Friday, February 22, 2019

Today's Elections-- In Both Parties-- Are Between The Establishment And Anti-Establishment. Gut Check: Which Side Are You On?

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Yesterday, Ron Brownstein, writing for The Atlantic, had his corporate, anti-Bernie slant on full display. He wrote that Bernie's "entry into the 2020 race amounts to a big stone in a lake: It will generate ripples that touch every other candidate. But his own path to the nomination remains rocky unless he can attract a broader coalition than he did in 2016. Whether or not Sanders claims the nomination himself, his bid could have a big impact on which candidate eventually does. Sanders will hurt contenders whose support overlaps with his, reducing the pool of voters available for those who are targeting the same groups most drawn to him, particularly young people, the most liberal activists, and independents who participate in Democratic primaries. That dynamic would most obviously affect Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, but could also potentially weaken former Texas Representative Beto O’Rourke, who’s mulling a bid. Yet it could simultaneously benefit the candidates with the least demographic and ideological convergence, a list that ranges from African American Senators Kamala Harris and Cory Booker to such relative centrists as Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar and former Vice President Joe Biden, if he joins the field."
But for all of his influence, Sanders still faces huge obstacles in his second bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Key among them is a history of resistance in 2016 from core groups in the party, including African Americans and voters who identify as partisan Democrats.

Sanders this week quickly demonstrated his greatest asset as a candidate: a passionate grassroots following that includes a massive base of small-dollar online donors. On Wednesday, he reported that, in the first 24 hours after his announcement, he raised nearly $6 million online, far more than any of his rivals did after entering the race. He’s in a stronger position than in 2016, too, in the internal party debate: As Sanders noted in his announcement-day interview with CBS, more of the Democratic Party’s leaders, including several of his 2020 competitors, have moved toward positions he took in the last presidential campaign, supporting a single-payer health-care system and free four-year public college. “All of those ideas and many more are now part of the political mainstream,” Sanders crowed during the interview.

It’s unquestionable that more Democrats are supporting those ideas than when Sanders aired them in 2016. But all of the policies remain contested: Klobuchar, for one, has already rejected both single-payer and free tuition. Other potential candidates targeting more moderate voters, such as Biden and several former governors eyeing the race, would be virtually certain to follow. (It’s also worth noting that the Democratic-controlled House is unlikely to pass legislation on either matter.) Even some of the candidates who have echoed Sanders’s overall goals are likely to challenge some of his specific proposals as unaffordable or excessive, as Booker has done by rejecting Sanders’s call to virtually eliminate private health insurance.

In other words, Sanders hasn’t won the war of ideas in the party nearly as much as he’s suggested. In fact, he’s virtually certain to face tougher scrutiny over his agenda than he did in 2016, when Clinton made the misguided strategic choice not to criticize his proposals as undesirable or unaffordable, but only as unlikely to pass Congress. Sanders probably won’t receive such deference again.
That's right, the corporate whores and careerists don't support Sanders. People do-- lots of them. The idea of someone like Amy Klobuchar or Status Quo Joe supporting Bernie's progressive positions is absurd. Browmnstein's whole perspective in his piece is absurd and can be summed up in one sentence: people who represent the status quo don't back revolutionaries. As I've said, people like Klobuchar and Biden wouldn't have supported the American War For Independence, free public education, the emancipation of the slaves, the minimum wage, Social Security... or anything else that was hard to pass and that upset the establishment.

John Nichols, in The Nation makes a far more salient point than Brownstein's corporatist carping: Two years into the presidency of Donald Trump, the nation is ready for radical change. Nichols begins by addressing people like Brownstein: "When Bernie Sanders launched his bid for the presidency in 2015, he was dismissed by political and media elites as an outsider with radical ideas that would prevent him from being taken seriously by Democratic primary and caucus voters. Now, as Sanders mounts his second bid for the presidency, the same political and media aristocrats speculate about whether Sanders will have a hard time distinguishing himself in a field of candidates who echo his stances on issues ranging from Medicare for All to wage hikes to tuition-free college and implementing a Green New Deal." Brownstein's biggest distortion is exactly what Nichols corrects: "Sanders won the ideas primary four years ago... As media and political elites misunderstood what made Sanders stand out in 2016, they are now misunderstanding what will make him stand out in 2020."
Sanders’s identification as a democratic socialist was not a liability in 2016. It was a strength. It made him an intellectually dynamic and exciting contender who addressed America’s anxieties and its hopes—not merely because with the solutions he proposed but in the way he put the pieces together by comfortably talking about doing battle with “oligarchy” and “plutocracy” and “the billionaire class.”

At a time when Americans were sick and tired of the political “competition” between right-wing dogma and centrist double talk, Sanders spoke a language that made sense. He focused on fundamental questions and provided fundamental answers: People who are ailing need affordable health care, and a single-payer national health-care program will get the care they need; people working 40 hours a week shouldn’t be living in poverty, and a $15-an-hour minimum wage will make ends meet; young people shouldn’t have to take on overwhelming debt in order to get an education, and free tuition will change the calculus. Ending austerity and addressing inequality costs money, and taxing the rich will help to balance the books.

...The moment will be just as ripe in 2020. The challenges that needed to be addressed four years ago remain unaddressed today, and in many cases have been made more daunting by the Robin-Hood-in-reverse approach of Trump and his billionaire-aligned Republican allies in Congress. Because of Trump’s racism and crude attacks on immigrants and refugees and women’s rights, there will be an even greater need to focus on an equity agenda that Sanders was sometimes criticized in 2016 for not emphasizing enough. In 2020, that agenda was central to an announcement of candidacy that declared: “I’m running for president because, now more than ever, we need leadership that brings us together-- not divides us up. Women and men, black, white, Latino, Native American, Asian American, gay and straight, young and old, native born and immigrant. Now is the time for us to stand together.”

In that same “complete the revolution” announcement on Tuesday, Sanders promised that “Together we can create a nation that leads the world in the struggle for peace and for economic, racial, social and environmental justice. And together we can defeat Donald Trump and repair the damage he has done to our country.”

Unlike most of the other candidates, who are evolving toward where Sanders is already at, the independent senator from Vermont simply has to be his own authentic self-- the guy who started working with the Young People’s Socialist League and civil-rights groups as a student at the University of Chicago and who joined the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom that Randolph and another democratic socialist, Bayard Rustin, organized in 1963.

The point here is not to suggest that the Democratic Party is about to go socialist, or that if Sanders is nominated and elected that America will suddenly be a socialist country. The point is that, after 30 years of globalization, 20 years of digital revolution, and 10 years of automation, with climate change posing an existential threat and with inequality surging in a new age of monopoly, the United States is at a critical juncture. The reactionary policies of the Trump administration will not meet the demands of this moment, but neither will the centrist “New Democrat” or “Third Way” approaches that have too frequently constrained Democratic administrations in the past four decades.

This is a potential New Deal moment, a potential Great Society moment. Bigger ideas, bolder approaches, better answers are needed if this country is going to respond in a meaningful way to climate change, to economic and racial injustice, to the dislocation caused by the collapse of the old economy, and to the monopolization of the new economy by a handful of tech giants.

Just as there was in the 1930s, and in the 1960s, there is now an opening for the Democratic Party to fill a void in our politics and policy-making. But to fill that void, the party must be willing to embrace at least some ideas that have been labeled as “socialist”-- and to maintain the embrace even when a Herbert Hoover or a Barry Goldwater or a Donald Trump attacks. Social Security was described as a “socialist” program, but FDR fought for and implemented it. Medicare was attacked as a “socialist” program, but LBJ fought for and implemented it. Major strides on behalf of racial justice, gender equity, disability rights, and environmental protection, to implement fair taxation and to provide a safety net, were often decried by the right as “socialist” initiatives-- as backers of a Green New Deal are now learning-- but, as these policies have been advanced, society has come to the point even centrists and some conservatives recognize their value.

It is not necessary to claim that democratic socialism has all the answers-- certainly Sanders does not do so-- but it is necessary to recognize that there are old socialist proposals that have always made sense and new socialist proposals that make sense in a moment of economic, environmental, and social disruption.

Sanders, to a far greater extent than the other 2020 contenders, is prepared to do this. He’s not doctrinaire or romantically idealistic. He’s practical and serious-minded. He’s a former mayor, who ran his state’s largest city ably. He’s been in the US House and the US Senate for almost three decades, compiling a record of getting things right when most Republicans and many Democrats got them wrong. He is a serious thinker and analyst of ideas, who is familiar with social democracy, as it has been practiced and as it now is being practiced in Scandinavian countries-- to such an extent that he once organized town meetings in Vermont with Denmark’s ambassador to the United States. And he is prepared to talk about how social-democratic programs have worked well for countries such as Norway, Sweden, Germany, and Canada.

Goal ThermometerIt’s not a hard sell. Polling suggests the people are ready. Social-democratic responses to contemporary challenges-- like providing health care as a right, not a privilege; like taxing the rich to fund job creation and green infrastructure-- are popular, especially with young voters and with the historically dispossessed voters who must be mobilized to win in 2020. If Sanders runs as a more-ambitious version of who he was in 2016-- with comprehensive proposals for meeting the ancient need of equity in a new machine age of globalization, digital revolution, automation-- he will stand out from the field of Democratic contenders.

...What makes Bernie Sanders stand out is an ability to move the discussion forward by educating voters rather than trying to frighten or divide them. At the heart of that education is an understanding that is hardwired into the American experience.

“Let me define for you, simply and straightforwardly, what democratic socialism means to me. It builds on what Franklin Delano Roosevelt said when he fought for guaranteed economic rights for all Americans. And it builds on what Martin Luther King, Jr. said in 1968, when he stated that, ‘this country has socialism for the rich and rugged individualism for the poor,’” says Sanders. He went on:
It’s time we had democratic socialism for working families, not just Wall Street, billionaires and large corporations. It means that we should not be providing welfare for corporations, huge tax breaks for the very rich, or trade policies which would boost corporate profits as workers lose their jobs,” he said, echoing a line that he frequently repeats in his standard campaign speech across the country. It means that we create a government that works for all of us, not just powerful special interests. It means that economic rights must be an essential part of what American stands for. It means that health care should be a right of all people, not a privilege.
Brian Hanley penned a post on Medium this week, 20 Reasons Bernie Sanders Is The One To Beat Trump In 2020 and you really do have to click on the link and read the whole thing to get the full import of what he's saying. I'll just give you the headlines here:
1- He's on track to win the 2020 primaries.
2- He’s the most likely to win the Electoral College.
3. He’s the most popular politician in the country.
4. The kids are crazy about him.
5. He’s a savage on social media.
6. He’s the undisputed leader of the progressive movement.



7. His supporters are as passionate as anyone’s.
8. He’s the king of grassroots fundraising.
9. His message resonates with Trump voters.
10. He’s a leading voice on environmental justice.
11. He has more experience and organizational readiness than the rest of the field.
12. He has crossover appeal that his competitors lack.
13. He may not be a Dem, but he’s given Dems life.
14. He’s stronger than ever due to the DNC’s reforms.
15. He may be in his 70’s, but so too are his main competitors.
17. He may be a socialist, but so too are growing numbers of Americans.
18. He’s authentic.
19. He represents the change most Americans want.
20. His interest in running isn’t for the power, it’s for the people.



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10 Comments:

At 9:56 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Abraham Lincoln was a "moderate" when he won the election of 1860. Abolitionists were suspicious of him and they had good reason to be. He pledged not to interfere with slavery where it already was. Rather, he opposed the extension of the slave system into new territories of the West. But Lincoln knew that slavery was a moral evil and he listened to the right people -- people like Frederick Douglass. In 1863 he signed the Emancipation Proclamation. It is inconceivable that any abolitionist could have built the sort of political coalition necessary to win the presidency in 1860 and maintain legitimacy thereafter. That dynamic may also be in play in 2020. I think that Bernie can do most good exerting pressure from the outside. A similar case can be made with respect to Franklin Roosevelt who was no radical when he was elected for the first time. But like Lincoln he had a moral compass and knew who to listen to.

 
At 10:23 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

9:56 raises some interesting points. Unfortunately, the US of A is burdened with the democraptic Party of 2018 and should not expect to see the Party rise to the challenge this opportunity presents. Their donors' wishes are far more important than are the needs of We the People.

 
At 10:27 AM, Anonymous wjbill said...

the corp media will be fully on board defending the status quo all the way to early November 2020 even if it means saying trump isn't all that bad. I could see mornin joe leading the support

On another topic, how many other congressional districts have deployed the NC-9 method of enhancing their chances? My guess if the conservatives find something that works it will show up again and again. You think the preacher in NC9 will get prosecuted or given a pass?

 
At 11:17 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Which side indeed. The media attack after just one day makes Mueller's Russian interference look like floating pillow feathers against vs an iron anvil under gravity. ("cant win...time has passed...too old...owns houses...supports breadlines...socialist genes...unbearable whiteness...supports dictatorial strongmen ...anybody but bernie again...etc etc.") Anybody seen our old friend, the actual journalist?

 
At 11:48 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

9:56, while your history is pretty good, it's not relevant to today.

running as an "electable moderate" in order to get into office where you can then become as "revolutionary" as necessary to affect meaningful change is the OPPOSITE of what Bernie is trying to do.

He's running as a "revolutionary" against an entrenched, omnipotent and unassailable bunker of money/power/fascism.

Whether he is actually sincere is another argument. Personally, I doubt it.

"Sanders still faces huge obstacles in his second bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Key among them is a history of resistance in 2016 from core groups in the party, including African Americans and voters who identify as partisan Democrats."

More sheepdogging. The key obstacle is:
1) the democrap PARTY, its sources of billions in bribes, its fraud and suppression of voters.
2) see #1.

after 2 years of trump and Nazi rule, I'll wager even the blacks and women will vote for Bernie.

 
At 12:30 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think Bernie's path is substantially easier than 2016. He's not a shoe-in, but he doesn't have to overcome no name recognition and a coronation candidate. If Bernie replicates his 40+% share of the delegates he got in 2016, he will likely lap the field and easily be the nominee. I don't know that he will be that successful in a crowded primary, but that also means he doesn't 'have to' do as well to still win the nomination, as everyone else will be splitting delegates as well.

I think the Democratic candidate wins regardless of their position on the political spectrum. (I suppose if Bernie gets the most delegates, but someone else gets the nomination due to superdelegates, it won't be a given.) Trump is too hated now and regular voters will show up to send him packing.

But Bernie is probably the only candidate that can legitimately expand the electorate. He could conceivably open up a Senate seat or two that is barely seen as up for grabs. Harris could capture most of the Obama coalition, but that probably only allows for a Congressional status quo. While Biden, Booker or Klobuchar will win, they might not defend all the swing seats in the Senate and the House will definitely be a bit redder. I am not sure where Warren falls. She is definitely the most hurt by Bernie's entry and is probably the only Democrat I would vote for if Bernie doesn't get the nod.

 
At 5:55 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I've taken the time to look at Bernie's voting records since he's been in congress: on gun safety legislations(like holding gun manufacturers responsible), on prescription drugs, etc. And I must say I'm not impressed.

 
At 8:03 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

12:30, let me disagree with you.

1) Bernie had plenty of name recognition in '16. what he didn't have was the DNC's boot on the scale tipping it in favor of the whore. He also didn't have the stones to walk out of the rigged primary and either run a 3rd party campaign or just speak the truth about the frauds of the DNC's process.

2a) Bernie MAY expand the electorate... by giving the millions who would otherwise never vote again to try it one more time. He also might even turn a couple of REALLY aggravated trump voters. But not many.

2b) Elizabeth, for whatever reason, seems to lack the charisma of Bernie. Bernie's appeal is nationwide, intergenerational and covers MOST of the economic strata. Elizabeth's base seems to be non-Nazi white women. Less potential there. And Bernie won't lose any of Elizabeth's base should he overcome the DNC.

3) nobody else can survive even a cursory examination of their record. Harris' record, once exposed, will more than compensate for her skill as a campaigner and rhetorician. The rest have garbage records or, at best, mixed (Booker). They enjoy either regional or identity appeal only.

4) after 2 years of watching the democraps (Pelosi) do absolutely nothing at all, the natural reaction of the sentient portion of the 65 million democrap loyalists (not more than 20 million) will be to just fucking quit the charade once and for all. NONE of the current slate will make them even ponder participating in the same old pointless bait-and-switch except Bernie.

Bernie's path is no easier. Corporations, banks, billionaires and the CMIC all loathe his rhetorical aversion to vulture capitalism and official corruption. Their bought proxies in DC (Pelosi, hoyer, cliburn... 200 others just in the house) are terrified of his stated policies. The DNC consists of a list of pure proxies. The adopted rules for their primary and convention still give them the option of subverting the will of their voters. Bernie could win all 50 primaries (he won't) and still lose in the convention (look up what they did in '68... and what that meant for the general election that year).

Bernie's only possible path is if it becomes plain that he is the only one who could beat trump, which I believe to be true at this point, and the DNC decides beating trump is more important than keeping their golden goose well fed (highly doubtful... they didn't care in '16).

I'm smelling biden or klobuchar if they don't mind losing. Harris if they pretend to want to win but not with Bernie. Booker if they just want to pander to the blacks but don't mind losing.

Trump's total will be more than his 62 million in '18. The democraps will probably settle for a safe (for the money) nom that will struggle to get 55 million (after the latest Pelosi malaise really sets in). Trump may win every state but NY and the west coast. He'll certainly get more electors than in '18.

 
At 7:38 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lulz. Trump isn't going get more votes than he did in '16. If Republicans refused to vote during the mid-terms, when they usually ride their GOTV advantage, they aren't going to come out in force for Trump in '20.

Even if he does somehow manage to squeeze more racists to the ballot box, the Democrats and Independents are also going to come out in force, either to vote FOR a candidate or to vote AGAINST Trump. You are brain dead if you think the Democratic candidate only gets 55M votes.

At this point Hillary could run again and win. Trump isn't going to W Bush his way into two terms as war president. The intelligence agencies aren't going sit idly by and let a terrorist attack happen and Trump has no one with the gravitas of Colin Powell to lie us into a war in Venezuela or Iran.

 
At 12:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I disagree. I remember 2010. The democrap voters were so disgusted with the betrayals of their party they stayed home and let the Nazis take over.

Pelosi is not going to allow anything that would actually encourage the left. In fact, she is going to do service to her donors and probably not even pretend to give a shit about MFA, GND et al. Trump is arrogating even more power via the declaration. Pelosi still has both thumbs up her ass up to the wrist. What further disasters and scandals will occur by 2020 that Pelosi will refuse to respond to??

And I'm quite sure that the DNC will rig the process for biden or some other corporate uber-whore that will suppress the left from even wanting to vote. As in 2016, even a Bernie endorsement of the whore won't make anyone give a shit... and millions more will retire from the charade forever. And Bernie will be forever tainted by his own record of betrayals. 30 million lefties won't even listen to him any more.

Between the Nazis religious fervence for the white racist bully and the left's having no reason at all to get excited is why I believe trump will win bigger than in 2016.

and, no way $hillbillary could run again nor would she even take half the states she took last time. She's the plague at this point.

 

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