Liberal group squares off with U.S.
Democratic leadership over challenging incumbents
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[April 06, 2019]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The grassroots group
that helped propel U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez into
Congress is taking on Democratic party leaders over what critics call an
effort to deter liberal candidates from running against more moderate
incumbents.
Justice Democrats debuted a new website late Thursday to help
progressive primary challengers get the communications, advertising and
digital resources they need to mount campaigns for the 2020
congressional elections.
The announcement was a direct challenge to the party's official campaign
arm, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC). Last month,
the DCCC said it would not do business with political consultants and
firms that help candidates challenging Democratic members of Congress
next year.
Ocasio-Cortez shocked the Democratic establishment last year with a
primary challenge that ousted a senior Democrat, Representative Joe
Crowley.
The DCCC policy, which party aides say codifies a long-time informal
arrangement, could make it harder for political newcomers to attract top
political consulting talent.
Justice Democrats denounced the policy as "bullying" and said it was
launching DCCCBlacklist.com to fight back.
"We're building a network of alternative infrastructure to help
progressive candidates find a path to Congress and create a Democratic
Party that fights for its voters, not big corporate donors," Alexandra
Rojas, executive director of Justice Democrats, said in a statement.
Justice Democrats are trying to recruit liberal upstarts for 2020 after
the success of candidates such as Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley,
another freshman congresswoman who beat an incumbent Democrat in 2018.
Both women denounced the DCCC policy on Twitter, with Pressley saying it
risked undermining "an entire universe of potential candidates and
vendors - especially women and people of color - whose ideas, energy,
and innovation need a place in our party."
DCCC NOT BACKING DOWN
The DCCC, currently led by Representative Cheri Bustos, spent $84.5
million in the 2018 election cycle on services such as research, polling
and advertising for Democratic campaigns.
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Democratic Congressional candidate Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
campaigns during a whistle stop in the Queens borough of New York
City, New York, U.S., November 5, 2018. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Bustos has met with House members concerned about the DCCC policy
adopted last month, but she has not backed down. Democratic aides
said there is no ideological test to the policy; the goal is to
protect sitting members of Congress.
DCCC spokesman Cole Leiter said on Friday the "transparent policy"
follows through on Bustos' promise to "protect every member of the
most diverse caucus in congressional history as we work to defend
and grow our Democratic majority."
Bustos, whose Illinois district voted for Trump in the 2016
presidential election, is a leader among Democratic moderates,
having advised many of them last year on how to flip Republican
districts. Democrats regained control of the House of
Representatives in November.
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer supports the DCCC policy, a
spokeswoman said.
"The DCCC's mission is to protect incumbents and expand our
majority, and it is reasonable to expect that member dues are used
for that purpose," she said.
The first 2020 target for Justice Democrats is Representative Henry
Cuellar. The seven-term congressman from Texas is one of the more
conservative Democrats in the House.
Cuellar's campaign manager Colin Strother mocked the progressive
political organization's criticism of the DCCC.
"It's a very entitled world view ... to think that you can take on
incumbent members in good standing, and then still get business with
the DCCC," he said.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and David
Gregorio)
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