It was largely heard behind the scenes, but there was a fair amount criticism among Democratic congressional candidates in 2012 that President Obama was focused too much on his election prospects, and not enough on theirs. The concerns were not without merit — though Democrats fared quite well anyway, Obama and his team spent the year largely ignoring down-ballot races.
Looking ahead, the president has very different plans for 2014. Obama no longer has to worry about his own re-election, and he intends to take a keen interest in congressional races.
President Barack Obama has agreed to do more than just raise money for House Democrats’ effort to win back the majority in 2014: He is also going to help with candidate recruitment.
Obama will headline eight fundraising events in 2013 for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and more fundraisers are planned for 2014. But Obama’s agreement to help DCCC Chairman Steve Israel of New York make the sell to would-be candidates in targeted districts is also significant.
“It’s transformational,” Israel said in an interview, adding that House Democrats are “firing on all cylinders like I’ve never seen before.”
The Roll Call piece suggests this is an even greater priority for the president than one might imagine. Remember Obama’s victory speech in Chicago at 2 a.m. on Election Night? One of the very first things he did after leaving the stage was call Steve Israel and Nancy Pelosi, stressing his interest in the 2014 midterms.
Indeed, what the president has volunteered to do for Democratic candidates reportedly exceeds what party leaders had even asked him to do.
In late January, Messina got in touch. Israel carefully weighed his “ask” and hoped for the best. [Jim Messina, the president’s top political aide] came back with more than Israel even expected. That included Obama’s fundraising and recruitment help, as well as support from the president’s political apparatus. Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. will be doing fundraising events on behalf of House Democrats as well.
While I don’t doubt House Democrats are delighted to have this kind of backing, the it’s unclear how much Team Obama can realistically expect to do.
Remember, in Election 2012, Democratic congressional candidates defeated Republican congressional candidates in raw vote totals by well over 1 million votes. It helped shrink the House GOP majority, but it wasn’t nearly enough — Republicans at the state level had carefully gerrymandered district lines so that GOP candidates would win, even if Democrats earned more votes.
Indeed, it was the central feature of the Republicans’ “REDMAP” initiative, which they remain quite proud of.









