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Thursday, February 28, 2019

The Point: How Beto will change the 2020 race


February 28, 2019  | by Chris Cillizza and Lauren Dezenski

How Beto will change the 2020 race

Beto's (almost) in.

On Wednesday night, Beto O'Rourke got thisclose to saying he was running for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020. "Amy and I have made a decision about how we can best serve our country," said O'Rourke in a statement. "We are excited to share it with everyone soon."

That statement came along with leaks from sources close to O'Rourke that he would not be challenging Republican Sen. John Cornyn for Texas Senate in 2020. Which pretty much leaves only the presidential race still hanging out there as an option for Beto.

As I wrote a while back, O'Rourke would be crazy not to run for president in 2020. He's the buzziest candidate in what could be a GIANT Democratic field and, if he passed on the 2020 race, it's not clear whether the energy and excitement he engenders among many party activists right now would continue for the next four or eight years.

So, what specifically does O'Rourke's now absolutely-certain-but-you-can-never-say-absolutely-until-he-actually-announces-it candidacy mean for the Democratic field?  Here are my initial thoughts:

1. It speeds up the decision-making process of Joe Biden. O'Rourke, based on early national and key state polls, is a top-tier candidate. He's also someone who is going to lock up a chunk of major donors as well as coveted national and state-level operatives with the quickness. What Biden can't let happen is for O'Rourke to get on too much of a roll before the former VP formally enters the race.

2. It narrows the path for a dark horse. With O'Rourke in and Biden almost sure to follow, we would have the four poll leaders -- those two plus Bernie Sanders and Kamala Harris -- all confirmed as candidates. That quartet accounts for a significant chunk of Democratic voters. Assuming all four, or three of the four, can maintain something close to their current level of support for the next year, it leaves an even smaller piece of the pie for the likes of Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York or Sherrod Brown of Ohio or former San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro.

3. It raises the financial bar for viability. O'Rourke, based on the $80(!) million he raised for his Senate candidacy in 2018, could well be the fundraising leader in the 2020 race in six months' time. He's got a national list of very activated small-dollar givers that is the envy of every candidate this side of Sanders. With O'Rourke (and his small-dollar donor army) in the race, you have a group of fundraising heavy-hitters that includes Sanders, Biden, Harris ($15 million raised in 2016) and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren ($34 million raised in 2018).

There are other Beto impacts, too. For one: Depending on how he chooses to position himself ideologically -- his 2018 Senate campaign was more about emotion than policy -- he could crowd the liberal lane or add another contender to the sensible-ish center.

The Point: O'Rourke's entry into the race is the most significant moment in the contest -- and is likely to stay that way until Biden gets in. (I could be convinced O'Rourke's entry might have more immediate impacts than Biden's.) Presidential races -- especially wide-open primaries -- are as much about momentum and energy as anything else. And O'Rourke has both in spades right now.

-- Chris

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"It's unnecessary and unwise to turn a border crisis into a constitutional crisis."

-- Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander, criticizing Trump's national emergency declaration over the border wall. If Alexander decides to vote to disapprove of Trump's declaration, the measure opposing Trump's emergency would reach the 51 votes needed to pass the Senate.

WATCH: WHO'S ON TEAM TRUMP?

These are Trump's biggest allies in Congress

They may not be perfect, but they're loyal. Here's why Donald Trump can depend on Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina; Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Florida; Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio; and Rep. Mark Meadows, R-North Carolina, in Congress.

Stay perfectly loyal to The Point by subscribing on YouTube

CHRIS' GOOD READS

Breaking from the NYT: Trump ordered officials to give his son-in-law Jared Kushner a security clearance

Robin Wright on what the collapse of the 2nd US-North Korea summit teaches us

Larry Sabato's first 2020 Electoral College map is out! 

Oh, Paul LePage. No no no no no.

Why Iowa matters so much to Kamala Harris and Amy Klobuchar

Luka! Doncic!

The Lil Pump profile I have been waiting for

And speaking of profiles, this one by Molly Ball on JLD is great, too

MUSICAL INTERLUDE

🚨 NEW music from Flight of the Conchords!!!!! 🚨 

EVERYTHING'S BIGGER IN TEXAS

The uber-hip SXSW festival will get an injection of politics this year with not one, not two, but three CNN-hosted town halls featuring Democratic 2020 presidential candidates. 

Scheduled to hit the stage: former Maryland Rep. John Delaney, Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

All three hourlong town halls will take place back-to-back-to-back on March 10 in Austin -- and air on CNN and CNN.com.

LAUREN'S 2020 LATEST

Jay Inslee: The Washington governor is expected to announce his presidential campaign "by the end of the week," reports the Seattle Times. 

Cory Booker: Has re-introduced a bill to legalize marijuana nationwide. Among the bill's co-sponsors: Sens. Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand and Bernie Sanders.

Kamala Harris: Is seeking to block out 2020 rivals from deep-pocketed California fundraisers, Politico reports. 

Sherrod Brown: Won't reveal his 2020 decision until the end of March. The Ohio senator adds that his "deliberativeness and reflectiveness" shouldn't be mistaken as a "lack of passion for my country."

Bernie Sanders: Leads the pack in a new New Hampshire poll of primary voting Democrats, with 26% support. Joe Biden follows with 22%, then Kamala Harris at 10% and Elizabeth Warren with 7%.  

A SUGAR FIX 🍫

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sat down with Rolling Stone for a big interview -- but not before indulging in a particular favorite: Chocolate.

Savor this exchange between Pelosi and Rolling Stone staff writer Tessa Stuart and the magazine's founder, Jann S. Wenner, who presented her with a box of chocolate before the interview kicked off. 

Nancy Pelosi: Oh, my goodness. Maison du Chocolat. This is the real thing. Thank you so much. Should we start?

Rolling Stone: Yeah, let's start, because you're busy.

Pelosi: No, I meant start with the chocolate.


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