Washington (AFP) - Barack Obama slashed US unemployment, protected child migrants and delivered health care to millions. But several 2020 candidates scorched the popular ex-president at their Democratic debate, a strategy that risks alienating voters as the party seeks to regain the White House.
With party
divisions over ideology laid bare, progressive rivals to centrist frontrunner
Joe Biden challenged the former vice president's record -- and by extension
several Obama-era policies on deportation, coal, Afghanistan and health care.
Calling
into question the legacy of perhaps the most revered living Democratic leader
made for startling viewing at this week's presidential debates, when 20
Democrats took the stage over two nights.
Despite the
strategy being a clear play by rivals to undercut Biden, who has made his
eight-year partnership with America's first black president a centerpiece of
his candidacy, it alarmed Obama loyalists concerned about repelling the very
voters who Democrats need to motivate to the ballot box next year.
"To my
fellow Democrats: Be wary of attacking the Obama record," Eric Holder,
Obama's first attorney general, tweeted Thursday.
"Build
on it. Expand it. But there is little to be gained -- for you or the party --
by attacking a very successful and still popular Democratic President."
As the
nation's first black leader, Obama was and remains hugely popular among African
Americans.
But he was
also deeply concerned about unnerving white middle-class voters, and so faced
resentment for not pursuing policies bold enough to close the racial wealth
gap.
David
Axelrod, a chief Obama campaign strategist, nevertheless argued Thursday that
it was a "perilous path" for Democrats to slam Biden's Obama-era
policies because that would require attacking Obama, who would win the
nomination "in a walk" if he ran today.
Neera
Tanden, who directed domestic policy for the Obama campaign and now heads the
Center for American Progress think tank, was blunter, likening the approach to
"political suicide."
"The
GOP didn't attack (president Ronald) Reagan, they built him up for
decades," tweeted Tanden, referring to the devotion with which Republicans
treat their political hero.
"Dem
Candidates who attack Obama are wrong and terrible," she added.
'Lessons
of the past'
The Obama
ambush signaled what has become increasingly clear in the era of Trump: the
party that seeks to oust him from power has shifted decidedly leftward.
While Obama
remains a favorite among Democratic progressives, many are keen not to merely
expand the Affordable Care Act -- popularly known as Obamacare -- as Biden is,
but replace it with a universal, government-run health care system.
Candidates
like liberal senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, and even Obama's own
housing secretary Julian Castro, suggested Biden was stuck in the past for
embracing some Obama policies rather than seeking bold new initiatives.
"It
looks like one of us has learned the lessons of the past, and one of us
hasn't," Castro memorably snapped at Biden, castigating the frontrunner
for not splitting more forcefully from Obama's deportation policy.
Warren
expressed frustration with the current health system and touted a shift to a
government-led "Medicare for All" plan, and blasted "a corrupt,
rigged system" that began before Trump and "that has helped the
wealthy and the well-connected, and kicked dirt in the faces of everyone
else."
The
fusillade against Obama caught the attention of Trump, who gleefully told
supporters at a rally Thursday that Democrats "spent more time attacking
Barack Obama than they did attacking me, practically."
Biden
acknowledged on Thursday in Detroit: "I was a little surprised at how much
the incoming was about Barack."
But even
Biden himself said he would not raise the deportation rate back to Obama-era
levels. And he added that he had opposed Obama's surge of troops in
Afghanistan.
Biden could
have rallied the party faithful with a more spirited defense of the Obama
presidency from the debate stage.
But the
lack of such full-throated acclamation suggests the balancing act that many
candidates are navigating, especially those further to the left of the former
president.
Candidates
like Senator Kamala Harris, who clashed with Biden on health care during the
debate, was quick to cheer Obama afterwards, perhaps to smooth over concerns
that she was attacking the ex-president's legacy.
"I
have nothing but praise for president Obama," Harris, who is black, told
reporters, noting he was the only recent president to achieve major health
reforms.
"My
proposal is about taking it to the next step," she said, adding that Obama
put Americans "on the path where actually this next step is even
possible."

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