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Democrats seek to keep focus on corruption, not impeachment
By BILL BARROW, Associated Press
CHICAGO (AP) — Democrats aren’t ready to embrace the I-word.
A day after separate legal hammers dropped nearly simultaneously on two for- mer members of President Donald Trump’s inner circle, Democrats in Washington and across the country faced a delicate balance as they sought to take political advantage of his growing troubles without alienating moderates and independents turned off by talk of impeachment.
Instead of calling for Trump’s removal, corruption is the new buzzword in Dem- ocratic circles. They’re not just pointing to former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s conviction on tax evasion and other charges and longtime fixer Michael Cohen’s plea deal implicating the president in an illegal campaign finance scheme. They’ve also got the indictment Tuesday of a second Republican member of Congress.
As the party faithful gathered in Chi- cago on Wednesday for the Democratic National Committee’s summer meeting, Chairman Tom Perez ticked off the grow- ing list of legal troubles for Trump and other Republicans. An “out-of-control” situation, he said, demands that voters “put up guardrails” by returning Democrats to power.
With less than three months before the midterms, that could be a potent political argument. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who could return to the speaker’s chair if Democrats pick up at least 23 new seats in November, was in her home state of California, where she recalled that Dem- ocrats won the House in 2006 by hammer- ing Republican corruption in the wake of the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal.
“This time, the culture of corruption, cronyism and incompetence is so perva- sive that it’s in the White House,” Pelosi told the San Francisco audience Wednes- day at the nonpartisan Public Policy Insti- tute of California.
Afterward, she said Democrats “can’t be political” in talking about impeachment. Separately, she sent her House colleagues a
letter encouraging them to keep emphasiz- ing economic issues, even as she pledged to “hold the president and his administra- tion accountable” by insisting that Con- gress “seek the truth.”
Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts sought her own nuanced position. The potential 2020 presiden-
tial candidate, who built her brand as an economic populist, unveiled sweeping anti-corruption proposals hours before the legal developments were announced Tuesday. As they consumed the news cycle Wednesday, she released years of her own personal tax returns — something Trump has refused to do.
The varied approaches reflect Demo- crats’ political and electoral conundrum. Opposition to Trump has flourished across the political left, already giving Democrats key electoral victories since his inaugura- tion. The party is competing on multiple fronts: gaining control of the House, at least maintaining a closely divided Senate and making inroads in governorships and state legislatures. All of those goals could be elusive without at least some support from independents and moderate Republi- cans, especially those who live in suburban areas and who dislike Trump but aren’t eager to watch Congress go through the di- visive and messy process of impeachment.
“We win on bread-and-butter issues. That’s what people will vote on,” said Min- nesota Democratic Chairman Ken Martin, who counts four competitive House races in his state. Martin noted Hillary Clinton’s decision in 2016 to focus most of her paid advertising on Trump’s negatives. “We see how that worked out?” he said.
In Ohio, a presidential battleground that Trump won by nearly 10 percentage points, state Democratic Chairman David Pepper argued Democrats have momen- tum by running on local issues, even if they can be traced back to Washington.
“Good candidates don’t get sucked into the daily vortex of Washington,” Pepper said. “We’ve spent months telling Ohio voters that these Republicans have voted to
take away their health care, protections for pre-existing conditions and now they want to take away Medicaid expansion. ... Why deviate from that to talk about something no one in Ohio controls?”
Of course, in some elections, localizing the argument could mean embracing a discussion about Trump and corruption.
“I’ve got a governor who’s joined at the hip with Donald Trump, so hell yeah,
I want us talking about it,” said South Carolina Democratic Party Chairman Trav Robertson. He was referring to Henry Mc- Master, who endorsed Trump in the GOP presidential primary and then accepted the president’s help in a tough gubernatorial runoff this year.
Zac Petkanas, a Democratic operative and frequent Trump critic on cable televi- sion, offered another reason for Democrats to be cautious: Voters aren’t ready for impeachment.
“Voters are tuning in for the big things” in the investigation, he said. “And there will be more of those. ... Democrats should advocate protecting the investigation and finding the truth. But you can’t be seen as prejudging.”
It’s worth noting that, for now, progres- sive activists aren’t necessarily looking
to punish Democrats who don’t push impeachment. Emily Phelps, a spokes- woman for Indivisible, noted that the grassroots group first endorsed the notion of impeachment proceedings when Trump fired James Comey as FBI director. But “our ultimate goal is not just to take down Trump,” she said, “but to take down the forces that allowed him to rise. (And) to be successful, we have to win elections
and derail Trump’s agenda in Congress to diminish his power.”
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Associated Press writers Juliet Williams in San Francisco and Lisa Mascaro in Washington contributed to this report.
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Follow Barrow on Twitter at https://twit- ter.com/BillBarrowAP
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