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Missouri Democrats see economic issues as way out of electoral wilderness

U.S. Sen. Al Franken speaks Saturday at the Truman Dinner in St. Louis. The Minnesota senator was the keynote speaker for the Missouri Democratic Party event.
Courtesy of the Missouri Democratic Party
U.S. Sen. Al Franken speaks Saturday at the Truman Dinner in St. Louis. The Minnesota senator was the keynote speaker for the Missouri Democratic Party event.

With jokes and jabs, some of Missouri’s top Democrats are seeking to rally supporters dreaming of abetter political future in 2018  —especially compared tothe nightmare defeats the party suffered almost a year ago.

At Saturday night’s Truman Dinner, the state party’s biggest event of the year, most of the best jokescame fromMinnesota Sen. Al Franken, a Saturday Night Live alum who’s now a national Democratic figure.

He exhorted Missouri Democrats to spend the next year on the phone and on the road, and ignore their families. “Ignore them. They’ll be fine,” he quipped.

“People get into politics in the first place to spend less time with their families,” Franken continued drily. “I know this because every time a politician resigns, he says it’s to spendmoretime with his family.” 

The crowd’s laughter didn’t drown out his serious purpose forbeing in Missouri.Franken had spent much of Saturday barnstorming the state (he joked he could vouch for a new Kansas City airport)  to raise money for fellow Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democratwho is considered among the most vulnerable Senate incumbents.

Franken highlighted her fight against wasteful government spending, which he said mirrored the fiscal battle that then-Sen. Harry S. Truman had waged during much of World War II.

Neither Franken nor McCaskill mentioned her possible GOP rivals. Instead, they focused on the Democratic economic message.

“We believe in a country where there is opportunity for everyone, not just at the top," Franken said, after relating a sobering story about his mother-in-law, who became a widow at age 29 with five young children.

Social Security survivor benefits and government education loans kept the family out of abject poverty, he said, and allowed the widow and all four daughters to get a college education that led to better jobs.

Franken said he recognized the importance of people pulling themselves up by their bootstraps.But, he said, “first you have to have the boots.”

Blasts at Greitens, Missouri Capitol 

McCaskill and state Auditor Nicole Galloway are Missouri’s only statewide Democrats — a major reason why they are prime Republican targets next year.

Thanks in part to  Donald Trump’s presidential surge, the GOP swept all thestatewideoffices on the 2016 ballot.

At the Truman Dinner, it was Galloway who delivered the toughest political attacks, along with state Democratic Party chairman Stephen Webber, a former state legislator from Columbia.

Galloway,who isalso from Boone County, said the GOP is targeting her because she is independent. She pointed to 13 public officials across the state who’ve been charged with financial crimes since she took office.

Despite Gov. Eric Greitens’ promise to improve ethics,  Galloway contended that “the ethical environment in Jefferson City is worse than it was a year ago,’’ particularly because of the rise in outside political groups who don’t have to report their donors and are influencing public policy. Greitens has ties to at least one of them.

“A ‘dark money’ cloud has descended over our state government,’’ Galloway said. “We have no idea who is pulling the levers.”

Webber offered a similar theme, and zeroed in on his party’s “sense of urgency” to change what’s happening in the state Capitol.

“Our state is being bought by a small group of billionaires, who are concerned only with what is good for themselves,” Webber said.

He then attacked Greitens as “an unprepared, unethical and absentee governor who doesn’t care about policy. He only cares about keeping his billionaire donors happy.”

Webber cited the passage of a “right to work’’ law to curb union rights, overturning St. Louis’ higher minimum wage, and healthcare cuts that he said are forcing almost 40,000 elderly to pay more for their prescription drugs as of July 1.

Follow Jo on Twitter:@jmannies

Copyright 2021 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Jo Mannies has been covering Missouri politics and government for almost four decades, much of that time as a reporter and columnist at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. She was the first woman to cover St. Louis City Hall, was the newspaper’s second woman sportswriter in its history, and spent four years in the Post-Dispatch Washington Bureau. She joined the St. Louis Beacon in 2009. She has won several local, regional and national awards, and has covered every president since Jimmy Carter. She scared fellow first-graders in the late 1950s when she showed them how close Alaska was to Russia and met Richard M. Nixon when she was in high school. She graduated from Valparaiso University in northwest Indiana, and was the daughter of a high school basketball coach. She is married and has two grown children, both lawyers. She’s a history and movie buff, cultivates a massive flower garden, and bakes banana bread regularly for her colleagues.