Amy Walter:
Well, it’s interesting. It is less ideological than it is stylistic.
This is the fight itself, not the problems they fight. As Tam said, it’s correct. What you hear Chuck Schumer and what you hear from Bernie Sanders to save the centerpiece, and by specifically holding the Trump administration responsible for many policies they want to present and can finally move forward, it will be similar.
This is the way they will do the trick. And I think we will see if what is happening right now in these town halls is a sign of broader dissatisfaction with Democratic voters in the way Washington management takes care of Donald Trump. It will appear, I think, above all, in the primaries of the party.
We will start to see people announce for the seats in the congress early enough. And these primaries, just as we saw when the Republicans were inside – they weren’t in the White House, they were trying to return to the White House, will we see something similar where we will have something of a tea?
We saw this time in 2009, 2010, and of course, with Trump, this idea, the same thing at that time. We have to see people fight more. In many cases, some of these fighters have proven to be large candidates in the general elections. This is a big question in the future, I think, for Democrats in the coming months.