Sunday, January 26, 2020

Texas Is Turning In A More Purple Direction-- Is 2020 The Year A Democrat Will Win Statewide?

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The Texas AFL-CIO is meeting in Austin's Omni Hotel this weekend, the only union hotel in the city. On the umbrella organization's agenda is endorsing 2020 election candidates. Many locals already have done so but these endorsements are for the state organization. And there was a problem right from the start. Many for the conservative building trades unions and unions in the fossil fuels industries are vehemently opposing progressive canddiates backing the Green New Deal. It's got to be incredibly frustrating for the union activists who are strongly campaigning on the Green New Deal.

As we mentioned when we first endorsed her, Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez is a Latina labor organizer and the line you hear about her is that she represents the future of Texas. Reporting for In These Times on Friday, Steven Greenhouse wrote about meeting Ramirez 7 years ago when she was running the Workers Defense Project and how he found her "whip smart, a born organizer and an inspiring speaker... The WDP brought national attention to the fact that Texas construction workers have the highest on-the-job death rate in the nation, and then in Austin won Texas’ first municipal ordinance requiring rest and water breaks for construction workers. It got Apple and other companies to guarantee workers on their Austin construction projects receive raises, safety training and workers’ comp, not required in Texas. Tzintzún Ramirez proved adept at working with undocumented workers, union leaders, construction industry execs and lawmakers." You can use the Take Back Texas thermometer below to contribute to federal campaigns of Texas progressives. Take a look at who Blue America is recommending in the Lone Star State.

Goal ThermometerGreenhouse interviewed her about... well, about how a labor organizer with a progressive agenda is going to defeat Republican Party heavyweight John Cornyn. She started by expelling that she's "spent a decade and a half thinking about how to make policy solutions for real-life problems that politicians often didn’t even know existed. I learned how to build coalitions. I learned how to raise resources for campaigns. I learned how to work around the clock to win-- because the only thing I have that those in power don’t have is time, and the knowledge that you can defeat powerful people by building movements of ordinary people."
Steven: At WDP and Jolt, you developed a reputation as a fighter for Latinos. How would you assure all Texans you will fight for them?

Cristina: I don’t think that disqualifies me to be Texas’ next senator-- I think it makes me uniquely qualified. The things that Latino families want are the exact things that every other family wants: Making sure the education system is affordable and accessible. Making sure people have good, living-wage and safe jobs. Making sure families can be together. Making sure our democracy works for everyone.

Steven: What are some ways you would work to help white and African-American communities?

Cristina: We have a senator, John Cornyn, who only wants to represent the interests of one ethnic group, one income bracket and one gender: the interests of white wealthy men.

I want to be the senator for everyone. I stand up for Medicare for All because I believe it is the best way to have the highest quality healthcare and to make sure every single American can go to the doctor. I want to tackle the student debt crisis and make sure every single Texas family can send their children to college or trade school. I want to make sure that Texas becomes a leader in transitioning our economy to green energy in a way that creates millions of great jobs for Texans.

I was really proud of my work at the Workers Defense Project. I brought union and non-union workers together, immigrants and American-born together, black, brown and white together to pursue their common interests.

I understand the way Republicans use racism and xenophobia and sexism to distract us. That’s how they get away with not giving us healthcare. That’s how they get away with divestment from our education system. That’s how they get away with an economy that doesn’t work for everyone.

Steven: The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has endorsed one of your 11 opponents, M.J. Hegar, presumably thinking a centrist Air Force veteran has the best chance. Why would a progressive like yourself fare better?

Cristina: There are two strategies to change Texas. One of them has been tried for 20 years and failed every single time-- which is to run a moderate Democrat to try and swing white Republican voters.

The other strategy is to embrace the state’s diversity. We are a state that is majority people of color, a state with a long populist tradition, where progressives are hungry for change. Beto O’Rourke was the most progressive statewide candidate I can remember, and he got closer than anybody. In our Senate campaign, we try to speak to everyone-- the Black Lives Matter movement, Latino and immigrant communities, the LGBTQ community.

Everybody knows that you don’t win in Texas unless you drive up voter turnout among Latino voters. No Democrat wins without us. Yet there are Democrats running who don’t want to speak to us, who don’t want to fight for us.

There are some people in Washington who think that they know Texas better than Texans. We will prove them wrong on Election Day.

Steven: Cornyn will no doubt have a huge campaign chest. How will you defeat him?




Cristina: Republicans know if they lose Texas in 2020, it’s game over for them nationally. So I think every single dirty trick will be played in this race.

Unseating the second-most powerful Republican in the Senate doesn’t come without hard work or substantial resources. It’s my intention to raise those resources from small-dollar donors across the country who understand what’s at stake in Texas. Texans have the ability to change the course of not just our state’s history, but our entire country’s history, when we flip Texas.

Steven: What do you hope to achieve in the Senate?

Cristina: A state as large as Texas can dream big because we are big. I want to position Texas to be a leader in our nation’s transition to renewable energy. We are already the largest wind energy producer. I want to make us the largest solar energy producer and create nearly two million green jobs in Texas-- good jobs-- over the next decade. I want to tackle income inequality. In Texas, we work more hours than most people in other states. Yet most Texans struggle to get by.

The other big issue is Medicare for All. In Texas, we have the highest uninsured rate in the country: one in six. Even Americans with health insurance struggle to pay their co-pays, deductibles, premiums. This past week my son was in the hospital twice, and we had a $500 co-pay.

Steven: Texas’ economy has been built in large part by fossil fuels. How do you persuade Texans that the Green New Deal is good for them?

Cristina: As Texans, we don’t run away from big problems. We take them head on. I see climate change as a big problem, but I also see it as a real opportunity, especially for Texas. John Cornyn opposes the Green New Deal because he says it’s too expensive, but he doesn’t calculate the catastrophic cost of doing nothing-- the cost for our economy and our environment, and the human cost and suffering, which is incalculable.

No state has more to gain or lose than Texas. Texas has 250,000 workers in the oil, gas and mining industries and 233,000 workers in advanced energy, which will outpace the oil and gas industry in the next few years. So it’s just basic common sense for Texas to support the Green New Deal.

Steven: I deliberately haven’t asked whether it’s hard running with a 3-year-old son-- I imagine male candidates don’t get that question.

Cristina: I don’t mind you asking, because it’s the truth. Deciding whether to run was hard. I know that, when men run, they get thanked for their sacrifice of being away, but when women like me run, we get villainized as bad mothers But I think I could be a great senator and a great mother. I’m running with my little guy, Santi. I taught him how to hand out flyers and say “Vota Mama.” He likes to do that at all the events.

When I’m going out and fighting for the policies and solutions I believe are in the best interest of Texans and Americans-- doing that with my son next to me, I know I’m fighting for his future as well.





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2 Comments:

At 5:34 AM, Blogger PDiddie said...

Wrong Latina, Howie.

Sema Hernandez is the one you should be promoting.

 
At 7:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

shoulda asked her why 30% of latinos supported trump and still do, if polling is to be believed.

caught her in a lie. Cristina: As Texans, we don’t run away from big problems. We take them head on.

that's not just a lie for Texans. it's a lie nationwide and across both parties. The favored method for Texans to flee from big problems is to deny they exist (climate, racism, fascism...) and to trot out the 2nd amendment (gun carnage). The guy who became sane about guns, Beto, became unelectable the moment he got sane.

That said, to suggest that TX democraps might be turning TX purple/blue is horse shit. Even if democraps win a few state/national seats and even if they become a majority, TX will remain a bastion of corruption, neoliberalism, fascism and naziism. TX democraps won't change any of that except the letter next to names.

It is pure sheepdoggery and delusion to suggest that changing the political hue in TX will change TX at all.

 

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