Rep. Joe Kennedy (D-MA) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) |
If you have no idea what I'm talking about, let me illuminate you-this morning, Speaker Pelosi endorsed in one of the last competitive congressional races of the cycle, in Massachusetts for Senate. Pelosi generally does not get involved in competitive congressional campaigns, other than to endorse incumbents (she did so recently in the competitive MN-5 race on the behalf of Ilhan Omar, for example). Pelosi always supports House incumbents in primaries-it's the policy of the DCCC, to the chagrin of some progressive challengers who were angered by the so-called "blacklisting" of consultants who work for challengers against House incumbents. This policy makes sense for Pelosi particularly since all of her power as Speaker comes from her caucus. Someone like Henry Cuellar or Dan Lipinski might be to the right of their district, and Pelosi's politics may more naturally match their primary opponents, but both these men voted for Pelosi as Speaker, with the clear understanding that she would not abandon them in their hour-of-need.
In some ways, she's doing the same thing with Joe Kennedy. Kennedy is a member of Pelosi's caucus-he voted for her in January of 2019 to become Speaker, and as a result she's doing the same thing she would normally do. While Ed Markey served for decades with Pelosi in the House, he's not a member of her caucus anymore, and she doesn't have the incentive to keep him happy in the way that she does Kennedy. But while I understand the logic here, I do think it's inappropriate to go against an incumbent like Markey in this way, because it puts House incumbents in a unique position that isn't afforded to other liberal challengers, and enforces a process that values elitism rather than a level playing-field.
Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Pelosi |
This sort of stepping over-the-line comes at a perilous point for House Democrats. In 2020, eight incumbents have so far lost reelection in primaries, the most for a non-redistricting year since Watergate; three of those incumbents were Democrats, none of which was involved with a scandal, and in the case of all three the candidates ran largely to the left of the challenger (as well as on constituent service issues). It is becoming clear with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, as well as these three challengers (Marie Newman, Cori Bush, & Jamaal Bowman), that there is some appetite to throw out longtime incumbents for not being progressive enough. It becomes more difficult for me to buy into the Speaker/DCCC's arguments to protect incumbents against these challengers when they're essentially now backing a similar sort of challenger in the Senate. Particularly considering that Markey is the rare incumbent who has won the backing of this movement (the Markey supporters seem to mirror the same people who backed Bernie Sanders, AOC, and Newman/Bush/Bowman thanks to his more left-leaning policies, particularly in terms of the Green New Deal), this feels like it will sow more, not less, unrest in the movement who are clamoring for new leadership in sharp blue seats in the 2020's, running counter to the DCCC's belief in backing incumbents. I've largely stood behind the DCCC in this belief, but after today I have to question the rationale-if the House Democrats are willing to bend their rules against someone like Markey to help one of their own, I don't understand why resources or political capital should be expended on people like Eliot Engel or Lacy Clay who are in the same position.
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