
“I believe
that our democracy is the ultimate kitchen table issue,” Ms. Slotkin said
during a sold-out event with Ms. Cheney in East Lansing. “It’s not even the
kitchen table; our democracy is the foundation of the home in which the kitchen
table sits.”
Ms. Luria
has campaigned on her reputation as one of the most bipartisan members of
Congress, and her record of using her perch on the Armed Services Committee to
secure tens of millions of shipbuilding dollars for her district.
On a recent
Tuesday, as she walked through the Dante Valve manufacturing plant in Norfolk,
a small business where workers build key parts for submarines, executives said
her support for the Navy fleet had proved “critical” for providing steady
paychecks in a town where the economy is inextricably tied to the U.S.
military.
Republican
strategists concede that this group of Democrats has proved tough to knock off,
having built brands in their districts that outperform the typical Democrat.
Their internal polling shows some of them outperforming Mr. Biden by double
digits in favorability.
To counter
the Democrats’ national security credentials, Republicans have recruited
military and law enforcement veterans of their own.
Ms. Slotkin
is facing off against Tom Barrett, a state senator and Army veteran who served
in Iraq.
“I have no
idea if I’m going to win my election — it’s going to be a nail biter,” she said
recently.
Ms.
Spanberger, who has frequently criticized her party’s leadership, is also in a
close race with Yesli Vega, a law enforcement officer.
Ms. Luria
won election to Congress in 2018 as part of a wave of Democrats who flipped
Republican districts and turned the House blue.Credit...Shuran Huang for The
New York Times
Ms. Luria’s
challenger, Ms. Kiggans, is also a Navy veteran and has run a campaign focused
on pocketbook issues.
“They talk
to me about the gas prices that are too much even this past week,” Ms. Kiggans
said of voters during a recent debate. “They talk to me about their grocery
prices. They talk to me about their savings account. People don’t have as much
as they used to in their savings account.”
She has
also tried to tarnish Ms. Luria’s independent credentials, portraying her as a
stooge of Ms. Pelosi.
Ms. Luria
has not allowed the attacks to go unanswered. She has repeatedly cast Ms.
Kiggans, who opposes abortion rights and has dodged questions about the
legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election, as an extremist and an election
denier.
“If
standing up for what’s right means losing an election, so be it,” Ms. Luria
says in her recent ad, adding: “If you believe the 2020 election was stolen,
I’m definitely not your candidate.”
Jen A.
Kiggans is running to take Ms. Luria’s seat.Credit...Kristen Zeis for The New
York Times
Ms. Kiggans
answered this line of argument with an ad of her own, in which she is shown
sitting at a kitchen table and surrounded by family photographs, and declares
that she is no “extremist.”
Interactions
between the two candidates have been testy.
“She’s an
election denier,” Ms. Luria said of Ms. Kiggans, with a note of contempt in her
voice. “She has never clearly said in public that Joe Biden won the 2020
election.”
Ms. Kiggans
shot back at a recent debate, while not specifically denying the charge: “Shame
on you for attacking my character as a fellow female Naval officer.”
One reason
some of the swing-state Democrats remain competitive in their races, despite
the national headwinds, is their ability to raise enormous sums of money.
Ms. Luria,
for instance, has posted some of the highest fund-raising totals this cycle,
raking in three times as much as her challenger in the most recent quarter.
But
national Republicans are working to counter that cash advantage, with political
action committees pumping huge amounts of money into districts to prop up
challengers, including about $5 million to aid Ms. Kiggans.
“Frontline
Democrats promised voters they’d be bipartisan problem solvers, but they came
to D.C. and voted in lock step with Nancy Pelosi,” said Michael McAdams, a
spokesman for the National Republican Campaign Committee. “Now their
constituents are dealing with record-high prices and soaring violent crime.”
For better
or worse, Ms. Luria’s image is now bound up in confronting threats to
democracy. She sought a seat on the Jan. 6 committee — a move she knew could
cost her her seat — calling it an outgrowth of her life’s work serving in the
military.
Her
supporters have cheered the decision.
“The people
who serve in our Congress, they were at great risk,” said Melanie Cornelisse, a
supporter who was on hand outside a Norfolk television studio for Ms. Luria’s
final debate with Ms. Kiggans. “And I think it’s really admirable that she is
one of the people who is leading that investigation.”
Ms. Luria
has posted some of the highest fund-raising totals this cycle, and raised three
times as much as her challenger in the most recent quarter. Credit...Kristen
Zeis for The New York Times
A reporter
asked Ms. Luria recently why she had focused so intently on threats to
democracy rather than, say, the price of gasoline. Ms. Luria has supported
measures to make the nation “energy independent,” through increased use of
nuclear and wind energy.
But also,
as a Navy veteran, Ms. Luria said, she felt she had to be true to herself — and
that meant continuing to call out Mr. Trump’s lies.
“To me,
there’s really two things that keep me up at night: One is China and the other
is protecting our democracy and our democratic institutions,” Ms. Luria said.
“As a candidate, I’m going to talk about the things that I think are the most
important for our future. There’s still a clear and present danger.”
Luke
Broadwater covers Congress. He was the lead reporter on a series of
investigative articles at The Baltimore Sun that won a Pulitzer Prize and a
George Polk Award in 2020. @lukebroadwater


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