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When Kyrsten Sinema campaigned for the Senate as “an independent voice for Arizona,” her volunteers didn’t take that literally. Perhaps they heard what they wanted to hear. Ana Doan, a retired teacher, thought Sinema would bring fresh energy to Washington as Arizona’s first openly LGBTQ senator. Devina Alvarado, a young Costco forklift driver, thought Sinema would defend women’s rights from Donald Trump. Michael (identified by his middle name to avoid retaliation) admired that Sinema had made it out of poverty after experiencing homelessness as a child, as he did. Each from a different corner of Arizona, they were all proud to have volunteered to get Sinema elected, proud of the doors they’d knocked and calls they’d made, proud to have had her glossy purple-and-yellow literature scattered in their home or on the floor of their car. But their pride had curdled long before Sinema announced she was leaving the Democratic Party last Friday.
So far, both the White House and Sinema’s Senate colleagues have been conciliatory, praising her legislative skill and acting as if little will change following her switch. (Sinema will still caucus with the Democrats.) Although her influence will diminish in a forthcoming 51–49 chamber, Democrats can ill afford to make Sinema a pariah. When reached for comment about the switch, Sinema’s press secretary told me in an email, “Kyrsten’s approach remains the same from when she first ran for Senate,” and directed me to a sleek video Sinema released on Friday: “I’m gonna be the same person I’ve always been,” the senator said.
But many of her most dedicated supporters don’t see things that way. I spoke with dozens of Sinema’s former volunteers from across Arizona, some of whom I managed in 2018 as a field organizer for the Arizona Democratic Party. What they’ve described to me is a feeling more raw and pained than mere disagreement over policies. Arizona Democrats are used to that; many have Republicans and independents in their family. They’re used to talking through differences. What they cannot forgive is the feeling that Sinema was not straight with them.
Doan, the teacher, had worked on a lot of campaigns in the border town of Nogales. She had just retired when Sinema announced her run, and she threw herself into the Senate race. Sinema was smart, well-spoken, a member of the LGBTQ community, and a fundraising powerhouse. In previous elections, Doan had begged the state party to do more phone banking in Spanish, and she didn’t like that phone bankers rushed older Latino voters who had questions about important issues. Things were different on Sinema’s campaign. Doan could have phone-bank lists brought to the houses of other volunteers, so they could make calls from the comfort of their own home.
She was thrilled when Sinema won, but her excitement was short-lived. Sinema, in her view, started spending too much time with the Big Business people who had funded her campaign and not enough time among the working-class folks who’d made phone calls for her. Doan told me it hurt to watch her senator block positive initiatives that other Democrats wanted to pass. “She made an idiot out of me, and I made an idiot out of all the people I spoke to,” Doan said. She said she wished Sinema had run as an independent in 2018, so people knew who she really was.
Alvarado, the forklift driver, had never volunteered on a political campaign before. She canvassed for Sinema a few days a week after finishing work and on the weekends too, always wearing her pink Planned Parenthood shirt. Alvarado couldn’t believe it when Sinema said she thought protecting the filibuster was essential to protecting women’s rights. When Sinema comes up in conversation these days, Alvarado’s fiancé teases her. “He knows I’m super salty that I volunteered for her,” she told me. “I for sure look forward to canvassing for her opponent.”
Michael considered Sinema to be a personal hero when he started volunteering on her campaign in Phoenix. A few years before, he’d been homeless, just as she had been. But Michael felt betrayed in March of 2021, when Sinema voted against raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour. “Hunger changes people,” he wrote to me in an email. “It made me want to make no one feel that way. I’m guessing it made her protective of what she has.”
Some of the people with the fewest illusions about Sinema were the people furthest away from her. Missa Foy, the chair of the Navajo County Democrats, didn’t even vote for Sinema in the primary. In 2018, she knocked on more than 1,000 doors for a ballot initiative in Navajo County, one of Arizona’s most rural regions. (You can’t walk down the sidewalk to the next house on your list in Navajo—you get back in your truck and drive there.) The voters Foy spoke with would offer her dinner and shelter from the cold, and listen to why they should oppose programs such as expanding school vouchers. Although Foy passed out the Democratic slate of candidates, with Sinema on top, she didn’t talk her up. Foy told me she was grateful for all the things that Democrats, including Sinema, were able to pass through the Senate, but she didn’t think Sinema’s new party preference was earth-shattering stuff. “Our mission is the same as before this news broke,” she said.
When Sinema visited Hopi sovereign land in 2018, Karen Shupla was impressed by her familiarity with water rights and other issues important to Native Americans. A tribal-elections registrar, Shupla is scrupulously neutral, but she does volunteer hundreds of hours to make sure elections run smoothly in a region that Democrats carry by more than two to one. She was unsurprised when the Hopi and other tribes supported Sinema by broad margins, and she was indifferent about Sinema becoming an independent. “It depends on how she deals with Natives from here on out,” Shupla told me. “We don’t want to be guessing which side she’s going to take on matters.”
The volunteer I spoke with over the weekend who still has the most affection for Sinema was the one who knew her personally. Martha “Marty” Bruneau met Sinema when the two of them ran for different seats in the Arizona state legislature in 2000. “I never ran again, and she never lost again,” Bruneau told me. The two of them stayed in touch. Bruneau thinks her fellow progressive Democrats have been exasperating and believes they put too much pressure on Sinema, who votes with Biden more than 90 percent of the time. She told me she doesn’t get Sinema’s reputation for being unapproachable. When I asked her if she’d support Sinema over a Democratic challenger, Bruneau praised Sinema’s record and said she’d have to look at both candidates. This was, in dozens of interviews, the closest that any of Sinema’s former volunteers came to saying they would vote for her again.
Some believe that Sinema is becoming an independent because she can’t win against a primary challenger. Campaigning as an independent worked in Alaska for Lisa Murkowski in 2010, and in 2006 for Joe Lieberman in Connecticut—but they were running in deep-red and deep-blue states, where their party was dominant enough to form a coalition with voters from other parties. Arizona is purple, with roughly equal portions of Republicans, independents, and Democrats. Sinema positioned herself as a lone politician capable of uniting her state, but if she is reelected, it will likely be by forcing an expensive and vicious election.
As David A. Graham wrote in The Atlantic last week, Sinema’s move is flashy but comes from a place of weakness. She seems vulnerable to a challenge from not only the left but also the center. Arizona just elected a full slate of establishment Democrats in a year far less favorable than 2018, when Sinema won her seat. It’s unclear if the campaign arm of the Senate Democrats will even support her next time around. What’s more, 2024 is a presidential-election year in an era when split-ticket voting is rare. Although Sinema is an incumbent, her sour relationship with the Arizona Democratic Party means she will not benefit from party infrastructure, for fundraising or mobilization. They don’t know what to expect from her, and she feels no obligation to explain publicly what she believes, or why she believes it. That’s her prerogative. But it’s also the prerogative of people who lent Sinema their time and reputation to now turn against her. In bitter irony, the volunteers who cut their teeth working to get her elected may be among those working the hardest to defeat her.
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Nathan Kohrman
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Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s switch from Democrat to independent won’t change much in the Senate, but it has significant implications for 2024.
Sinema will continue voting with Democrats most of the time. She’ll maintain her chairmanship of two subcommittees, both of which are standard assignments for a first-term senator. Republicans are no closer to having a majority in 2023 than they were at 5:59 a.m. Eastern time Friday morning, before stories announcing her decision went live on CNN and Politico.
“The reality is, not much has changed. I’m going to keep doing what I do,” Sinema told Arizona Morning News, claiming she had never attended Democratic Party caucus meetings or lunches.
Other Democrats agreed. “Senator Sinema has been an independent for all intents and purposes,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) said on CNN shortly after the news broke.
But the GOP might be a bit closer to a majority following the 2024 elections. Sinema’s decision makes an already brutal 2024 Senate map even more excruciating for Democrats, who now face decisions about how to handle a senator who tanked major pieces of President Joe Biden’s agenda but was critical to rescuing other parts.
Sinema insisted her party switch had little to do with politics ― she has not even announced whether she will run for reelection in 2024. But the implications are obvious, even if the ultimate impact might remain unclear until Election Day two years from now.
As a Democratic incumbent, Sinema would have been guaranteed the protection of the well-funded, well-oiled political apparatus controlled by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.). Both the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and Senate Majority PAC, which combined to raise more than a half-billion dollars in the 2022 cycle, would have spent on her behalf in a competitive general election and likely in a primary as well.
Senate Majority PAC did not respond to a request for comment on Sinema’s party switch, and Senate Democrats have not yet selected a chair for next cycle’s DSCC.
But those two groups typically don’t support any Democratic challenge to the other independents who align with the caucus, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and Maine Sen. Angus King. While both break with other Democrats on occasion ― King played a major role in blocking Biden’s first nominee to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, for instance ― neither aggravates the party nearly as much as Sinema. Both are also long-time political leaders in their home state, meaning any challenge is doomed anyway.
Elizabeth Frantz for The Washington Post via Getty Images
Sinema, for all her aspirations of recreating the coalition that backed the late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), is not yet a hometown hero on that level. The most recent polling judging her popularity, an AARP survey conducted by a bipartisan duo of pollsters in October, found just 37% of Arizona voters had a favorable opinion of her and 54% had a negative opinion.
Sinema’s numbers were matched only by Blake Masters, the Republican venture capitalist who lost to Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) in November. Kelly, Gov.-elect Katie Hobbs (D), GOP gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake, Biden and former President Donald Trump were all more popular than Sinema with Arizona voters.
Switching parties allows Sinema to avoid a brutal primary challenge, or at least make one much more difficult to pull off. If another Democrat decided to jump into the race, they could risk splitting the vote in the general election and handing Republicans the seat in 2024.
Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), who likely would have run a primary campaign against Sinema, now faces the conundrum of becoming a spoiler candidate if he decides to go through with it. National Democrats will also have to choose whether to back Sinema and discourage other candidates from running against her.
In a statement Friday morning, Gallego did not sound inclined to back down.
“We need senators who will put Arizonans ahead of big drug companies and Wall Street donors,” he said. “Whether in the Marine Corps or in Congress, I have never backed down from fighting for Arizonans.”
Gallego said Sinema’s party switch was another example of her “putting her own interests ahead of Arizona’s.”
Functionally, Sinema’s announcement will have little to no impact in the Senate. While her desk is located on the Democratic side of the Senate floor, she spends most of her time on the Republican side, where she is friendly with many GOP senators, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). She rarely attends Democratic caucus meetings, generally avoids partisan messaging events and only endorsed Hobbs a few weeks before this year’s election.
Sinema has been a key bipartisan dealmaker in the past two years, helping negotiate and steer through several notable bills into law. Most recently, she helped win over 12 Republican yes votes for legislation codifying protections for same-sex and interracial marriages. She also successfully pushed for major infrastructure and gun law reforms.
Progressives, who largely lined up behind her Senate bid in 2018, have found much to complain about her time in the Senate, however. She opposed eliminating the filibuster, including to pass voting rights legislation. And she helped block major progressive priorities, including a $15 minimum wage and efforts to close a tax loophole benefiting rich investors.
And the party’s left flank, emboldened by statewide victories in a GOP-leaning midterm year, is very explicitly not behind her ahead of 2024. Primary Sinema, a group formed in 2021 to back a prospective challenger, said its goal of defeating her remains unchanged.
“Today, Kyrsten Sinema told us what we’ve already known for years: she’s not a Democrat, and she’s simply out for herself,” the group said in a statement. “For the last year, we’ve been laying the groundwork to defeat Kyrsten Sinema because Arizonans deserve a Senator who cares about them, and not special interests. In one way, Sinema just made our jobs easier by bowing out of a Democratic primary she knew she couldn’t win. Now, we’ll beat her in the general election with a real Democrat.”
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Washington — Democrats took a major step forward to shake up the early state calendar for the presidential primary process and make South Carolina first to vet the party’s candidates for president.
The Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee (RBC) gathered in Washington this week, where they voted to approve recommendations put forward by President Joe Biden that included making South Carolina the first primary contest.
The president’s proposal came after South Carolina delivered him a decisive and pivotal primary victory in 2020 and launched him on a path to the White House. Under the recommendations, South Carolina would hold its primary on Feb. 3, 2024. The window for early voting states would also include New Hampshire and Nevada with contests the following week. Georgia would be fourth, and Michigan would go fifth.
At the start of the meeting Thursday, RBC co-chair Minyon Moore read a letter sent to committee members by Mr. Biden Wednesday and laid out the proposed early voting order.
“I agree with the president that this is a bold window that reflects the values of our party, and it is a window worth fighting for,” Minyon said of the proposal.
Following the vote on the recommendations, a visibly emotional DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, a South Carolina native, addressed all members praising their work.
“This proposal reflects the best of our party as a whole. And it will continue to make our party and our country stronger, and it will elevate the voices that are the backbone of the party, ” Harrison said.
While many of the committee members praised the proposal, not everyone is happy with it. For the first time in more than 50 years, officials are recommending that Iowa not hold the first contest, after the Iowa caucuses launched the nomination process every four years since 1972.
“We changed our process significantly and I just feel like we’ve received no credit for that,” said Scott Brennan, a member representing Iowa on the RBC. He said it had been his hope that Iowa would remain in the early voting window, especially if it were expanded to five states, and he was surprised that Georgia and Michigan were both added instead.
While New Hampshire would go second along with Nevada, it would lose its first primary status, which is set in state law.
“We are disappointed of course with what the recommended calendar would look like. New Hampshire has a statute, and we will be abiding by our law,” said RBC member Joanne Dowdell representing New Hampshire.
Moving up into the set of early voting states would be Georgia and Michigan, two major general election battlegrounds that helped deliver a victory to President Biden in his race against former President Trump in 2020 when they flipped from red to blue. Giving Michigan more prominence in the presidential election process has been an ongoing effort by Democrats for 30 years.
Excited about the prospect of becoming an early state, RBC member Ray Curry, of Michigan, sees the move as a praiseworthy step forward.
“It’s also been acknowledged that Michigan’s diverse community is a key piece and is central to what the true makeup of the U.S. actually looks like at this time. It’s a different time in history,” Curry said.
Legislation to move up the primary date from March to February passed in the state earlier this week and is making its way through the state House.
The committee has been working on the process since last year. While the recommendations have been made by the committee – the process for finalizing the first states to hold contests in the Democratic presidential primary is still far from over. The RBC recommendations will now go to the full DNC for ratification early next year.
Each state’s primary is set differently. In South Carolina, it is set by the party chair. In New Hampshire, Nevada, and Michigan, the state government runs the primaries. In Georgia, it’s established by the secretary of state. In order to be in the early window, each state must show the committee it is taking the steps necessary to meet the waiver for its designated early contest by Jan. 5 ahead of the full DNC ratification. States that do not meet the DNC’s certification deadline will have to go later and not in the early window. If states go outside the regular window without an early waiver, they face penalties including the automatic loss of half their delegates, and candidates will not be allowed to campaign in those states.
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I climbed out of the C train station on my way home and there, to my surprise, was Hakeem Jeffries, standing by a small folding card table. “Congress on your corner” read a banner. The image has stuck with me since that evening in 2014—not simply because it was canny retail politics, but because Jeffries was basically alone at the Brooklyn intersection, smiling and fielding any and all comments from constituents who included residents of desperately poor housing projects and of fabulously expensive brownstones. That moment is a pretty good metaphor for his rapid rise from New York state assemblyman to, as of Wednesday, the House Democratic minority leader and the successor to the legendary Nancy Pelosi.
Jeffries has long been a fascinating, somewhat contradictory mix of down-to-earth, crafty, independent, and unifying. But he’ll have immense shoes to fill. Pelosi, who served 20 years at the helm of the House Democratic caucus, was extraordinarily effective in bending House Democrats to her will by knowing when to reward and when to punish members. Does Jeffries have the ability to push similar buttons?
There are plenty of talented, ambitious Democratic House members. But Jeffries is the one who has emerged to succeed Pelosi because he checks so many boxes at once. He’s an expert in the arcane congressional rules needed to pass or kill legislation. He’s able to translate complex concepts into language digestible by the general public—and an equally adept listener. He is 52 years old and Black at a time when his party’s leadership needs to become younger and less white. And Jeffries, during his 10 years in the House, has handled a series of increasingly high-profile assignments deftly, including serving as one of managers of the (first) impeachment case against President Donald Trump. There’s also the grubby reality that Jeffries, a charismatic presence particularly in small groups, should be a potent campaign fundraiser as Democrats seek to regain the majority in 2024. “He’ll do very well with the Democratic donor crowd—and for that matter, the Republican crowd too, at least personally,” says Kathryn Wylde, the president of the Partnership for New York City, a powerful business group. “I can’t speak to those characters from California, but I actually think he’ll do better than Nancy Pelosi, by a long shot, with New York donors.”
“I’ve spent my entire adult life around the donor class,” a Washington Democratic operative says, “and they’re going to love him.”
Colleagues point to his role in crafting and passing a federal criminal justice reform bill in 2018, where Jeffries helped bridge gaps between the left and right when explaining why he’ll make an effective leader. “In the end, what separates him is the thing that all legislative leaders need, which is a combination of people who love you and people who fear you,” a top aide to one of the more liberal Democratic House members says. “In any snapshot of the 435, there are only a handful who can hold both of those things. And Hakeem will go to the mattresses for somebody when they really need it, even if he doesn’t have a tremendous amount of warmth in his heart for that person.” All of which is why, in a famously fractious body, Jeffries was elected minority leader by unanimous acclamation.
Which isn’t the same as universal love, however. The Democrats’ left wing has had its problems with Jeffries. Four years ago he elbowed past Barbara Lee, who was both more progressive and more senior, to win the chairmanship of the House Democratic Caucus. Last year Jeffries and Alabama congresswoman Terri Sewell formed the Team Blue PAC to help moderate incumbents beat back leftist primary challengers. “The extreme left is obsessed with talking trash about mainstream Democrats on Twitter, when the majority of the electorate constitute mainstream Democrats at the polls,” Jeffries told The New York Times. In case anyone missed the point, Jeffries told The Atlantic, “There will never be a moment where I bend the knee to hard-left democratic socialism.”
Republicans will certainly attack him, substituting racism for the sexism deployed against Pelosi. But they will have a hard time caricaturing Jeffries as a far-left radical lib. He was raised in Crown Heights, and knows well the history of racial tension in the neighborhood—an uncle, Leonard Jeffries, is a controversial former Afrocentrist professor. But Hakeem Jeffries, the son of a middle-class social worker and a substance abuse counselor, grew up to become a progressive institutionalist, someone who would try to change the system from the inside. He attended city public schools and the state university at Binghamton, then graduate school at Georgetown and law school at NYU, before being hired by one of the city’s most prominent white-shoe firms, with clients including Viacom/CBS. He ran for office for the first time (and lost) in 2000.
Possibly the most remarkable thing about Jeffries is that he came up through Brooklyn politics and survived six years in Albany as a state assemblyman without even the hint of a corruption scandal. “Hakeem is a throwback,” says Steve Cohen, an attorney and a New York Democratic insider who has worked with Jeffries for many years in a variety of roles, including as senior adviser to Andrew Cuomo during the former governor’s first term. “He’s interested in consensus and the public good, not in what’s best for his career, and he understands that success in the public arena depends on work in the backroom.” Cohen points to the subtle part Assemblyman Jeffries played in wrangling reluctant Democratic state legislators to vote for the 2011 legalization of same-sex marriage in New York. Jeffries has sharpened those inside-game skills in Washington: When New York senator Kirsten Gillibrand was pushing to reform military sexual assault protections, her office turned to Jeffries and his staff for crucial insight on how to best assemble support in the House.
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Chris Smith
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House Democrats chose caucus chair Hakeem Jeffries of New York to succeed Nancy Pelosi as leader of the Democrats in the chamber next year, a historic move that will make him the first Black person to lead one of the two major parties in either chamber of Congress. What do you think?
“Isn’t 52 a little young to be leading the Democrats?”
James Clark, Unemployed
“He probably had to kill twice as many progressive bills as his white colleagues to get to where he is today.”
Vivian Kirk, I.D. Designer
“Hopefully this paves the way for future corporate attorneys to seek leadership positions.”
Daryl Williams, Information Distributor
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As Republicans prepare to take over the House with a narrow majority, House Democrats’ largest moderate faction, the New Democrat Coalition, is poised to play a potentially critical role in bipartisan legislation.
Members of the business-friendly bloc are due to meet on Thursday to elect a new chair, who is likely to become one of the Democratic House minority’s more important figures.
Perhaps as a result, the normally sleepy contest to chair the business-friendly caucus has turned into a contentious fight between two vice chairs: Rep. Scott Peters of California and Rep. Annie Kuster of New Hampshire.
In a bid to undermine Peters, Kuster, her allies and advocates for affordable prescription drugs are shining a light on his role as a prominent obstacle to legislation empowering Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices.
President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act ultimately included provisions enabling Medicare to negotiate lower prices, but the objections of Peters and a handful of other Democrats resulted in concessions to the pharmaceutical industry that made the final bill weaker. Among other things, Medicare is now required to negotiate a smaller number of drugs on an annual basis than it would have under Democrats’ original proposal.
“Kuster was one of many Democrats from competitive districts who fought to advance the drug pricing initiative,” an aide to a member of the New Democrat Coalition told HuffPost. “It was clear she did not agree with those who worked to water down the drug pricing provision at the expense of frontline members and the American people.”
Peters, who received more campaign cash from pharmaceutical industry PACs in 2022 than any other Democrat in Congress, insists that his pressure helped turn the House’s drug pricing bill into something that would pass the Senate. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), in particular, held up the bill on the grounds that it risked curbing innovation in the industry.
“It’s a curious thing to be critical of the congressman for achieving an extraordinary legislative achievement,” Mary Anne Pintar, Peters’ chief of staff, told HuffPost. “Because of his work, that plan was able to earn Senate support.”
“He was seeking true reform rather than political expediency,” she added.
In a Politico article recounting the highlights of departing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s tenure in the House, Peters even depicted Pelosi as his co-conspirator in silencing progressive complaints about the compromise he brokered.
But Democrats and other people involved in drug price negotiations tell a different story, taking particular issue with the idea that Peters deserves credit for resolving an impasse he helped create.
“It’s like the bank robber who wants credit for the successful release of the hostages,” said a senior Democratic House aide who was closely involved in the prescription drug legislation. “It insults members’ intelligence.”
Getty Images/Associated Press
In 2019, Peters voted in support of H.R. 3, a stand-alone bill empowering Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices that contained stronger provisions than the bill that became law earlier this year. He even issued a statement touting its benefits for “seniors in San Diego,” part of which he represents.
Since Democrats did not control the Senate or the White House at the time, however, the bill did not advance. And Peters has subsequently said that that was why he voted for it in 2019.
But in 2021, with united Democratic control of the federal government, the stakes of the fight were real — and some Democrats had second thoughts. Echoing the concerns of the pharmaceutical industry, Peters warned that the bill — in the form that passed the House two years prior — “would really deal a deathblow to American innovation.”
Advocates for prescription drug price negotiation counter that brand-name pharmaceutical and biotech companies often draw upon federal government research to develop new treatments. Germany is an example of a country where the government negotiates drug prices and an innovative pharmaceutical sector flourishes. The German company BioNtech played a critical role in developing Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine.
Peters stuck to his guns, though. In September 2021, he and two other Democrats — Reps. Kurt Schrader (Ore.) and Kathleen Rice (N.Y.) — provided the decisive votes to prevent the prescription drug portion of what was then the Build Back Better bill from advancing out of the influential Energy and Commerce Committee. Kuster, who is also on the committee, voted for it.
The bill still advanced to the House floor via the Ways and Means Committee, where Florida Democratic Rep. Stephanie Murphy’s “no” vote was not enough to stop the bill. But collectively, the group of four Democrats, including Murphy, had made it clear to House leadership that they would not sign on to a bill until it gave Big Pharma more leeway.
David Mitchell, founder of the nonprofit advocacy group Patients for Affordable Drugs Now, maintains that Peters and his allies weakened House Democrats’ bargaining hand with Sinema and other reluctant Democrats in the Senate.
“Our goal was to get the strongest possible bill out of the House and in fact, it was Scott Peters who led the effort to water it down,” said David Mitchell, head of Patients for Affordable Drugs. “Scott Peters has been and continues to be a handmaiden of the industry.”
“For him to now say, ‘I knew what would pass the Senate,’ is really the height of arrogance,” he added.
The senior Democratic House aide conceded that Democratic leaders were talking to Sinema and her staff throughout the House’s lawmaking process, and thus it’s unlikely that Peters weakened the bill more than it already would have been.
Peters’ bigger impact was in drawing negative media attention to the issue at a time when Biden’s standing in the polls was taking a nosedive and few voters were even aware that Democrats were tackling the issue of prescription drug prices, the senior aide said.
“Him being the ringleader of blocking this out of Energy and Commerce led to this wave of terrible headlines about Democrats blowing it on drug pricing, or Democrats unable to advance drug price negotiations. It was exactly the wrong way to hear about this great thing that Frontliners in particular were depending on,” the senior Democratic aide said, referring to “Frontline” Democrats in swing seats vulnerable to a Republican takeover.
“Scott Peters has been and continues to be a handmaiden of the [pharmaceutical] industry.”
– David Mitchell, founder, Patients for Affordable Drugs Now
The political stakes of the debate are especially galling to Peters’ critics. Centrist Democrats can often justifiably frame their divergence from party leadership on issues like climate change, student debt or taxes as a political necessity for someone in their state or district.
No such rationale exists for watering down Medicare’s bargaining power with big drug companies. Polls regularly show that the vast majority of Americans, including independents and Republicans, support empowering Medicare to negotiate lower prices on prescription drugs.
What’s more, Peters serves in a solidly Democratic district. But vulnerable Frontline Democrats were evidently fearful that the final spending bill would not include a strong prescription drug component.
In July, Rep. Susan Wild, a member of the New Democrat Coalition from Pennsylvania, led a letter from 14 Frontline Democrats to Pelosi and other party leaders demanding that the spending bill empower Medicare to not only negotiate lower prices for seniors but that it also have the power to negotiate prices for private health insurance enrollees.
“With public support of Medicare price negotiation of prescription drugs at nearly 90%, it is time to take action,” the letter stated.
Kuster alluded to those members’ concerns in a Nov. 23 interview with Punchbowl News about her bid to lead the New Democrat Coalition.
“There were members, and particularly Frontline members, who felt that if we could have resolved [the drug pricing bill] earlier … we would have been in a stronger position to negotiate with the Senate and they would have been out campaigning on it last spring,” Kuster told Punchbowl News.
Of the four House Democrats who leveraged their votes to water down prescription drug price reform, Peters is the only one who is returning to Congress. In a Democratic primary in May, Schrader lost to a progressive challenger, who attacked him for his stance on prescription drugs and reliance on pharmaceutical industry PAC money. Rice and Murphy both retired from Congress.
Peters’ ascent to the helm of the New Democrat Coalition would mark something of a return to the bloc’s centrist roots.
In recent years, the caucus has loosened its eligibility criteria, growing to more than 90 members. Rather than oppose aspects of Biden’s agenda, Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.), the outgoing chair of the New Democrat Coalition, stood out as one of the most outspoken advocates for the expanded child tax credit.
It’s unclear how much members of the New Democrat Coalition plan to weigh the prescription-drug reform issue when electing their next leader on Thursday.
Peters chaired the New Democrats’ political arm in 2018, a cycle in which the bloc raised $3.2 million for its endorsed candidates and contributed over $500,000 to New Democrat candidates and incumbents in the 2022 cycle, according to Pintar, his chief of staff.
Peters’ stance on prescription drugs had not come up in discussions with members of the New Democrat Coalition, Pintar added.
“He wants to use this caucus in a way that appeals to swing voters so we can win back the majority,” she said.
Kuster points to her work as a co-chair of the Bipartisan Addiction and Mental Health Task Force as evidence of her success collaborating with Republicans. She has her own group of supporters within the moderate bloc, including Rep. Haley Stevens of Michigan, who signed the letter backing drug price negotiation alongside Wild.
Asked about prescription drug policy, Stevens hinted that she might see Peters’ committee vote against prescription drug price negotiation as a strike against him.
“They’re both on Energy and Commerce,” Stevens said. “And they voted differently on that bill, and we ultimately ended up getting a big part of the prescription drugs in the Inflation Reduction [Act], but we’ve got more to do.”
But Stevens emphasized that she has a longstanding relationship with Kuster that was the driving force behind her decision.
“I’ve been with Annie for a long time on a variety of things,” she added.
Arthur Delaney contributed reporting from Washington, D.C.
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Democrats were able to defend every state legislative chamber in their control this year — making it the first midterm elections since 1934 in which the party in power has not lost a chamber.
They were also able to flip chambers in several states, a shift from previous midterm cycles where Democrats have struggled at the state level. In Pennsylvania, Democrats narrowly gained control of the state House for the first time since 2010. They flipped the Minnesota Senate for the first time in a decade, and both chambers in Michigan, giving the party a trifecta in both states. In Wisconsin and North Carolina, Democrats prevented Republicans from gaining supermajorities, protecting Democratic governors’ veto power. And in New Hampshire, control of the House remains unknown, nearly two weeks after the elections.
In a memo first shared with CBS News, the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee (DLCC) said the victories serve as a lesson to Democrats up and down the ballot.
“Democrats made history in state legislatures this year — defying the odds, bucking political wisdom, and laying out a blueprint for Democratic wins at the state legislative level,” wrote DLCC president Jessica Post. She credited investing early and helping local leaders and said that unlike 2010, Democrats this decade will be able to go on offense. Now, the DLCC is calling for the party to continue building from the ground up.
Post argued that some of the obstacles Democrats faced this year stemmed from GOP control of some of the nation’s state legislatures because it’s the legislature that often controls the way congressional districts are drawn.
“Democratic efforts to control the U.S. House are more difficult because of Democrats’ failure to invest in state legislatures earlier,” Post wrote. “Congressional Democrats were running in districts rigged by Republican state legislators in many states. If Democrats want to fight back against the MAGA agenda and make our country better for all Americans, that work must start in state legislatures.”
The state level successes come on the heels of redistricting. According to the National Democratic Redistricting Committee (NDRC), there are many reasons for Democrats’ victories in 2022 but investment in state level races was a part of it.
“It was a big lesson of the last decade, that Democrats needed to be more focused on the states and state level infrastructure, and I think you’ve seen the party really rally to that over the last several cycles, and 2022 was the culmination of that investment,” said NDRC President Kelly Burton said.
The NDRC started its work before the actual redistricting process. Compared to the previous decade, Republican control over the redistricting process decreased by more than 20%. Burton said without such efforts, the results would have been worse for Democrats. She believes the party will continue to invest heavily on the state level because it’s paying off.
The DLCC started sending funds to legislature candidates for 2022 last fall and released its strategy identifying what it believed would be the most competitive states in the spring. In total, the DLCC raised and spent $50 million this cycle, surpassing the 2018 midterms. Its finance team also helped state partners raise more than $105 million for targets this election season.
The memo noted two major themes were front and center during this election cycle as part of its winning strategy: abortion rights and protecting democracy.
The DLCC recognized abortion rights would be a major factor in state legislative elections early on and launched its States to Save Roe website in January even before the Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision. It then continued to capitalize on the issue “at every turn.”
The committee also worked to tie all Republicans to what it called “MAGA extremists” and warned Republicans posed an existential threat to democracy. As part of that, they took aim at state officials like Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvania who was in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, 2021, for former President Trump’s speech.
At the same time, candidates continued to address how they would lower costs, the memo said, blunting some of the attacks by Republicans amid soaring inflation. Some efforts included direct relief checks, tax rebates or working to cut child and health care costs.
While the DLCC is calling for the party to build off the 2022 successes, it was not alone in its efforts to increase Democrats’ numbers in the state assemblies and senates. The States Project invested nearly $60 million in state chambers, the most in a single cycle by an outside effort.
The DLCC is now looking to 2024, helping to defend majorities as well as flip seats in states like New Hampshire and Arizona. Next year, Virginia is also a battleground with its off-year elections.
While Republicans lost chambers in 2022 – they did see representation grow in several states. In Florida, where the party already had a trifecta, Republicans were able to gain supermajorities in both the state House and Senate. They were also able to gain supermajorities in at least one chamber in Iowa, North Carolina, South Carolina and Wisconsin. In Oregon, GOP candidates also gained seats – ending Democrats’ supermajority in the state.
In a memo to donors following the election, the Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC) said it had its best fundraising cycle to date but pointed to significant spending disadvantages. Overall, the RSLC spent a record $30 million but was outspent by Democratic groups combined at the state legislative level four to one.
It is not yet clear just how much outside Republican groups spent on legislative races.
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The Democrats will retain their control of the Senate after incumbent Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto won a tight reelection race, defying polling expectations and giving Democrats the best overall midterm performance for a sitting party in 20 years. What do you think?
“Imagine how many progressive policies can be shot down in the next two years.”
Brianna Leib, Recreational Therapist
“We’re still doing the whole Senate thing, huh?”
Martin Akbrud, Olive Pitter
“The status quo is saved!”
Vince Wilkin, Package Thrower
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House Republicans are in position to reach the 218 seats they need to flip the chamber after the midterm elections. As of Saturday night, CBS News estimates Republicans will win at least 214 seats, while Democrats are estimated to win at least 210 seats.
In several outstanding races, Republicans are ahead. However, some toss-ups have been breaking for Democrats, and on Saturday night, CBS News projected that Democrats flipped Washington state’s 3rd Congressional District, a seat the GOP was favored to hold.
There are currently 11 races that have not been called, and 10 of those seats are considered “battlegrounds.” Of those remaining in battleground districts, five were rated as “toss ups,” two were in the “likely Democrat” category, one was “leaning Democrat” and two were “leaning Republican.”
Democratic strategists who work on House races this cycle say it would take a “miracle,” but Democrats do have a possible path to retaining the majority.
They would then have to win at least 8 of the remaining 11 seats.
In nine of California’s uncalled and competitive races (California’s 3rd, 9th, 13th, 22nd, 27th, 41st, 45th, 47th and 49th), three were “leaning Republican.”
For Republicans, California could help them get to the edge of clinching the majority — if their candidates hold their leads.
Mitchell said for any chance for Democrats to hold the House, they’d have to win in the 22nd, 27th and 41st, all districts where the Republican incumbent is in the lead.
“If Democrats won all three of those races in California, then think the odds go up that the Democrats can hold the House. But if Democrats lose one of those three, the odds go way down, they lose two of those three, the door slams shut,” Mitchell said.
Sarah Chamberlain, president of the Republican Main Street Partnership group which works with more moderate House Republicans, said she’s confident Republicans David Valadao and Ken Calvert will hold their seats.
Republicans also lead in one other tight race: Colorado’s 3rd District, where GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert is in the lead by around 1,100 votes with 99 percent of results in.
Democratic incumbents were projected to win three Nevada seats. Maine’s 2nd District and Alaska’s At-Large District, two seats with ranked choice voting, were leaning Democrat.
“From the math that we’ve done — I think it’s a foregone conclusion [that Republicans take the House],” said Chamberlain. “But it’s gonna be very close. It’s gonna be just a couple of seats. And it shouldn’t be I mean, this should have been a landslide, frankly.”
In the primaries, Chamberlain’s group supported Republican candidates like Reps. Peter Meijer of Michigan and Jamie Herrera-Beutler, House Republicans who were targeted by former President Donald Trump. Chamberlain argued that the moderate, mainstream candidates her group picked would have been more competitive in the general election, compared to the the further-right candidates who beat them and were on the ballot.
She said that candidate quality issue, as well as a disconnect between Trump and the rest of the Republican establishment, was a reason control of the House remains so tight.
“I don’t think Trump’s going away,” Chamberlain said. “We just need to make better decisions with Trump. I do think some of the Trump candidates hurt us on Tuesday. And that’s why we need to work together as a party and move forward.”
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Nevada Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto is projected to win her reelection bid, protecting Democratic control of the Senate in 2023 and giving the party a reassuring sign about its prospects in the pivotal swing state.
Cortez Masto defeated Republican nominee Adam Laxalt, who had previously served as the state’s attorney general like her. Laxalt ran a hardline conservative campaign compared to the more low-key centrist effort run by Cortez Masto. The latter became the first-ever Latina to win a Senate seat in 2016 with strong support from former Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
Democrats are now set to hold at least 50 seats in the Senate next term. Because Vice President Kamala Harris can serve as a tie-breaking vote, Democrats will be in charge of the chamber regardless of the outcome of the final Senate race in 2022, a contest in Georgia that will be decided by a Dec. 6 runoff election.
Despite Laxalt’s support for conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election and his own family’s disavowal of him, polls showed him closing in on Cortez Masto for months. With support from national Democrats and Republicans, the candidates and their supporters spent more than $175 million on advertising ― turning the race into Nevada’s most expensive election ever.
Analysts expected Cortez Masto would gain some ground after the Supreme Court revoked Americans’ constitutional right to abortion in June. She highlighted the court’s move in her final months on the campaign trail, pledging to fight to protect reproductive health care and casting her reelection as critical to Democrats’ continued control of the Senate, which has a huge influence over the appointment of judges. Laxalt tried to downplay his years of support for anti-abortion policies.
Nevada has trended Democratic in recent elections, but the state previously had a long history of electing Republicans. The GOP hoped that defeating Cortez-Masto would boost its influence ahead of the 2024 presidential election. A super PAC connected to Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) invested heavily in the race, and former President Donald Trump cheered on Laxalt.
Despite Cortez Masto’s success, the closeness of the contest is a warning sign for Democrats because Nevada is central to most possible scenarios in which a Democrat can win the presidency.
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House Republicans are in position to reach the 218 seats they need to flip the chamber after the midterm elections. As of Friday, CBS News estimates Republicans will win at least 213 seats while Democrats are estimated to win at least 206 seats. In several of the outstanding races, Republicans are ahead.
There are currently just under 30 races that have not been called. At least 10 seats are considered “battlegrounds” and there are a handful of other races that have remained tight since Tuesday. Sixteen of the uncalled races are in California, a reliably Democratic state that has several competitive Congressional districts this cycle.
Democratic strategists who work on House races this cycle say it would take a “miracle,” but Democrats do have a possible path to retaining the majority. Their path to do so would require a clean sweep in all 13 remaining uncalled seats that are designated by CBS News as “likely” Democrat or “lean” Democrat. This includes nine seats in California alone, with several Democrats in tight races.
They would then have to win at least 7 of the 13 seats that are rated as “toss ups” or “Lean Republican” by CBS News.
In nine of California’s uncalled and competitive races (California’s 3rd, 9th, 13th, 22nd, 26th, 27th, 41st, 45th, 47th and 49th), six have Republicans in the lead. Four of those feature Republicans leading by more than 6 points, while two have margins of 1 point or less.
But at least two of those, Democratic incumbents, Reps. Katie Porter and Mike Levin, are expected to take the lead once the remaining mail ballots are counted, said Paul Mitchell, vice president of Political Data Inc.
For Republicans, California could help them get to the edge of clinching the majority — if their candidates hold their leads. If Republicans win in all of them, and that’s added to the 211 races that have been officially called by CBS News for Republicans, this will put Republicans at 217 seats — one away from the majority.
Only a fraction of the vote has been reported for these districts, due to the extended time that clerks have to report the final results, and mail ballots that were postmarked by Election Day may be received until next Tuesday.
Mitchell said for any chance for Democrats to hold the House, they’d have to win in the 22nd, 27th and 41st, all districts where the Republican incumbent is in the lead.
“If Democrats won all three of those races in California, then think the odds go up that the Democrats can hold the House. But if Democrats lose one of those three, the odds go way down, they lose two of those three, the door slams shut,” Mitchell said.
Sarah Chamberlain, president of the Republican Main Street Partnership group which works with more moderate House Republicans, said she’s confident Republican Valadao and Calvert will hold their seats.
In the 11 remaining races designated as “battlegrounds” by CBS News, which include four races in California, Republicans are leading in seven of them. They also lead in one other tight race: Colorado’s 3rd District, where GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert is in the lead by around 1,100 votes.
Democratic incumbents are in the lead in three Nevada seats and in Maine’s 2nd District and Alaska’s At-Large District, two seats with ranked choice voting.
“From the math that we’ve done — I think it’s a foregone conclusion [that Republicans take the House],” said Chamberlain. “But it’s gonna be very close. It’s gonna be just a couple of seats. And it shouldn’t be I mean, this should have been a landslide, frankly.”
In the primaries, Chamberlain’s group supported Republican candidates like Reps. Peter Meijer of Michigan and Jamie Herrera-Beutler, House Republicans who were targeted by former President Donald Trump. Chamberlain argued that the further-right candidates who beat their mainstream Republican picks would have been more competitive in the general election.
She said that candidate quality issue, as well as a disconnect between Trump and the rest of the Republican establishment, was a reason control of the House remains so tight.
“I don’t think Trump’s going away,” Chamberlain said. “We just need to make better decisions with Trump. I do think some of the Trump candidates hurt us on Tuesday. And that’s why we need to work together as a party and move forward.”
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Democratic Gov. Tony Evers is projected to win reelection in Wisconsin, blocking Republicans from taking total control of the swing state.
Evers defeated Republican construction company CEO Tim Michels, who conceded early Wednesday morning.
Michels won his primary with the backing of former President Donald Trump and largely embraced his backer’s lies about the 2020 election. He then proceeded to relentlessly attack Evers on the economy, crime and education.
Evers fought back with his own focus on education, arguing that he successfully guided the state’s schools through the coronavirus pandemic.
A mild-mannered executive, Evers has battled GOP efforts to strip away his power since his narrow 2018 victory over incumbent Republican Gov. Scott Walker. His vetoes have prevented the GOP from enacting a slew of different conservative policy goals.
Evers could still lose his veto powers, as a fresh gerrymander of the state’s legislative districts has given Republicans a shot at veto-proof supermajorities in both chambers of the state legislature.
The governor’s race was long considered a toss-up, with polls showing the two men within the margin of error.
A Michels win, along with continued GOP control of Wisconsin’s heavily gerrymandered state legislature, would have meant that Republicans would have had total control of one of the nation’s most crucial swing states. President Barack Obama won the state twice, though Trump won it in 2016 and Biden narrowly took it back in 2020.
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