Many members facing tough reelections have sought to forge their own paths, run against Washington and at times even distance themselves from President Joe Biden. But rank-and-file Democrats acknowledge that time is running out to get everyone on the same page and more needs to be done to help boost their colleagues who could lose their seats without a more succinct vision.
“We all need to work harder about delivering the message on reducing costs, making sure we are empowering small businesses and working families,” said Sen. Jon Tester, to Montana Democrat. “We’ve been doing that from the get go, but we just don’t talk about it enough.”
“We need to focus on commonsense, bipartisan action that can actually get done and bring folks together,” Gottheimer told CNN.
Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, among the most vulnerable Democrats this cycle, acknowledged the challenge of getting legislation through.
“You know I served in organizations that had missions and goals and you worked to achieve that. It was rather straightforward. This place doesn’t work like that. It doesn’t function well,” said Kelly, a Navy veteran and former astronaut .
“I have always had a cohesive message. It’s not in sync with the other 49,” Manchin said when asked if he thought Democrats had a unified message.
On Thursday, Democratic leaders in the House and Senate held a news conference on their plans to penalize gas companies for what they said has been price gouging at the pump. But those plans face long odds of passing in the Senate, where Democrats would need 10 GOP votes and the backing of Manchin to move legislation.
Sinema told CNN, “I think you should ask someone else,” when asked if Democrats had a clear message for the midterms.
Many Democrats interviewed for this story touted what Democrats have done with their majority: They confirmed the country’s first Black woman to the US Supreme Court, passed a massive Covid-19 relief package swiftly after Biden took office, found a way to work with Republicans to pass a bipartisan infrastructure bill, and are worth with Republicans on ironing out House and Senate differences on the bill aimed at making the US more competitive in industry with China.
But the big-ticket items that can drive Democratic voter enthusiasm, such as lowering the cost of child care, prescription drugs, climate legislation, a path to citizenship for certain undocumented immigrants and raising taxes on corporations, are still undone.
“We dithered around too much on things like Build Back Better, and we gotta show we can make a decision,” Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia said. “We’ve gotten some good things done, but I think we gotta get more things done.”
For their part, Republicans are largely getting more bullish about their chances in the midterms, citing Democrats’ lack of cohesive messaging as one reason.
“There are a whole bunch of Democrats who are feeling really in a bad spot right now. I am just gonna say that is my observation. They are in a lot of trouble politically and their President isn’t helping them. He is in fact hurting them a lot,” North Dakota Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer said.
National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Rick Scott blasted Democrats for not being responsive enough to voters in their messaging.
“They are not reacting to what the public is talking about,” Scott said. “They are not being responsive on inflation, they have no message on what happened in Afghanistan. They have no message and they aren’t doing anything about energy independence.”
CNN’s Morgan Rimmer contributed to this report.
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