After a long debate yesterday, the Democratic State Committee rejected (for now) Anthony Pollina’s request to address them and ask for some sort of endorsement. While the Pollina campaign will spin this as a rebuff only by the Party elite, the truth is the State Committee is both more liberal than much of the greater Dem community, and also represents a cross-section of muckity-mucks as well as grassroots activists – so the rejection is not good news for Pollina.
As I have stated on this site, I personally believe, as a matter of principle, that if somebody wants to address such an open-to-the-public committee, they should get to. Everyone should have the opportunity to be heard. It’s hard to condemn, though, as I appreciate that people have concerns; that an audience would just be spun to suggest some sort of support (as he repeatedly does regarding his meeting with the Barre Town Dems in his interview with Baruth), or that it might undercut a potential Democratic candidate. Then there’s simply the feeling that they owe nothing to someone who – in public over the years – has repeatedly made the point that he has higher regard institutionally for even Republicans over Dems. It’s a simple reality of human nature that such history is hard to easily shake off, due to the same psychology that causes many leftists to conclude they won’t be able to vote for Hillary Clinton in November if she is the Democratic Presidential nominee.
Still…
In any event, the same questions will keep going round and round, and some are more valid than others. There’s the whole third party concept. Some might question Pollina’s historic committment to some progressive issues (but honestly, what candidate doesn’t invite that kind of question)? But there is one big roadblock that may make all other questions ultimately meaningless – a roadblock made manifest by Representative Rachel Weston of Burlington before Pollina himself at a recent Montpelier House Party. A question – and an account – repeated again to State Committee members yesterday.
Weston is a rising star in Vermont politics; young, smart, charismatic, politically progressive – and an elected Democrat from a very left leaning district that is always a key battleground between Dems and Progs. At the house party, Pollina gave his unity pitch (which resonated with Weston), and then took questions from the group.
Weston stepped up to ask the obvious, yet heretofore unspoken one: If Pollina wants Dems to look past Party labels and support him based solely on the issues for the good of the greater community, is he willing to do the same? Specifically – if a Prog chooses to run against a Dem who is progressive on all the issues (and who may even support him, perhaps?) is he willing to offer his own support to that Dem even if there’s a Prog candidate, given that he’s asking that level of commitment for himself?
It would seem to have been a critical, even defining moment for Pollina – or perhaps a re-defining moment, as that is truly what he is attempting to do before Democratic crowds. Unfortunately for all of us, he first tried to avoid the question entirely by suggesting they hadn’t made such a confrontational run in a while. Weston pointed out that the immediacy of the question was standing right before him. She fully expected – as usual – to face a Progressive opponent herself in her battleground district.
Over the course of his evening, Pollina shifted from the response that he wouldn’t support anyone in such a conflict, to the position that he might support both, to the view that they would have to talk about it if it comes up.
But what was missing for Rachel was the clear reciprocation she was looking for. A statement that if she were to join Team Pollina, buck partisanship, focus on the issues only, and support him with her reputation, that he would join Team Weston, buck partisanship, focus on the issues only, and support her with his reputation. In attempting, in front of a crowd, to find a way to have his cake and eat it too, the message Weston received in response to her question was simple: No.
So the issue at the end of the day is trust, and the fact is, it takes two to tango. As dubious as Dems are toward Pollina specifically, its questions like Weston’s that get to the heart of the trust issue on the Dem side; when Pollina speaks of wanting to take on Douglas as a team, does he mean working together shoulder-to-shoulder, or does he have a team of horses in mind?