A pitched battle between mainstream Democrats and more liberal democratic socialists is roiling Seattle, one of the most progressive cities in the country, in a potential preview of the choice Democratic voters face in picking a presidential nominee.

Like Trump, mainstream Democrats led by Mayor Jenny Durkan are campaigning against a socialist candidate, while more liberal candidates consider their most potent enemy to be Amazon, a tech giant targeted by Trump whose growth has changed the face of the city.

ADVERTISEMENT Seattle voters will cast ballots in a primary election next month to winnow a field of more than 50 candidates running for council seats in seven districts across the city.

In virtually every one of those races, November’s general election is likely to come down to a choice between a candidate backed by self-described democratic socialists and a candidate aligned with the city’s business community.

Voters who once fostered the Seattle Way – a go-along, get-along style of politics – are now furious with the current council, which has struggled for four years to answer a growing crisis of homelessness, crime in the downtown core and drug addiction.

"There is no part of the city I go to and no community where homelessness is not at the top of mind," Durkan told The Hill in an interview. "Many people can't afford to live here anymore. People are getting priced out, especially communities of color."

In one sign of just how bitter the political atmosphere has become, just three of the seven incumbent City Council members are running for reelection.

“The citizens are simply and completely disgusted with the direction of the city,” said Cindi Laws, a longtime Democratic activist who aligns with the mainstream wing of the party. “In short, people are pissed off.”

A seemingly intractable struggle between the business-friendly progressives and the far-left has consumed Seattle politics.

An effort to pay for a response to the crisis with a tax on large businesses, a so-called "head tax," failed last year when the council reversed itself in the face of heated opposition from the business community and trade unions.

Last week, when posters appeared asking residents to use a city-sponsored app to report the location of tents used by the homeless, activists flooded the app with fake reports.

“The messaging is very much anti-homelessness and dehumanizing people who can’t afford to live here anymore,” said Heather Weiner, a Seattle political strategist. “We’ve gone from being the crunchy liberal working-class city to now a city of high-income tech people and people who have been here for decades and who are concerned with protecting their nest eggs, which are their homes.”

The fight is on display in southeast Seattle, once a working-class melting pot of Boeing machinists and Asian and Central American refugees who are increasingly being displaced by tech hipsters.

"At the end of the day, you have to be able to move forward," Durkan told The Hill. "Being a progressive means you actually make progress."

Weiner, who backs Morales, said Durkan’s attacks were “the same language we’re hearing from Trump and the GOP playbook.”

Neither Solomon nor Morales responded to requests for comment.

In a city where the typical council campaign costs less than an average tech worker’s yearly salary, corporate money is playing a larger role.

After the fight over the head tax, Amazon and other large corporations funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars into a political action committee run by the city’s Chamber of Commerce, and a former council member has formed his own PAC aimed at boosting more business-friendly Democrats.

Tension between Seattle’s liberal activists and the business community has existed for decades. Winning elections in the city means cobbling together a coalition of business and labor, a mold Durkan followed when she won office with 56 percent of the vote. She is not the first mayor to anger local Democratic groups who wish their executives were more aligned with the city's more progressive neighborhoods.

“If there is a schism here, it would appear that it is between the Democratic Party and our mayor, not between Democrats and socialists,” said Scott Alspach, who heads a local Democratic club.

The tension in some ways mirrors a broader fight for the future of the Democratic Party, one playing out in the presidential nominating contest before rapt audiences in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Durkan, who has not endorsed a candidate in the race, said she thinks Democratic voters will gravitate more toward candidates like Warren than to candidates like Sanders. The latter has described himself as a democratic socialist and is now battling to be the standard-bearer for progressives after having that lane to himself in the 2016 race.

"As the Democratic field advances, we will see that people understand that you can have strong principled progressive stances and still get things done. I think Bernie Sanders's star will fade," Durkan said. "I think he was lifted up as much by the fact that he wasn't Hillary as he was by his own ability to move people forward."

Licata, the former city council member who frequently found himself outvoted by his more business-friendly colleagues, said the fight in Seattle could presage warnings for the most liberal Democrats running for president.

“The ideas of the strong progressive wing, I think, resonate with many people, but not necessarily the majority of the people,” he said. “Their approach can be easily misrepresented and manipulated by the opposition to scare people. I think that’s what’s happened in Seattle, and I think that could happen on the national level.”