Key Question for Dems: Is the New Boss the Same as the Old Boss?
Key Question for Dems: Is the New Boss the Same as the Old Boss? · The Fiscal Times

In the boom-and-bust cycle of American political parties, the Democrats are at what can only be seen as the nadir of a bust. Completely shut out of power in the nation’s capital, and facing greatly diminished influence in state government, the party has spent the three and a half months since the wipeout of the November elections in an internal debate about how to move forward.

Over the weekend, the first tentative answer to that question came with the election of former Labor Secretary Tom Perez to chair the Democratic National Committee. The party, despite broad repudiation at the polls in November, has decided not to stray too far from its current ideological orientation. A majority of the voting members of the DNC rejected a more leftward direction embodied by Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison, who came in second in the balloting.

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Perez is closely associated with Hillary Clinton, who lost the presidential election to Donald Trump in November, and for that reason was seen by some as too closely tied to a leadership structure that failed the party in 2016.

On Sunday, in appearances on multiple talk shows, Perez admitted that the party had failed to reach as broad an audience as it needed to in the election, and said he would pursue a new strategy of local engagement, promising to be active in “every ZIP code.”

“We have to rebuild our party in the 50 states and territories and that’s exactly what we are going to do,” he told Chuck Todd on NBC’s Meet the Press. “We also have to redefine our mission. We not only elect the President of the United States, but we elect people from the school board to the Senate and everywhere in between.”

On ABC’s This Week, he promised to “build strong capacity to elect Democrats up and down the ticket.”

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It was more of the same on CNN: “We have to make sure we’re out there everywhere talking about how we’re the party of good job creation, the party of middle-class security, we’re the party of inclusion. we believe our diversity is our greatest strength. When we lead with these values I believe we succeed.”

If the promise to make the Democrats compete everywhere in the country sounds familiar, it should. In 2005, after George W. Bush was reelected to the presidency and Republicans solidified their hold on both the House and the Senate, a demoralized party turned to Howard Dean, the former Vermont governor, whose “50-State” strategy helped the party rebound, taking control of both Houses of Congress in 2006 and the White House in 2008.