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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDemocratic Party Machinery Shows Rust
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A tepid economy and President Barack Obamas sinking approval ratings contributed to some of the Democratic losses last fall. The setbacks also revealed a withering of the campaign machinery built by Mr. Obamas team more than seven years ago. While Democrats held the White House, Republicans have strengthened their hand in statehouses across the U.S.
Democrats maintain a significant electoral college advantage as shifting U.S. demographics tilt their way. This spring, a Pew Research Center analysis found that 48% of Americans either identify as Democrats or lean Democratic, compared with 39% who identify with Republicans or lean Republican. But many Democrats worry that GOP success capturing state and local offices will erode that advantage before they have a chance to rebuild.
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After two presidential victories, Mr. Obama presides over a Democratic Party that has lost 13 seats in the U.S. Senate and 69 in the House during his tenure, a net loss unmatched by any modern U.S. president.
Democrats have also lost 11 governorships, four state attorneys general, 910 legislative seats, as well as the majorities in 30 state legislative chambers. In 23 states, Republicans control the governors office and the legislature; Democrats, only seven.
Such losses help shape the future: An ousted state lawmaker doesnt run for Congress; a failed attorney general candidate loses a shot at the governors office. As a result, the flow of fresh political talent rising to statewide and national prominence in the years ahead wont be as robust as Democrats hope.
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In few places are the Democrats troubles more apparent than in Ohio, the perennial presidential battleground state twice won by Mr. Obama. Ohio Democrats lost every statewide contest in the November midterms, allowing the GOP to build supermajorities in both legislative chambers... The losses in Ohio are the consequences of failing to develop a strong corps of local officeholders and the campaign machinery to support them, Democrats in the state say.
One reason Democrats have struggled to recruit candidates for higher office is that the pipeline has been choked off by a redistricting process dominated by the GOP. In Ohio, a five-member state committee made up of elected officials draws the district lines for state legislative seats that serve as a springboard to higher office.
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Without an inspiring candidate at the top of the ticket, Democrats in the 2014 midterm elections couldnt rely on a broad network of volunteers, the kind of force that boosted Mr. Obama to wins in Ohio in 2008 and 2012. The state party mustered three paid field staff members; two years earlier, with Mr. Obamas re-election bid in full swing, the number was 600.
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Democrats are quick to say they will rebound, just as the GOP bounced back from setbacks in 2006 and 2008. At the same time, some Democrats say the party cant ignore its state-level defeats. We have a little bit of blue in the West Coast. A little bit of blue in the Northeast, and occasional blue elsewhere. But, boy, its a bright red map in all of those big, square states, said former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle. Thats where I do worry about recruiting and building a bench and finding ways to connect with real voters. Were not doing a very good job of that.
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Some Democrats blame Mr. Obama, saying his political machine, Organizing for Action, was good at electing him president but has done little for other candidates.
That did hurt the Democratic Party, because a lot of money went into OFA that might have ordinarily gone into the Democratic National Committee, said Howard Dean, a former DNC chairman.
The Obama team basically ignored the party, said Ed Rendell, former governor of Pennsylvania and former chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Mr. Obamas defenders said he has left a lasting legacy by modernizing campaigns with data and technology.
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/democratic-party-machinery-shows-rust-1437439089
Agnosticsherbet
(11,619 posts)Of the Republican party.
pscot
(21,024 posts)who actually gave a damn about trying to build the party. Which is why we go into next year with no bench strength.
uponit7771
(90,370 posts)question everything
(47,568 posts)after the wins in 2008 when we had both the White House and Congress. Even for barely a year.
Warpy
(111,416 posts)First, governors are elected in off years in a lot of states, meaning only the compulsive voters bother voting. More and more, it's right wing churches doing GOTV. The Democrats haven't bothered.
Second, the message of the party in these off years has been "business as usual," trying not to scare conservatives away. That means the base, getting killed by business as usual, has not seen a reason to go out on a cold November day to vote.
The party is overdue for a shakeup, a big one. One hopes it is coming.
still_one
(92,492 posts)question everything
(47,568 posts)these are facts and some of us have discussed these on these pages.
Why, do you think, O'Malley is the only Democratic candidate younger than 60 while the Republican field is full of next generation ones?
It is too bad that often people here choose to ignore the facts instead of looking at them square in the eye - regardless of who the messenger is.