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In this edition: Biden gets a primary challenger, another Republican quits their primary, and the Re͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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October 27, 2023
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David Weigel

Dean Phillips, President Biden’s first elected challenger, takes the plunge

David Weigel

THE NEWS

CONCORD, N.H. – Dean Phillips entered the New Hampshire primary with six hours and 22 minutes to spare, surrounded by reporters, joking when he could.

Asked for the $1000 filing fee, he said he’d “brought small coins.” Asked why — seriously, though — he was waging a challenge to President Joe Biden, he said he was there to “celebrate” a “man of extraordinary empathy,” by retiring him.

“I’m the underdog, I’m the longshot, I’m at a massive disadvantage, and that’s why I love our country,” he told the crowd in the secretary of state’s office, as the Dean campaign bus and his vintage Government Repair Truck waited outside. The slogan “Make America Affordable Again,” briefly wrapped on the bus, had been removed; the candidate didn’t like the MAGA echo, and wanted to stay positive.

“My message isn’t age,” he added. “I work with 80-year olds who are plenty competent.”

Moments later, he remarked on just how long Biden had been around: “I think I was three years old when he became a United States senator.”

Phillips entered the race after pleading with better-known Democrats to read the polls and offer themselves up as a Biden alternative. When none did, he and anti-Trump ex-GOP strategist Steve Schmidt put together a New Hampshire-focused campaign — 119 town halls, endless access, no question out of bounds, and a first-day promise to put the state back in front of the Democratic calendar.

“I’m a Democrat who believes in tradition,” Phillips told NHJournal reporter Michael Graham.

The first hour of the campaign was light on policy — especially policy that separated Phillips from the president. Asked if he’d do anything differently than Biden in Gaza, he demurred: “I think this would be a terribly inappropriate time to comment,” he said, “during the war.” In remarks outside the state house, and to reporters inside, he said he’d secure the southern border and push back against anyone who said it was a race-baiting topic.

“For someone to accuse those who care about border security of being racist — I think those people are being inhumane,” he said, promising to represent the “exhausted majority” and open the White House to ordinary people.

Gathered to meet Phillips outside was a small group of voters — around two dozen, outnumbered by reporters, cameras, and the “Dean Team Road Crew” that blasted “Shake It Off” and “Don’t Stop Believin’” from a sound system and offered coffee from the government repair truck. The voters who’d come out for the show were overwhelmingly Democrats who agreed with the congressman’s tricky pitch: that Joe Biden was terrific, and had to go.

“I think Biden’s health is in serious question,” said Laura Miller, 58, who voted for Biden in both the 2020 election and primary. The potential for a Trump-Biden rematch made her “scared to death.” She knew “nothing” about Phillips, so she showed up.

DAVID’S VIEW

If you looked at polling on Friday — or, really, any day this year — the Phillips pitch was compelling. Democratic primary voters worry about nominating the president again. They want an alternative, preferably one born after the end of World War II.

This week’s Gallup update found Biden’s approval rating among Democrats at 75%, the lowest level of his presidency, as left-leaning critics of Israel denounce him. The 2020 Biden coalition has already fractured, and in New Hampshire, where Biden ran fifth in the last primary and the party has since gone through a fight over ending its first-in-the-nation status, it wasn’t that robust to start with.

Few Democratic strategists wanted to work on Phillips’ race — at best they win the upset of the century, at worst they’re blamed for weakening the president — and when the Congressman cast around for staff, he pulled from a grassroots group, Step Aside Joe, that spent all year trying to find a Biden challenger.

“It can be done,” Step Aside Joe organizer Norman Solomon told Semafor. “A Democrat in Congress can have the courage to engage in a democratic process known as a primary campaign for the party’s presidential nomination.”

Right: Phillips is running because no other Democrat with an elected office wanted to do this. The contempt I found for the Minnesotan all week was remarkable. Minnesota Democrats think he’s embarrassing himself; Black Democrats think he’s insulting them; strategists who worked on the party’s House campaigns think he’s glib and vainglorious.

“There’s absolutely no desire for this to happen,” said Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. “I like Dean. I think he’s a good member of Congress. I don’t understand why he’s doing this. It’s a short-term non-story.”

Phillips missed the filing deadline for Nevada’s primary, and representatives for the Iowa and South Carolina parties said that he had never reached out at all. New Hampshire offered any Biden challenger the best shot at an upset, because the president’s skipping it and not on the ballot — his supporters plan to write him in — and reporters won’t ignore the results just because the Democratic National Committee isn’t counting their delegates for breaking with their new calendar.

This weekend, Florida Democrats will hold their quadrennial convention and lay out their presidential ballot. Phillips, according to party chair Nikki Fried, had never contacted the party about getting on; Christale Spain, the chair of the South Carolina Democratic Party, said that Phillips chose to “disregard” the most racially diverse early primary state “in favor of competing in a state that will offer zero delegates.”

That, said Spain, was “saying the quiet part out loud” about Phillips’ potential constituency. “He’s an unserious candidate who doesn’t appear to care about what our majority Black Democratic electorate has to say.”

Long before this, Phillips had annoyed other Democrats by criticizing its strategy to tie Republicans to their most radical members. In 2021, he was among the Problem Solvers who broke the bipartisan infrastructure act from Build Back Better; in 2022, when the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee spent to help a MAGA candidate primary defeat Michigan Rep. Peter Meijer, who’d voted to impeach Trump, Phillips called it “dishonorable” and “dangerous.”

“It’s never been about the Democratic Party or the larger mission,” said Tim Persico, the executive director for the DCCC in that cycle. “It’s always been about Dean Phillips.”

In the run-up to this decision, Phillips wasn’t very specific about where he parted with Biden; he launched the campaign with no platform. Is that a problem? The Democrats who don’t want Biden to run for ideological reasons are vastly outnumbered by the ones who think he’s simply too old to do this again.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s approach to New Hampshire was to seek out independents and conservatives who might cross over, emphasizing his most anti-left views — an absolute disaster that tanked his numbers with Democrats and convinced him to leave the party. The test for Biden this time will be how he looks against a relatively like-minded challenger who just happens to be more than a quarter-century younger.

THE VIEW FROM OTHER PRIMARY CHALLENGERS

The two other Democrats running against Biden welcomed Phillips into the race, agreeing with his premise that a new nominee would probably out-perform the president.

“I’m pretty sure I’ll remain the Democrats’ best bet to defeat Donald Trump in 2024, but I welcome Dean Phillips into the mix so voters can hash that out for themselves,” Marianne Williamson told Semafor. “Democracy is a good thing, and anyone who feels moved to run should run. The American people should hear from any candidate with credible ideas on how to defeat fascism, end a chapter of our history riddled with economic injustice, and begin a new era of possibility for the average American.”

Cenk Uygur said he was “very happy” to see Phillips enter the race, and hoped that “a dozen Democratic governors follow him.” He’d told Semafor last week that he wanted to win — and, in the process, set a precedent that naturalized citizens could run for president — but expected to see more Democrats enter the race if he got traction.

“Mr. 37% has got to be tested in the primaries before Democratic voters become convinced he’s our strongest fighter,” said Uygur, referring to the Gallup poll. “And come on, does anyone believe that? So, would Dean Phillips do better than Biden against Trump? Who wouldn’t?”

NOTABLE

  • For ABC News, Brittany Shepherd surveys the Black Democrats who find the Phillips campaign insulting; Mississippi Rep. Bennie Thompson called it “divisive” and “disrespectful to a large population and support base for the Democratic Party.”
  • In the Atlantic, Tim Alberta spends some quality time with Phillips and strategist Steve Schmidt, explaining their strategy: After a win in New Hampshire, the “slingshot of coverage would be forceful enough to make Phillips competitive in South Carolina, then Michigan.”
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States of Play

Tennessee. Voters in Franklin, a Nashville exurb that’s trended left, rejected a far-right mayoral candidate by a landslide on Tuesday. Mayor Ken Moore beat alderwoman Gabrielle Hanson by 60 points, after weeks of investigations by local TV reporter Phil Williams revealed her support from white supremacists, her past arrest for promoting prostitution, and how she’d pretended that a 2016 photo of women having dinner in Chicago was a gathering of her “executive women’s club.” A slate of other far-right candidates, running with Hanson, lost their races.

Georgia. A Republican-drawn congressional map was thrown out by a federal district court, a victory for plaintiffs who argued that new lines that eliminated a Democratic seat near Atlanta had violated the Voting Right Act. Gov. Brian Kemp called a special session, after Thanksgiving, to redraw the maps and resubmit them.

North Carolina. Democratic Rep. Jeff Jackson entered the 2024 race for attorney general, confirming speculation that he’d seek statewide office again after the GOP majority in Raleigh gerrymandered his seat. “I am the last person corrupt politicians want to see as Attorney General because I don’t care about what party they’re in,” he said in a TikTok video, calling the new Republican gerrymander — which will turn at least three competitive House seats into safe GOP seats — corrupt. Republicans haven’t elected an attorney general in the state since the 19th century; GOP Rep. Dan Bishop, whose seat borders Jackson’s, is already running.

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Ads
Nikki Haley/YouTube

SFA Fund, “DeSantis is Lying Because He’s Losing.” For nearly two weeks, Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis have traded shots over his false accusation that she wants to bring Gazan refugees to America. Citing Semafor and other outlets to debunk that, Haley’s super PAC hits DeSantis over his House record — his vote for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which Trump attacked first five months ago.

Friends of Stephen A. Zappala Jr., “Social Justice Experiment.” Progressive Democrat Matt Dugan defeated Allegheny County’s district attorney in the May primary. No Republican had won that office, in staunchly Democratic Pittsburgh and its suburbs, in decades. But Zappala won the GOP nomination as a write-in candidate, and his ad uses crime footage from Philadelphia and San Francisco to warn that “the same extremists who created this now want Pittsburgh to be their next social justice experiment.”

The Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, “Greetings.” Michigan voters legalized recreational marijuana in 2018, and Ohio voters could legalize it if they pass a ballot measure on Nov. 7. The “yes” side uses the story of Morenci, a Michigan town right past the Ohio border, to gently mock Ohioans for not getting in on this yet: “Michigan gets to keep all the tax revenue for schools, roads, and more.”

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Polls

With a few exceptions — DeSantis trips to Georgia and Texas, an upcoming Trump rally in Texas — the 2024 field hasn’t invested much in Super Tuesday states. There’s been no campaigning or paid advertising to move the numbers in Massachusetts. The result: Trump has a solid majority, and support for Trump alternatives has splintered as more candidates climbed into the ring. One-fifth of Republicans say DeSantis is their second choice, but 18% say the same of Haley, and one in eight Republicans currently supporting a Trump alternative say he could be their back-up candidate. (Just 8% of Massachusetts voters are registered Republicans, giving conservatives more clout inside the party.)

Democrats know that there’s a potential protest vote against the president. The people marching and protesting for a ceasefire in Gaza warn that “Genocide Joe” will lose their votes, and the election. But the risk to Biden is lower if most of the protests come in safely Democratic states. Biden is weaker here than he’s been in any New York poll, losing 16% of Democrats and 18% of liberals to third party candidates. Just 22% of independents support him. He leads anyway, because Democrats so decisively outnumber the rest of the electorate.

For three weeks Republicans agonized over their House speaker election, fretting that it made them look like “idiots.” When House Speaker Mike Johnson prevailed, Democrats moved quickly to highlight his most conservative views — opposition to gay marriage and the end of sodomy laws, support for austerity budgeting. How’s the GOP brand faring right now? We’ll find out something on Nov. 7; Biden won this seat by 29 points, Leonard has run as a moderate who doesn’t always agree with his party, and Amo is a center-left Democrat whose ads remind voters that he worked for Biden and Barack Obama.

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2024
Scott Olson/Getty Images)

White House. Conservative pundit Larry Elder dropped out of the GOP primary on Thursday, ending a six-month longshot campaign that foundered when he narrowly missed the first debate. (He filed an FEC complaint over his exclusion from the August debate in Milwaukee, which was unanswered when he quit.) On the way out, Elder urged Republicans to “unite behind Donald Trump to beat Joe Biden and fight back against Biden’s unprecedented election interference and the left’s destruction of America.” He’d previously warned that Trump might have alienated too many voters to be “electable.”

Nine Republicans remained in the race against Trump, and they spent the week responding to the Israel-Gaza war and the killing of 18 people in Lewiston, Maine; the gunman was still at large on Friday morning. Two candidates suggested that the government needed to do more to isolate dangerous people. “An involuntary commitment would have done the trick,” DeSantis told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on Thursday; in an earlier statement, Vivek Ramaswamy had called to “remove these violent, psychiatrically deranged people from their communities and be willing to involuntarily commit them.”

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Q&A
Scott Olson/Getty Images

Eight Republican presidential candidates are heading to Las Vegas this weekend for the Republican Jewish Coalition’s annual leadership summit. The last time they gathered at the Venetian, Donald Trump wasn’t there, Republicans were bitter about a mediocre midterm result, and there was plenty of visible interest from RJC members in an alternative candidate.

Things have changed. Trump is dominating polling of the GOP primary — and, for the first time, the meeting is being held as Israel is at war. Before Trump and seven other candidates address the room (one after another, with 20 minutes apiece, on Saturday), RJC political director Sam Markstein talked with Americana about what to expect.

Americana: Donald Trump is coming to this conference after criticizing Benjamin Netanyahu, saying he was “not prepared” for the Oct. 7 attack. Netanyahu got a rapturous response when he talked to the RJC, so how is Trump’s reaction going to play?

Sam Markstein: I do think that his speech is going to be very closely scrutinized, and that some of the other candidates might bring that up in their speeches. It wouldn’t surprise me. Everything is fair game. Last year, you were there — you saw the reception for Prime Minister Netanyahu. In Israel, from what I’ve seen, the response he’s getting has not been as warm as it was at RJC, given the ongoing crisis, but politics will wait until after the war is won and Hamas is destroyed.

Americana: You’re not expecting him to show up and get heckled for what he said, or anything like that?

Sam Markstein: No. Our leadership is so tuned in and knowledgeable on the issues. They focus a lot more on the concrete actions and steps that people took or are taking to remedy the situation, not just rhetoric. So, if you were to ask them, “do you think Donald Trump was pro-Israel?” they would say he’s the most pro-Israel president ever, and then give you a rundown of everything he did. while he was president.

Americana: Vivek Ramaswamy’s been criticized by Haley, and others, for saying that we might end aid to Israel if he makes peace in the region. He told Axios the other day that we should provide a “diplomatic Iron Dome” for Israel but “no money.” So, what do people want to hear from him?

Sam Markstein: We put out an open letter to Vivek, back over the summer, discussing this exact issue. Even though there’s this suggestion that Israel has the funds to quote “go shopping in the world’s arms market,” and doesn’t need U.S. assistance, the fact is that Israel spends about 85% of that money, of the aid it receives, in the United States. And because they spend the money here, we’ve developed a deep connection at every level — weapons, strategy, tactics, training, all that.

Finally: This is really not the time for us to take an action that will be universally perceived by Israel’s enemies as weakening the relationship. Talking about cutting off aid now is not a good idea. As far as the conference goes? It’s going to be interesting. This is the first time he’s ever come.

Americana: You’ve talked about the RJC funding the primary challenge that beat Steve King, and challenging Marjorie Taylor Greene? Is anyone stepping out of line?

Sam Markstein: The Republican Party is unequivocally and unapologetically standing shoulder to shoulder with Israel. Unfortunately, the other side cannot say the same. We’re very impressed with both the leadership in the Senate, the conference in the House — speaker drama to the side — as well as the presidential candidates. So, overall, yes, we’re very excited and proud of the unanimous Israel support in the GOP.

Americana: How would you rate the Biden administration’s response, so far?

Sam Markstein: We give Joe Biden good marks on his response to the crisis in Israel. I would also give good marks to Secretary of State Blinken. But there are plenty of folks in the administration, and plenty of folks on the Democratic side, who frankly have not lived up to what’s expected. I mean, can you imagine calling for a ceasefire in September of 2001? In tying the hands of our country in the fight against al Qaeda? This is the exact same thing. A ceasefire means that Hamas remains in power.

Americana: Is there any candidate coming to the RJC’s stage that wouldn’t be better for Israel, in this moment, than Biden?

Sam Markstein: Let’s see how the response continues from the Biden administration. He’s been strong so far. But as the ground invasion begins in earnest, when the really tough days begin, we’ll see how strong they are. If they think they’ve seen pressure from the far left, they haven’t seen anything yet. It’s just going to get more bloody, more messy, more chaotic, and then you’ll see who Israel’s real friends are.

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