I still like him, but now I'd like to see Amy Klobuchar My number one priority is someone who can beat Trump in 2020. Today I think she can. More importantly, I predict on November 3, 2020 I'll believe it still. Why:
- in 2020 she'll be 60 years old, 14 years younger than Trump and younger by a similar margin than Sanders, Biden, and Clinton, and 11 years younger than Warren., 8 than Brown''
- in 2020 she'll be 60, 4 years older than Harris, 12 years older than O'Rourke, 9 years than Booker, 6 years than Gillibrand,
- her experience in government relative to her competitors is roughly similar to her age--more experience than those younger, less than those older
- by 2020 I expect the great American electorate to have tired of Trump, even more than they have already. The contrast between "Minnesota nice" and "New York crass [add your own adjectives] could not be greater.
- having been elected to the Senate 3 times from the Midwest battleground of Minnesota shows her ability to campaign and win.
- early analysis of the landscape for the 2020 election sees the MW states of WI, MI, and MN along with PA as key, so her Minnesota background gives her a headstart.
- all else equal, I think a woman will do better in debates with Trump than a man would. I see Clinton as having done better against him than the 16 Republican men.
What are her vulnerabilities:
- foreign affairs/national security. Depending on the course of events over the next 2 years her lack of background could be a real handicap.
- perceptions: "too nice to lead", "not a tough enough fighter against Trump" would be my guesses at the lines of attack against her. I think her exchange with Kavanaugh helped her here, but much will depend on her ability in debates.
- not progressive enough. That would be the view of the Sanders cluster of the Democratic party. I think she's about as progressive as the nation will stand as a president in current circumstances, absent a recurrence of the Great Recession.