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Some Philly Democrats worry the city party isn’t prepared for November — and that could cost Joe Biden

With six months until a high-stakes presidential election, the turnout challenge for Democrats is compounded by waning enthusiasm for Biden, generational divides, and tensions over party operations.

President Joe Biden is greeted by party chair Bob Brady at the Philadelphia International Airport in March.
President Joe Biden is greeted by party chair Bob Brady at the Philadelphia International Airport in March.Read moreTyger Williams / Staff Photographer

More than 500,000 Democrats in Pennsylvania’s bluest city didn’t vote in last month’s primary.

Turnout in Philadelphia, a perennial problem for Democrats, is sure to be higher in November. But the number of city voters who head to the polls could make or break President Joe Biden’s reelection chances.

With six months to go until a high-stakes presidential election, the turnout challenge for Democrats is compounded by waning enthusiasm for Biden, including some in the party protesting him, generational and ideological divides in the city party, and lingering tensions over how the local party is run.

It’s led to frustration from some Philadelphia committeemembers, who say they’re concerned about the effectiveness of the party’s turnout operation and its long-standing party boss, Democratic City Committee Chairman Bob Brady.

Big-city Democratic machines aren’t what they used to be, thanks largely to the reduction of political patronage in city government. And Brady gives an enormous amount of deference to local ward leaders, meaning the strategy — and vigor — of the party’s turnout efforts vary by neighborhood.

But with Philadelphia’s slice of the statewide Democratic vote continuing to shrink in recent elections, Brady’s critics are calling for a more cohesive citywide strategy that takes advantage of its greatest asset: the thousands of elected Democratic committeepeople who are trusted voices in their neighborhoods.

“What is Bob Brady’s plan to boost turnout?” asked Fred Dedrick, a committeeman in West Mount Airy. “The numbers were horrible, even for a primary, and the turnout keeps getting worse and worse. What has happened to this army of party people who are supposed to be advocating for their neighbors?”

The debate reflects long-standing rifts recently aggravated this winter when some progressive members were dismissed.

Brady countered that the party is running one of its most robust campaigns in years, led by the Biden campaign in coordination with party ward leaders.

“We’re doing everything we can,” Brady said. “We’re working in complete conjunction, which never happens. [The Biden campaign] hired all our people, local people. They’re not bringing anyone in from Arizona that wants to know where to get a good cheesesteak.”

Through it all, the Biden team is projecting calm.

“There’s an understanding across the board that whatever family feud is going on in the Democratic Party in Philadelphia, it is gonna be put aside to get President Biden over the hump,” Biden’s Philadelphia campaign lead, Kellan White said.

“We’re gonna talk to everybody because we need their help to get out the vote or ultimately, we all lose in November.”

‘You send a signal you don’t want our help’

On a Wednesday afternoon ahead of primary day last month, Democratic ward leaders, committeepeople, and elected politicians gathered for the weekly “pizza with the chairman” open house.

Brady, a former congressman who has chaired the city party since 1986, sat at the head of a table huddling with small groups. His cell phone, one of the most valuable political rolodexes in the city, kept ringing.

Brady, 79, is perhaps the most well-connected Democrat in the region. He often greets Biden on the tarmac at Philadelphia International Airport when the president visits, which is a lot.

“He gets upset if I’m not there,” Brady said.

But Brady’s old-school style is often criticized by younger, more progressive members of the party and tech-savvy organizers eager to modernize.

“There are some who are like, I’m the big bad wolf with the big bad party,” Brady said from his office, decorated with photos of him and past Democratic presidents. “Come talk to me. The door’s open.”

Some don’t feel welcome. This year about 20 committeepeople were ousted after signing a letter supporting progressive Working Families Party candidates for City Council over Democratic nominees. The two Working Families Party members won seats long held by Republicans, and all five Democrats still cruised to victory. Only a handful of the city’s 3,400 committee people were impacted but it intensified tensions over how the party operates.

“We’re doing the work while the Democratic committee fails to get people out to vote … and purges really hardworking people,” said Rebecca Poyourow, an ousted committeeperson in Roxborough, where she cofounded an effort that’s boosted turnout in her neighborhood. “You send a signal that you don’t want our help,” she said.

Andre Carroll, a Democratic nominee for state representative who previously worked on a Working Families Party candidate’s campaign, said Democrats must focus on turning out a diverse coalition.

“The thing about politics is that we need to do a better job of increasing participation and any time we’re removing people from their posts, we’re going in the opposite direction,” he said at the Brady lunch.

Others defended the ousters. “I’ve been a ward leader 28 years and I’ve always done what my chairman asks of me,” said Angel Cruz, who runs a North Philadelphia ward.

Cruz represents one of the lowest turnout wards in the city. Brady’s own ward had 21% turnout in the primary. Some argue there should be consequences or incentives for ward leaders to drive turnout.

But Brady insists the party’s leaders aren’t to blame. The city has lost residents to the suburbs in recent years and voter apathy is hard to overcome.

“We can only do what we can do,” Brady said. “They gotta turn out. We give them every reason to turn out and the numbers all through the elections are horrible.”

‘There’s not necessarily a user guide’

A chief criticism of the city party from some elected committeepeople is there’s no user manual for turning out voters.

“If there is a coordinated approach to voter engagement and registration, there’s a ready-made army of people who could be mobilized,” said Laura Boyce, a committeeperson in the Second Ward. “That could be more effective than outside campaigns coming in, or at least really complementary to it.”

In 2021 after meeting with party leaders, Boyce sent a list of recommendations, including a newsletter and monthly training sessions on constituent engagement, voter registration software, and canvassing. None of it was ever implemented.

Philadelphia has 66 wards split up into divisions, which each elect two Democratic and two Republican committeepeople. The neighborhood representatives act like political block captains and historically helped connect residents to city services or jobs. Today, the role can feel more nebulous. How active a committeeperson is can depend on their relationship with their ward leader and whether the ward is “open,” allowing it to be run more autonomously than the city’s closed wards.

Tim Lynch, a committeeperson for eight years in Northeast Philadelphia’s 56th Ward, pays for and circulates pamphlets in his division ahead of elections but there’s no coordinated effort ward or citywide.

“If the committeeman wants to do something on his own, God bless ya,’” he said.

Gianni Hill, an adviser to Brady, said with a decentralized system of ward leaders comes different approaches and some resistance to new technologies and ideas.

“A lot of people think there’s this magic tool that’s gonna get 3,400 committeepeople turned into magic field organizers and that’s not realistic,” Hill said.

Hill, a 23-year-old first-year law student who Brady calls “Mighty Mouse,” is coordinating with the Biden campaign on the city’s turnout operation.

“There is a current ramp-up of more tech and data-driven decisions and functions,” Hill said. “I do think there are various tensions we have to manage and part of that is clearer communications.”

‘Democrats, we worry a lot.’

For all the fretting, modern presidential campaigns have largely run independently of city and state parties. Biden’s campaign in Philadelphia is no different.

The campaign is already opening field offices across the city — an early deployment compared to 2020, when it hired a Pennsylvania state director in August.

Trump, who has a drastically different strategy but also far less campaign cash, has no offices in the state.

Biden’s and Sen. Bob Casey’s campaigns convened a room of ward leaders, elected officials, and younger organizers from North Philadelphia two days after the primary.

Sharon Vaughn, a ward leader, chastised Biden’s protest voters. “They had the audacity to put in ‘uncommitted.’ What kind of message is that? You shoulda stayed home if you weren’t gonna vote for a Democrat.”

Oscar Lopez, a former Casey intern and recent college graduate, offered a counter perspective.

“Many young people don’t view this as a place where they have a voice and that’s why many didn’t show up two days ago,” Lopez said.

After the event, Casey said the gathering represented the coalition Democrats need in November and dismissed some of the hand-wringing.

“Democrats, we worry a lot,” Casey said. “And that’s good because there’s a lot at stake if we fall short.”

Staff writer Sean Collins Walsh contributed to this article.