Article snippet: The TAKE with Rick Klein Forget Hillary vs. Bernie, or the left-vs.-center splits that have defined their fights for a generation. For Democrats, raging primary battles are less about ideology than they are electability – and what kind of candidates can motivate voters in the age of President Donald Trump. With four red states voting on Tuesday, Democrats’ main problem at the moment isn’t in finding viable contenders so much as it is what to do with too many of them. In Georgia, two 40-something women named Stacey are fighting for the Democratic nomination for governor. Stacey Evans, who is white, is running based on her appeal to moderates and Republicans; Stacey Abrams, who is black, is an unapologetic liberal hoping to boost progressive and minority turnout. In Kentucky, a former fighter pilot, Amy McGrath, faces off with Lexington’s openly gay second-term mayor, Jim Gray, in what Democrats view as a chance to reclaim a House seat in a solidly Republican state. In Texas, two young progressive women are competing for the chance to take a Houston-area district that Hillary Clinton carried two years ago. National Democrats failed to keep one of the women out of this round of voting by pronouncing her “truly disqualified” in a general election. Of course, qualifications are for voters to decide. Inside some compelling candidate backstories are complicated calculations about the Democratic Party’s path back to power. The RUNDOWN with MaryAlice P... Link to the full article to read more