Monday, August 26, 2019

A LITTLE HELP FROM YOUR FRIENDS (PART I)


OUR ADVICE FOR ELIZABETH WARREN, JULIAN CASTRO, AND KAMALA HARRIS

Recently we offered the field of 2020 Democratic candidates some general advice. We first urged that they stop attacking President Obama. Given his 95% approval rating among democrats, little good can come from assailing his time in office.  We urged that the candidates simplify their healthcare plans and fire at  Donald Trump,  while avoiding personal attacks on each other. We promised advice for individual candidates “later.” That time has arrived.

The debate in Houston September 12-13 will feature a smaller field because of tougher democratic party donor and polling criteria. How many candidates make the stage remains uncertain, but expect something like 13, not 20 as in Miami and Detroit, meaning the debate might require one day, not two.
We don’t know who’ll remain viable when voting starts next February, so we won’t try advising everybody. We've taken a  "top
four plus two” approach. Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Kamala Harris lead in almost every poll we’ve seen. We’re still in the campaign’s early stage, we projected two other candidates we think could have a shot. Somebody we didn’t pick (Cory Booker? Amy
Klobuchar
?) still might catch fire. For reasons we’ll discuss, our might-get-it-going candidates are the two Texans, Julian Castro and Beto O’Rourke. We start with Warren, Castro, and Harris and will follow up with Biden, O’Rourke, and Sanders.
 
Elizabeth Warren
Frankly, we don’t see much we can tell you. Since getting past that DNA test mistake at the beginning, you’ve run a nearly flawless campaign. You’ve become legendary for detailed policy proposals (“I’ve got a plan for that!”) and turned in two excellent debate performances. You’ve eschewed big donors yet raised plenty of money. One CNN commentator called you “the best athlete on the field.” Still, we have a few suggestions.

First, you must work harder at combatting the notion you’re a pointy-headed elitist Harvard professor who isn’t a regular person. You can accomplish that by talking more about your personal narrative in addition to those policy
proposals. You’re from Oklahoma, for crying out loud! You grew up with the everyday problems real people, especially women, face – paying for an education, taking care of children while pursuing a career, making ends meet on a limited salary. We suspect many people don’t know any of that. 


Second, we suggest you show some flexibility in your plans, especially health care.  If you get nominated all your proposals will face intense examination.  Make clear your broad health care goals, but spend less time on mechanics.  We hope you can indicate a willingess to adjust your plans if someone else has a better idea. 


Third, you must disabuse the nation of the idea you're a socialist.  Polls show many of your policy proposals, like the wealth tax, enjoy broad public support.  The media, in its perpetual horserace focus, lumps you with self-described Democratic Socialist Bernie Sanders. Senator, as we've written, you have some very capitalist ideas.  Socialism means governmental control of the means of production. You haven't advocated that, and you should take every opportunity you can for reminding people of that. 

Julian Castro
We identifiedy you as a possible party crasher because you performed well in both debates and your records suggests you have the right stuff for being President.  Unlike many of your
rivals, who've only been legislators, you have administrative experienc as housing secretary and as Mayor of San Antonio. So, what advice do we have for you? 

First, you must show you're more than a one-trick pony.  Immigration has been your debate
calling card, but you talk more about other things.  Your website offers interesting proposals on education, the economy, and policing.  Since you made the Houste debate state, talk more about those.

Second, when discusssing immigration, you can't come across as attacking President
Obama.  You sounded like that in Detroit when you went after Biden on deportations.  There's plenty you can challenge about Trump's immigration policies without an apparent assault on Barack Obama.  Though we understand your qualms about his deportation policies, you can't become President without the Obama coalition.
 
Kamala Harris
We find you the most frustrating candidate in the race. We’re attracted by the idea of a progressive woman of color as the
Democratic nominee. We have little difficulty with your 
policy positions though, even more than Senator Warren, you should simplify your health care approach because it’s too complex. Our biggest concern with you lies in your communication style. That could have more to do with you not getting nominated than any issue.

Despite being in the U.S. Senate only three years, you’ve forged a reputation as a tough inquisitor of Trump nominees. You effectively
utilized your prosecutorial
experience in making both Supreme Court pick Brett Kavanaugh and Attorney General designee Bill Barr squirm. In the Miami debate, you
employed those skills in a well-timed
attack on Biden over school integration, an attack he flubbed. This gave you a boost in the polls and had pundits talking about how you’d proved you can stand on the debate stage against Trump.

All well and good, but you should stop being a prosecutor 24/7. We’ve seen that style in interviews and other appearances and it doesn’t work. You come off at times as “snarky” and unpleasant. That style may work in California, but it will fail in the heartland. As trial lawyers, we learned there comes a time
for leaving the cross-examination persona in the courtroom. Your poll numbers dropped after both debates as the glow of your performances faded. You must understand interaction with voters and media in a presidential campaign occurs outside a court or congressional committee hearing room.

NEXT: Biden, O’Rourke, Sanders