President Donald Trump’s chaotic first five months in office have driven his popularity ratings down, leading some Democrats to see Americans as coming around to their way of thinking. But this is a delusion because their party remains in a deep funk. The same CBS News polling this week that showed Trump’s approval at a new low — 36 percent — showed congressional Democrats were even less popular — 30 percent. After Republican Karen Handel’s victory in a House special election Tuesday in the Atlanta suburbs, Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, declared, “Our brand is worse than Trump.”
President Donald Trump’s chaotic first five months in office have driven his popularity ratings down, leading some Democrats to see Americans as coming around to their way of thinking. But this is a delusion because their party remains in a deep funk. The same CBS News polling this week that showed Trump’s approval at a new low — 36 percent — showed congressional Democrats were even less popular — 30 percent. After Republican Karen Handel’s victory in a House special election Tuesday in the Atlanta suburbs, Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, declared, “Our brand is worse than Trump.”
This might be an overreaction. As The Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. writes, while Republicans have won all four House special elections to replace Trump appointees, a case can be made that Democrats overperformed each time.
Nevertheless, comprehensive national polls continue to show the same underlying dynamic that has caused Democrats to hemorrhage seats at the local, state and federal level since 2010: Millions of Americans see the party as uninterested in their well-being — in Ryan’s words, “not being able to connect with the issues they care about.”
Normally, years of Republican gains would trigger a sober self-assessment among Democrats. In 1992 — after three presidential elections in which the GOP won 133 of 150 states — the centrist ticket of Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton and Tennessee Sen. Al Gore led the party back to the White House.
But that was a different, less polarized time. A quarter-century later, as The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat noted in a recent column, it’s hard to find a center bloc in U.S. politics any more. (This has troubling implications for Republicans as well as Democrats.) Among Democrats, this polarization has led the party base to abandon big-tent politics in favor of binary judgments that ascribe moral failings to those with even moderate disagreements about cultural issues.
America needs better from the Democratic Party. It needs a party that eagerly tackles the big issues of the day with realistic, pragmatic solutions. It needs a party that admits the Affordable Care Act is deeply flawed and that works to improve health care instead of just jeering the deeply flawed Republican replacement measure. It needs a party that actively seeks to reduce income inequality by changing education to focus on creating more 21st-century job skills and by making it easier for older workers to launch new careers instead of being left behind by technological change.
But most of all, America needs a party more devoted to getting things done than to hating Trump. Until that happens, Democrats will remain as unpopular as the president they loathe.
— The San Diego Union-Tribune