Boston Globe
 
 
Democrats know why they lost, but won’t fix  their problems

 
By Eric Fehrnstrom   NOVEMBER 16,  2016  

 
ARE DEMOCRATS ready to undertake with  seriousness the course correction 
that 
is needed to revitalize the party?  Judging by the early reaction to Donald 
Trump’s victory, the answer is  no. 
Anyone looking at  the 2016 electoral map and exit polls knows there were 
two main forces that  tipped the election to Trump: white working class 
inhabitants of the Rust Belt  upset about a hollowed-out economy, and religious 
voters, both Catholic and  Protestant, who reacted to attacks on their values 
by voting against the  candidate of the cultural elite. There may be other 
reasons, but these two are  highest on the list. 
Trump’s victory  did not happen overnight, either. The last eight years of 
the Obama presidency  have been disastrous for Democrats. On their way to 
minority status, Democrats  since 2009 have lost a net of 13 US Senate seats, 
69 House seats, 12  governorships, and 30 state legislatures. The entire 
party is a smoldering  ruin. 
This is what  happens when you invite unfair foreign competition for 
American jobs via bad  trade practices and massive illegal immigration, and 
when 
you go to war with  nuns over birth control. 

Still, some  Democrats believe the presidential election was unfairly 
denied them. 
Former  Massachusetts governor (and Democratic presidential candidate) Mike 
Dukakis  thinks the problem is the Electoral College. MSNBC host Rachel 
Maddow pointed  the finger at third-party candidates Jill Stein and Gary 
Johnson. Democratic  influence peddler Sidney Blumenthal accused rogue FBI 
agents 
of staging a “coup  d’etat.” Hillary Clinton is blaming everyone but 
herself. 
Clinton is not very  good at self-
reflection. If she were honest, she would admit Bernie Sanders  pushed her 
campaign too far to the left. She took the side of Black Lives Matter  
protesters against the police. She promoted government-run health care and free 
 
college tuition at a time of record-breaking deficits. She embraced more gun 
 control. 
Instead of  listening to her husband, Bill Clinton, she strayed from a 
centrist message,  focused on jobs and the economy, that got him elected and 
reelected in the  1990s. 
Now a civil war is raging between the  progressives and the pragmatists in 
the party, and it looks like Democrats will  make the mistake of thinking 
they didn’t move left far enough. Two of the  leading candidates for party 
chairman are the former governor of Vermont, Howard  Dean, and Representative 
Keith Ellison of Minnesota — the former a tired liberal  voice from a decade 
ago, the latter the chair of the Progressive Caucus in the  House. 
As Democrats  prepare to double down on the errors of the past, Trump is 
finally making a  hoped-for pivot to the middle. 
He told “60  Minutes’’ in his first TV interview that he plans to keep 
major portions of  Obamacare. He backed away from appointing a special 
prosecutor to pursue  Clinton’s e-mails. He said he is focused on removing 
criminal 
illegal immigrants  from the country, not breaking up families. He welcomed 
same-sex marriage as  settled law. 
Of course, that  hasn’t stopped the protests. Trump needs to continue to 
prove himself worthy of  the office, but his critics also need to cut him some 
slack. 
When Trump said he  wouldn’t take a government salary, his detractors on 
Twitter acted like Pavlov’s  dogs in comparing him to Adolf Hitler, who 
refused pay as Germany’s chancellor.  They should have reached for a more lucid 
comparison from America’s own past —  John F. Kennedy, who donated his check 
to charity. 
The road ahead is  not going to be easy for Democrats. There are 10 Senate 
Democrats up for  reelection in 2018 in states won by Trump. Their path is 
going to be made more  challenging by a failure to come to terms with the 
real reasons voters are  deserting the party in droves. 
Eric Fehrnstrom is a Republican political analyst  and media strategist, 
and was a senior adviser to Governor Mitt  Romney.

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