Friend, many of you have asked – what is it going
to actually take for Democrats and the pro-democracy coalition to
actually win this year? I wanted to take a few minutes and explain why
I'm optimistic based on my 40+ years in the business.
It boils down to five or six reasons.
#1:
Redistricting wasn't nearly as bad as we thought
Everyone –myself included– was assuming
Republicans would be able to gerrymander their way into a huge
advantage this year – up to 12 or even 14 seats. But with
redistricting mostly done, it looks like that juice was already mostly
squeezed. Turns out for the most part, you can't gerrymander more than
they did 2010, which means that the process is looking like it'll be a
wash or even as Dave Wasserman at Cook puts it, "there will be a few
more Biden-won districts after redistricting than there are
now.”
Instead of starting down 14 seats, we might be up a
few, or even more, pending some court battles. But in any case this is
a very positive sign.
#2: The
GOP/MAGA party is nominating loons like we've never seen
before.
Nominees still matter. The current crop of
Republicans have the potential to be crazier than even the 2010 Tea
Party revolution, where the Republicans nominated, among others, an
actual witch, who proceeded to blow a winnable Senate seat in
Delaware. That's the history they're up against. On the Senate side,
you've got a Big Lie true-believer, a disgraced former governor, an
incumbent senator whose conspiracy theories are regularly debunked, a
first-time candidate who will be nominated solely because Donald Trump
wanted him, and a TV doctor who’s put profit ahead of the health of
his viewers for decades. And it's going to be even crazier on the
House side as the Trump-led purge of moderates continues in favor of
those pushing the Big Lie.
But it's not just that the GOP is nominating loons.
The Democrats have largely avoided this problem this cycle. A lot of
the candidates the Democrats are nominating – the people actually
running – are strong candidates. They aren't getting bogged down like
the Republicans are. Which in turn means Democratic primaries are not
the slugfest the GOP candidates are facing. Looking at a state like
Pennsylvania with Lamb, Fetterman, and others – the winner will not
emerge as bruised as the GOP nominees in some of these places. And
that's a huge advantage.
If
you're following me this far, you know I'm optimistic. But we still
have a lot of work to do. Can we count on you to keep The Lincoln
Project in the fight?
#3:
Externalities will provide opportunities for
Democrats
This one is really simple. Yes, Biden's approval
rating is the lowest it's been. But given the polarization in our
country right now the only way he can go from here is up. And there's
still plenty of time for Omicron to pass, inflation to subside, and
positive externalities to shift momentum in Dems' favor. Not unlimited
time. But enough to shift the momentum and Dems are in a much better
place to capitalize on it. Look at how DeSantis and Abbott are
handling COVID and the economy. That's the clear contrast right there
and Democrats can take advantage.
#4:
There's still time for Democrats to coalesce
I know the reaction to President Biden's speech in
Georgia might contradict this. But there is still time for Democrats
to unite behind a pro-democracy message. The Lincoln Project is
beating the drum as loudly as we can: 2022 is about democracy first,
second, and always. Policy has to take a back seat – if we don't win
this year and in 2024 we might not have another chance to argue about
policy anymore under an authoritarian government. We are not being
alarmist.
But now it's our task to make sure we build the
largest, widest, deepest and most diverse political coalition in
American history. This work starts at the local level. We have to
organize and we have to do it now. Everyone has a part to play.
Help
us keep it up.
Which brings me to my fifth point.
#5:
There are more of us than them
For the past two decades the margin of the popular
vote has steadily tilted in favor of the Democrats. Looking back to
the Gore years – the margin was still pretty small. Now you're talking
several million more votes. That margin is so big that even in some of
these marginal Congressional districts – in a Presidential year, many
more Democrats vote than Republicans. Why is that
important?
We know their names. Yes, this is an off-year
election so turnout will take more work. But we know they're
persuadable and they voted two years ago this November. The end result
here is that there are more potential voters for us than there are for
Trump's autocratic movement. The historical headwinds are tough. But
the numbers are there for us to win.
All of this points to why I believe Democrats are
going to hold the majority in the House and even expand it in the
Senate this year. It will be a colossal task. It will take all of us
from every part of the political spectrum to stop Trump and his MAGA
mob. It will take a true pro-democracy coalition.
That's
what we're building right now at The Lincoln Project. Everything else
is secondary. Are you with us?
-Joe Trippi
PS: I want to make a sixth point. If you are
reading this I know you really do care about our democracy. This is
something I've said going back to the Dean campaign. You have the
capacity to grow this movement. One more friend, one more coworker,
one more person in your network. They will listen to you. Pass along
the message. It's the most important thing you can do this year to
help save our democracy.
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