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DNC Chairman Tom Perez takes final tour of Democratic convention finalists

Posted at 8:41 PM, Dec 06, 2018
and last updated 2018-12-06 21:41:07-05

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez is beginning a final tour of potential 2020 convention cities as he tries to give his party its best shot at toppling President Donald Trump.

The DNC chairman, who already has set the 2020 convention for July 13-16, is expected in early 2019 to announce his choice among finalists Houston, Miami and Milwaukee.

Perez and a small group of aides will be in Milwaukee on Monday. They are scheduled to visit Miami on Friday and then Houston on December 14. The group is expected to spend about a day in each of the three cities. It's the second and expected final round of site visits.

"These three dynamic and energetic cities have each put forth impressive bids to host the 2020 Democratic convention. We appreciate their work and look forward to next steps in the process," said Jess O'Connell, the party's former chief executive officer who is advising Perez on the search.

Republicans already have announced plans to gather in Charlotte, North Carolina, where Democrats held their 2012 convention. The GOP will convene Aug. 24-27, keeping with the tradition of the party that holds the White House going second and getting the last opportunity to showcase itself for voters.

Democrats opted for an earlier-than-usual convention. Noting the expected large field of candidates, Perez has said he wants no delays in a nominee having the opportunity to unify the party and shift to the general election campaign.

For now, Democratic officials are not tipping their hand on any potential convention favorite, insisting they wouldn't spend time and resources on a second visit to any city that wasn't still in the running.

Perez aides say logistics are the most important factor in the decision. The details go well beyond the arena space that most voters will see on prime-time television, extending to everything from hotel capacity and transportation plans to move thousands of delegates and dignitaries to vistas for television networks and space for inevitable protesters.

Beyond those factors, the three finalists hope to provide the party nominee with a compelling narrative about the Democratic Party.

South Florida has long been the Democratic anchor in a key battleground state, fueled by a diverse and ever-changing electorate.

Wisconsin Democrats, anchored by organized labor, just toppled Republican Gov. Scott Walker and re-elected Sen. Tammy Baldwin to prove the party still has strength in the Rust Belt-Great Lakes region where white, working-class voters propelled Trump to the White House.

Texas Democrats point to the recent midterm election — Democrats flipped three GOP-held suburban House seats and Rep. Beto O'Rourke's surprisingly close loss to Republican Sen. Ted Cruz — as proof that the conservative has an emerging Democratic coalition of city liberals and suburban moderates.

Whatever Perez chooses, there is no provable tie between convention sites and November outcomes.

Trump won battleground Ohio handily in 2016 after the GOP convention in Cleveland. President Barack Obama won Colorado in 2008 after being nominated in Denver, but lost his second convention state — North Carolina — four years later. President George W. Bush lost both states — Pennsylvania and New York — where he was nominated.