About that demobilization

About that demobilization

by digby



Despite everyon'es fears that the 2018 midterm victory sapped all the energy out of the Democratic electorate, it appears that those voters are still on fire:.
Democratic freshman lawmakers are posting huge fundraising numbers even though it is the beginning of the 2020 cycle, signaling trouble for Republicans hoping to reclaim the House.

Democratic presidential candidates are posting some impressive first-quarter fundraising hauls. But it’s the stellar numbers from relatively obscure, freshman House Democrats that have caught the attention of Republican operatives. Rep. Josh Harder, D-Calif., raised $800,000 from Jan. 1 to March 31; Rep. Antonio Delgado, D-N.Y., raised $750,000; and Rep. Joe Cunningham, D-S.C., raised $650,000, to name a few.

Fatigue typically sets in after an election as donors retrench and the grassroots bask in victory. To the extent robust, post-midterm election activity continues, presidential candidates usually benefit. But House Democrats — even those not named Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. — are maintaining their 2018 momentum.

“The Democrats’ liberal base is still motivated by their white-hot hatred of President Trump,” said Michael Steel, a Republican operative.

Democrats collectively raised more than $1 billion in 2017 and 2018 on their way to flipping 40 House seats and winning control of the chamber after eight years in the minority. The party lost a net of two Senate seats but successfully defended a handful of targeted seats while capturing two from the GOP in the key battlegrounds of Arizona and Nevada. In doing so, Democrats vastly outraised the Republicans.

Some Republicans assumed that the progressive energy fueling the Democratic Party’s green wave of fundraising and activism in 2018 would cool down post-election. According to this line of this line of thinking, seizing the House, and exercising the power it afforded, would satisfy some of the hunger to combat Trump.

But some Republicans are warning colleagues to ignore this conventional wisdom after seeing the initial wave of first quarter fundraising figures from House Democrats who were elected just last November and are far from household names. “Democrats are serious about defeating the president and they want a House that will be helpful,” said a veteran Republican strategist, who requested anonymity to avoid publicly criticizing the party.

“In 2018, Democrats were just getting started,” this operative added.

And I'd guess Trump's ongoing lunacy, which is getting worse, will keep this energy at a very high level, especially if the Presidential candidates deliver a hopeful policy agenda.

Hate plus hope FTW

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