Conor Lamb, the centrist candidate more popular with party bosses than with the rank-and-file.Īnd yet it is Kenyatta who - to steal Howard Dean’s famous line from his insurgent 2004 presidential campaign - is running for the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party. He seems instead in a fight for second place with another western Pennsylvanian, U.S. So the question I had while driving west past ancient cemeteries, Revolutionary War battlegrounds, and fancy horse farms to see Kenyatta in action was: Why isn’t he the Democrats’ present? With the May 17 primary quickly approaching, Kenyatta continues to run well behind the made-for-TV, smart-pol-who-looks-like-a-bouncer candidacy of Lt. While pundits fight over whether the Democrats should own their new look as the party of the college educated or woo back the working class, Kenyatta - who washed dishes at age 12 to help his mom get by, then took on $100,000 in debt earning degrees at Temple and Drexel - speaks to a more universal idea: the politics of aspiration. Yet Kenyatta also bridges so many gaps for a party grappling with a severe identity crisis. In seeking to become America’s youngest senator, he surely faces the hurdles of so many “firsts” in a state where politics is weighed down by its brass-knuckle ward-boss traditions - a Black, openly gay man in a state that has sent only white men to the Senate since 1789. Malcolm Kenyatta is the future of the Democratic Party. “Democrats win tough elections,” he said, “when we focus on the future.” He reminded the room that a Black man with the exotic name of Barack Hussein Obama carried Pennsylvania by a larger margin than President Joe Biden, twice.
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Instead, his case hung largely on the notion that only he could energize the young, Black, brown and neglected working-class voters that Democrats need to show up in November. 'Focus on the future': After some chuckles and the obligatory “Hi, Mom!” from Kenyatta, the candidate made an argument that touched lightly on the practical, like that he’s the only candidate from the largest voting bloc of Philadelphia and its suburbs. The reason is she doesn’t think you can win and beat a Republican in this state.” “I’ve been trying to get her on your train for a while, and it just ain’t working. He grabbed his phone to press the record button. “This is for my mom,” said 20-year-old Keiran Francke, already a Democratic committeeman in Chester County’s London Britain Township while studying political science at the University of Delaware. Yet arguably the most critical Democratic voter of the night’s “meet-and-greet” an hour west of Philadelphia was the one who wasn’t there. More: Three takeaways as Democratic Senate candidates talk about gun violence More: Fetterman, Democrats confront a newly hostile Senate primary More: Trump endorsement hovers over prime-time GOP Senate debate
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Kenyatta said voters simply want to “look your child or your grandchild in the face and know with a level of certainty their life is going to be a little bit better than yours was, because they got every opportunity and every chance.” Instead, he gave an animated master class on how progressive ideas could mean opportunity and better schools for rising working-class people like Kennett Square’s Latino community - avoiding the policy-wonk jargon that sometimes weighs down his fellow Democrats. Senate nominee.Ībout 20 folks sated by chips and salsa gave their rapt attention as Kenyatta paid little mind to the political horse race that still pegs him as a long shot. Malcolm Kenyatta held court for 20 minutes to explain why Pennsylvania Democrats should pick him, a 31-year-old North Philadelphian with a surname forged in 1960s Black radicalism, as their U.S. In the backroom of a popular Mexican restaurant in Chester County’s mushroom capital of Kennett Square, standing in front of florid Mexican folk paintings, a faux red-tile roof, and a half-finished Corona, state Rep.