Michelle Cottle
Enough With the Nepo
Candidates, Democrats
April 6, 2026
Ms.
Cottle writes about national politics for Opinion.
The Democrat Terry
McAuliffe has worn many political hats over the years: mega-fundraiser, top
campaign hand for President Bill Clinton’s 1996 run, chairman of the Democratic
National Committee, chairman of Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign, the
72nd governor of Virginia. Now he is soliciting campaign donations for his
wife, Dorothy, who is running for Congress in what will be a Democrat-friendly
House seat if Virginia voters approve a redistricting plan this month. Looking
for a boost in the crowded primary, Ms.
McAuliffe’s campaign is blasting out emails from Terry with the theme: I’ve been a party player for more than four decades, so please help my
wife!
I wish Ms. McAuliffe
well. But I’m rooting for her path to take her somewhere other than Congress.
Sure, she is plenty
qualified. A former State Department official, Virginia’s former first lady has
more experience in government and politics than many other first-time House
candidates. I also have no reason to doubt she is a delightful person. But as the
Democratic Party tries to shed its reputation as the defender of a self-serving
political elite, I do think its candidates should avoid trumpeting their status
as the beneficiaries of rank nepotism.
Better still, sitting
Democratic officials might stop encouraging nepo candidates. Americans are in a
salty, anti-establishment state of mind. Public confidence in the federal
government and in political parties is in the basement. The results of early primary
elections in North Carolina and Texas last month suggested an anti-incumbent
mood. Younger Democratic voters and elected officials are agitating for
generational change. Polling shows people disgusted with the political status
quo. Voters are sending strong signals that they want fresh faces and fresh
ideas. Yet Nancy Pelosi, the formidable speaker emerita, has already endorsed Ms.
McAuliffe.
Nepo candidates are an enduring,
nonpartisan reality of U.S. politics. But the Democratic Party risks more than
just one House race by embracing them at this moment.
The American electorate
has long had an awkward relationship with dynastic politics. In theory, voters
hate the idea of inherited power. In practice, they are frequently drawn to
familiar names and pedigrees. In many cases, the political torch gets passed
from one generation to the next. (See the Kennedys, Bushes, Cheneys, Daleys,
Romneys, Gores, Caseys, Sununus, Cuomos. …) In others, it moves sideways,
between spouses (Dole, Dingell, Clinton, Matsui, Bono, Letlow …).
There have been plenty
of stellar political scions who reinforced the idea that certain families have
a real taste and talent for public service. But there is a dark side as well.
Americans’ enduring obsession with the Kennedy clan felt unhealthy long before
it saddled us with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. atop the public health system.
On occasion, voters get
fed up with a specific dynasty. (Poor Jeb Bush!) And Americans’ predilection
for nepo candidates doesn’t necessarily hold during periods of
anti-establishment frustration. In some circumstances, a well-known familial
brand can wind up hurting more than helping.
On this point, the
McAuliffe brand isn’t exactly an inspirational, future-forward one. Mr.
McAuliffe’s fame and fortune were bolstered by his close ties to the Clintons,
and for many of the voters familiar with him, he is a relic of that era, which
has refused to gracefully fade away. He is also the guy who, after finishing a
term as governor in 2018, popped up to run again in 2021 — a rare occurrence in
Virginia, which prohibits governors from pursuing consecutive terms — and got
stomped by a Republican, Glenn Youngkin.
This isn’t to single out one family.
Consider the disastrous attempt by Tammy Murphy, the wife of Phil Murphy, then
the governor of New Jersey, to snag herself a U.S. Senate seat in 2024. Jumping
into the Democratic primary in late 2023, Ms. Murphy was the darling of the state party machine. She quickly
racked up endorsements from county officials who, under the state’s
since-dismantled “county line” system, determined which candidates received the
prime spot on the ballot. Friendly with big donors, she initially outraised her
chief competitor, Andy Kim, then a representative.
Thankfully, voters were
having none of it. Democrats preferred Mr. Kim’s upstart campaign and his
pledge to take on the party machine. Ms. Murphy was decried as the pick of a
sclerotic, reform-resistant establishment. Her poll numbers languished, and the
backlash against her grew fierce enough that she bowed out of the race that
March. Mr. Kim went on to win the June primary and then the general election.
At least Mr. McAuliffe
is a former governor. Mr. Murphy was still in office when his wife ran; there
was no way to separate his power from his wife’s candidacy.
The more political
nepotism looks like a tool for manipulating the playing field, the more noxious
it becomes — even when a revered political figure is involved. This year, as
Representative Jim Clyburn noodled whether to run for an 18th term, he told The
Washington Post that whenever he retired, he would love to see his House seat
go to his daughter Jennifer. “You’re a daughter,” the South Carolina Democrat
reasoned to a Post reporter. “What would you think of your dad if you decided
to do something and your dad didn’t support you?”
No doubt, many grateful
voters in his district would be happy to help Mr. Clyburn cement his legacy by
backing his child. But when elected officials grease the path to power for
family members, no matter how gently, that sends a negative message about their
party’s principles and about the sense of entitlement among its leaders.
Manipulation doesn’t become virtuous because the manipulators are otherwise
respectable.
Too many elected officials see their
posts as possessions to do with as they please. Just last month, Senator Steve
Daines, Republican of Montana, waited to withdraw his name from this year’s primary
election until just three minutes before the state’s filing deadline and didn’t
post his announcement video until two minutes after the deadline, ensuring that
his preferred successor — who had filed five minutes before Mr. Daines’s
withdrawal — would have minimal competition. How’s that for slippery? Democrats
and even some Republicans expressed
dismay. Last year, Representative Chuy GarcĂa, an Illinois Democrat, pulled a
similar stunt. He got formally reprimanded by
the House, thanks to a resolution introduced by a fellow Democrat, Marie
Gluesenkamp Perez, of Washington. So far, Senate Republicans have shown less
enthusiasm for condemning Mr. Daines’s machinations.
Political players’
seeking to manipulate the game with cronyism or nepotism is no way to regain
the public trust. No matter how any individual race plays out, the stench
clings to much of the team.
Democrats appear on
track to do well in this year’s midterm elections, propelled by growing
anti-Trump sentiment. But they still have much rebuilding and rebranding ahead.
They need to get serious about showing that they get what Americans want from
them.

