Remember Tom Hanks’ famous line from “A League of Their Own”?

“There’s no crying in baseball.”

Well, if President Trump had coined a motto back in 2016, it probably would have been, “There’s no apologizing in politics.”

No matter how much outrage Trump sparked, he never said he was sorry. You could argue that there were times when an apology was warranted. (The McCain War Hero debacle in 2015 comes to mind).

But there is no arguing that Trump’s strategy was a bold one.

And as the 2020 election nears, he is still the only individual steering clear of the words, “I’m sorry.”

In fact, the Democrats are doing the complete opposite. They apologize … a lot.

They are sorry for the jokes they made, the positions they held, the tweets they tweeted, the pictures they posed for.

You name it, they’re sorry for it.

On some levels, their remorseful strategy makes sense.

While Trump won an election without bowing to the Twitter mobs, President Barack Obama made his bones apologizing.

Not for himself of course, but for America. Often in foreign countries.

So now, the liberals are doing their best to follow suit and placate the perpetually offended.

Former Vice President Joe Biden is obviously the biggest culprit.

First, he had to answer for all of his past hair-sniffing and inappropriate shoulder-touching of females from 8 to 80.

When the hosts of The View told Biden that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi thought he should apologize, Biden said defensively, “Sorry I invaded your space! Sorry this happened. But I’m not sorry in the sense that I think I did anything that was intentionally designed to do anything wrong …”

Here, Biden employs the classic, “I’m sorry you feel that way.” It is the worst kind of apology, both passive-aggressive and narcissistic. Biden doesn’t actually admit to being in the wrong, but he can always say, “I said I was sorry! C’mon man.”

But Biden wasn’t finished there. After getting blasted by Sen. Kamala Harris at the NBC debate, Biden eventually buckled. He apologized for citing his past work with segregationists as an example of how he can work with politicians on the other side of any issue.

Biden told a crowd in South Carolina, “Was I wrong a few weeks ago to somehow give the impression to people that I was praising those men who I successfully opposed time and again? Yes, I was. I regret it. And I’m sorry for any of the pain or misconception I may have caused anybody.”

This apology felt particularly empty because only a few weeks prior, Joe staunchly rejected the idea that he had done anything wrong.

In fact, when a reporter informed the VP that Sen. Cory Booker was offended by his remarks and thought he should apologize, he said, “Apologize for what? Cory should apologize. He knows better.”

Biden was against apologizing for busing before he was for it.

And Joe isn’t the only sorry Democrat in the fight.

Beto O’Rourke asked for forgiveness after making a dumb joke about how he only “sometimes” raises his kids. Mayor Pete Buttigieg apologized for saying “all lives matter” during a speech in 2015. Kirsten Gillibrand has “evolved” to the point that she has reversed about 90% of the political views she held while representing a conservative House district in upstate New York. And Rep. Tulsi Gabbard made a video where she offered a mea culpa to the LGBTQ community for her previous stances.

But what the Dems don’t realize is that the sorrys will never cease. For liberal millennials, being perpetually offended has become a way of life. It is too easy. If you kowtow once, you can be sure it will not be the last time.

The Dems aren’t just taking cues from the internet mob, they are taking orders from it.

And after a while, apologies lose their potency. Like a loser boyfriend who forgets your birthday for the third time, you begin to wonder if he’s actually sorry or if he is just mouthing the words to avoid a fight outside the Cheesecake Factory.

Admitting one’s mistakes is not necessarily a bad thing. But these candidates aren’t apologizing out of genuine remorse. They are doing it out of fear of making people mad. And I don’t know if I want a president who is scared of that.

Because, regardless of party, a president is bound to do just that.

Whether it be pro-lifers or neocons or vegans or Wall Street hardos or cat ladies, it is impossible to please all of the groups that make up our great and complex nation.

Didn’t Abraham Lincoln once say, “You can’t please all the people all of the time …”?

And once a candidate has apologized to everyone, what do they have left to stand for?