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elleng

(135,883 posts)
Wed Oct 28, 2015, 06:53 PM Oct 2015

Why the Democrats need Martin O’Malley

'To begin, I must emphasize that I am not officially supporting the presidential campaign of Martin O’Malley, the former governor of Maryland. This article is focusing on his candidacy because there is a practical argument to be made in favor of nominating him – one that is too compelling, even alarming, to be safely ignored.

Right now the Democratic Party has a problem. There are only three candidates left in the race – former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and O’Malley – and it is widely assumed that one of them, Sanders, is unelectable. As political scientist Monica Bauer explained in an editorial for The Huffington Post, “it seems clear to me his open dismissal of capitalism makes him pretty much unelectable in a general election, and thus a disaster for the Democratic party, if they were to nominate him for president.” This view is hardly limited to Bauer; in fact, it sums up the conventional wisdom held by the Democratic Party for pretty much as long as “socialist” has been used as epithet in this country. Although I personally feel that the stigma surrounding that term is unfounded, that doesn’t alter the objective facts regarding its potency. At the very least, a detached analyst has to concede that Sanders is a very risky candidate in terms of his ability to win the general election.

The same thing must be said about Clinton. While she is certainly more moderate than Sanders, the former First Lady has prohibitively high unfavorability ratings in swing states like Colorado, Iowa, Virginia, Florida, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. “Since voters in general elections normally won’t vote for a candidate they don’t like or at least find trustworthy, it’s imperative that a Democratic nominee hold positive favorability ratings going into Election Day,” observed columnist H. A. Goodman in The Huffington Post, who goes on to note that the combined electoral votes of the six aforementioned swing states are enough to deny the presidency to any candidate who lose all of them. What’s more, Clinton’s numbers against her potential Republican opponents are disturbingly weak: A recent CNN/ORC survey had her losing by one point to Ben Carson and ahead of Donald Trump by only five (Sanders loses to Carson by two and beats Trump by eleven), while a Fox News Poll taken roughly the same time found her losing to Trump by five, to Carson by eleven, to Jeb Bush by four, and to Carly Fiorina by three (Sanders wasn’t included in that poll).

That leaves O’Malley, who despite being a popular two-term governor has so far not been taken seriously enough to even appear in face-to-face polls against various Republicans. Examining his record, one finds a strong enough resume: As mayor of Baltimore, his innovative cost-saving measures helped the city earn its first budget surplus in years, and his overall reputation for competence led to him being considered one of America’s top young big city mayors during his tenure. Upon being elected governor of Maryland, O’Malley proceeded to rack up a series of impressive progressive accomplishments, including abolishing the death penalty, raising the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, legalizing same-sex marriage, extending in-state tuition breaks to undocumented immigrants, and passing stricter gun control regulations despite heavy opposition from conservative Democrats as well as Republicans. This isn’t to say that O’Malley is without his own weaknesses – his “zero tolerance” policies as Baltimore mayor are blamed by many activists for worsening mistreatment of racial minorities by that city’s police, while his various social programs resulted in tax increases that could prove damaging if brought up in a general election. Nevertheless, as Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller put it, O’Malley was “the most effective Maryland governor since the mid-1970s,” which if nothing else earns him his right to be taken seriously next to his primary opponents. . .


In an ideal America, the Democratic Party wouldn’t face the possibility of defeat more than a year away from the general election simply because there are only three candidates left before the race has officially started. If the party didn’t find itself in that very specific situation, there would be no need for pragmatic editorials like this one. Be that as it may, Democrats cannot afford to put Trump, Carson, Cruz, or Bush in the White House simply because they’d rather not admit that their preferred choice is unable to win. Because O’Malley is in the race, there is a third option that potentially staves off the dangers posed by a Clinton or Sanders nomination.

In light of the dire stakes involved, it behooves us to take him seriously.

http://goodmenproject.com/ethics-values/democrats-need-martin-omalley-mrzs/

4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Why the Democrats need Martin O’Malley (Original Post) elleng Oct 2015 OP
A very interesting piece of reasoning. Koinos Oct 2015 #1
Becoming less invisible these days, elleng Oct 2015 #2
I really don't understant the relative lack of media attention to him. potone Oct 2015 #4
Great piece, thanks (nt) Recursion Oct 2015 #3

Koinos

(2,798 posts)
1. A very interesting piece of reasoning.
Wed Oct 28, 2015, 11:08 PM
Oct 2015

I have always thought that O'Malley would be the most electable in the general. He carries the least amount of baggage, has a solid resume of actual accomplishments, and is a genuine progressive. Whether democrats will have the good sense to give him a close look, I am not sure. In a sense, he is the perfect, albeit invisible, candidate.

potone

(1,701 posts)
4. I really don't understant the relative lack of media attention to him.
Thu Oct 29, 2015, 09:05 AM
Oct 2015

I am a Bernie supporter, but I think that O'Malley sounds very good. I'd like to see him get more attention. This primary process shouldn't be predetermined by the media as a contest between Bernie and Hillary, which Hillary is bound to win. As with the dismal Republican debate last night, much more focus needs to be placed on policy positions and the accomplishments of the candidates. I am tired of having my intelligence insulted by the low level of the questions asked during the debates.

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