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Biden beat Bernie but the battle between progressives and pragmatists still rages

The battle between Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders is over but the fight between progressive and pragmatic Democrats still rages. While support for Medicare For All and the Green New Deal define the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, the pragmatists favor the expansion of environmental protection and health insurance coverage in incremental steps. 

Primaries in New York and Kentucky this week will be true tests of strength between the two factions competing for control within the Democratic Party.

Biden prevailed against Sanders in the Democratic presidential race but candidates endorsed by the Vermont Senator pose major threats to mainstream Democrats in U.S. Senate primaries in Kentucky and in a closely contested primary for the House in the 16th congressional district in New York which includes parts of the Bronx and Westchester County.

Both progressive candidates are turning up the heat in polls against candidates who were once strong frontrunners. The fuel that is propelling Jamaal Bowman in New York and Charles Booker in Kentucky includes strong pushes from progressive icons, hostility towards the political establishment, missteps by the early leaders, a surge in support for African American candidates in the wake of George Floyd’s murder and a heightened sympathy for the Black Lives Matter movement. 

The House Democratic primary race in New York pits Rep. Eliot Engel, the chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, against Jamaal Bowman, a 44-year-old African American man and former middle school principal who grew up in poverty.

This is a heavy weight battle with Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and AOC in Bowman’s corner, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and former New York Senator Hillary Clinton backing Engel.

Engel appeared safe on his way to a 17th term in the House until he was caught on a hot mic saying, “if I didn’t have a primary, I wouldn’t care.”  

Former House Speaker Tip O’Neill used to say that “All politics is local” and Engel should have heeded his advice. He occupies a powerful position as the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, but he has left a vacuum locally, which Bowman has effectively filled. This could be a repeat of 2018 in New York’s 14th district, when an unknown Alexndria Ocasio Cortez came out of the dust to unseat incumbent Democratic Rep. Joe Crowley, who was on the fast track to become Speaker of the House of Representatives.

A long-term incumbent in troubled times, like Engel, who plays the power game in Washington, D.C., at the expense of his own district, has a political life expectancy shorter than the statue of a Confederate general.

As a committee chair, he is a powerful insider but his reputation as an absentee representative, his opponent’s high-octane endorsements and racial turmoil created an opening that Bowman has effectively filled.

The same formula for success has led to a surge in support for African American state Rep. Charles Booker against former Marine combat veteran Amy McGrath in the contest to nominate an opponent to challenge Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-K.y.) in November.

McGrath raised a ton of early money and gained the endorsement of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. But the frontrunner stumbled out of the gate when she announced her support for the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court and then retracted her endorsement.

In the last few weeks, Booker has gained ground on McGrath and gained the endorsements of the progressive power trio, Sanders, Warren and Ocasio-Cortez.

Booker and Bowman both appear to have what President George Herbert Walker Bush once called the “Big Mo”. Recent polls indicate that Booker and Bowman are ahead of their opponents. 

Wins by both Bowman and Booker would have profound national implications.

Democrats are likely to maintain control of the House, but victories by progressives like Bowman will strengthen the hand of the progressive caucus against the pragmatic Democratic majority. The GOP is in danger of losing its majority in the Senate; should Booker win over McGrath and beat McConnell in November, it could move the new Democratic majority in the upper chamber to the left. There will be another battle next Tuesday between Democratic Senate pragmatists and progressives in Colorado, in which former Gov. John Hickenlooper faces off against Andrew Romanoff in Colorado.

Primary victories by both African American candidates will showcase the power of Blacks in the Democratic Party and might ramp up the pressure on Biden to select an African American running mate. Victories by both candidates would also strengthen the hand of progressive Democrats as they deal with Biden for influence over his campaign, the party platform and his administration.

Finally, during a time of heightened racial tensions, there is a need for strong African American participation for the progressive movement to thrive. Biden beat the progressive icon, Sanders, for the Democratic presidential nomination because of the former vice president’s overwhelming support from Black primary voters.

An alliance between Black politicians — like Booker and Bowman — and the white liberals who supported Sanders is essential to the triumph of the progressive movement. 

Brad Bannon is a Democratic pollster and CEO of Bannon Communications Research. He is also the host of a radio podcast “Dateline D.C. With Brad Bannon” that airs on the Progressive Voices Network. Follow him on Twitter @BradBannon.

Tags 2020 election 2020 House elections 2020 primaries 2020 Senate elections Bernie Sanders Brett Kavanaugh Chuck Schumer Democrats down ballot Eliot Engel Elizabeth Warren Hillary Clinton incumbents Joe Biden Joe Crowley John Hickenlooper Mitch McConnell Pragmatist primaries progressives Republicans

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