Extreme Democrat Derek Tran enters Biden witness protection program
Extreme Democrats, including Derek Tran, again refused to answer if Biden is fit to be president. A new story highlighted the self-serving political calculus behind their shameful silence.
“Southern Californians deserve answers, not Derek Tran’s self-serving silence that insults their intelligence. Tran again demonstrated he always puts his own personal gain and blind partisanship first.” – NRCC Spokesperson Ben Petersen
In case you missed it…
POLITICO California Playbook: Next question, please
POLITICO
Lara Korte, Melanie Mason and Dustin Gardiner
THE BUZZ: DONKEY IN THE ROOM — California Democrats trying to flip seats in swing congressional districts are steering clear of the turmoil at the top of the ticket — even as a growing number of Democratic lawmakers have expressed desire for President Joe Bidento step aside.
The pressure has the president doubling down on his reelection bid, leaving congressional hopefuls in an impossibly awkward position.
As we told you Monday, some senior leaders, like Reps. Adam Schiff and Nancy Pelosi, have publicly acknowledged doubts about Biden’s age since his disastrous debate with former President Donald Trump, while other lawmakers have gone further. California Rep. Mark Takano was among those who forcefully called on Biden to stand down during a call with other members Sunday afternoon. Bay Area Rep. Zoe Lofgren also voiced concerns on the call.
The fractures between Democratic skeptics and Biden loyalists are only expected to get more painful as House Democrats convene at party headquarters this morning to discuss Biden’s political longevity.
Meanwhile, California’s Democratic challengers are doing their best to avoid the quagmire. When asked whether they think Biden should step down, eight candidates in target districts ducked the issue or ignored Playbook’s inquiries.
For now, there’s little upside for the candidates to speak out — they lack the clout to affect the outcome, and any position is likely to alienate some faction of the party when they need to keep their fragile coalitions together. They’re relatively small fish in the Democratic Party, and yet they’re acutely tuned into the political precarity of the moment, given that they’re in toss-up districts and collectively, they could win the House for the Democrats.
With lower name-ID and less entrenched followings than elected members of Congress, they’re more reliant on the party apparatus, including local Democratic clubs, and may have less incentive to rock the boat. In at least one instance, the Bidens have even helped juice their fundraising; Will Rollins, who is challenging Republican Rep. Ken Calvert, attended a fundraising event with Jill Biden in Palm Springs a few months ago.
But the candidates also have more to lose if the top of the ticket proves to be an albatross on down-ballot Democrats. Even before the calamitous debate, there were signs that congressional Democrats were outperforming Biden.
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Others are staying out of the conversation altogether.
Rudy Salas, who is running against incumbent Republican Rep. David Valadao, did not return our requests for comment. Neither did the campaigns for Derek Tran or Dave Min, who are both vying for competitive seats in Southern California. George Whitesides, a challenger to Rep. Mike Garcia, didn’t get back to us, either.
The campaign for Adam Gray, another Democrat looking to unseat a Republican in the Central Valley, declined to comment.
Republicans, meanwhile, are eager for a chance to capitalize on Democrats’ ambiguity. Shortly after Rollins announced his relatively neutral position on Biden Monday afternoon, the National Republican Congressional Committee used it against him.
“Extreme liberal Will Rollins just anchored himself to the sinking ship that is Joe Biden, co-signing Biden’s failing record of inflation, open borders, crime and chaos,” NRCC spokesperson Ben Petersen said in a statement.