Wednesday, April 08, 2020

America-- And The Democratic Party-- Needed Bernie To Stay In The Race

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This is a must-watch video, a discussion between Mehdi Hasan and Naomi Klein. They don't get to Bernie staying in the race 'til near the end but the whole half hour is a worthwhile way to spend some time. As for Bernie staying in the race, I very much agree with Naomi Klein and with Alan Minsky, the Executive Director of Progressive Democrats of America who penned this guest post a day before Bernie decided to drop out. I hope you agree as well-- and agree enough to contribute to congressional candidates who are running on Bernie's issues, even if it's just five or two dollars. Thats why I've included a Bernie Congress Blue America thermometer below. Just click on it and vote with a few dollars to let Bernie you agree too.


Stay In The Race Bernie Sanders-- America Needs You Now More Than Ever.
-by Alan Minsky


Progressive Democrats of America calls upon Senator Bernie Sanders to continue his presidential campaign until the end of the 2020 primary season.

Goal ThermometerWe understand that many Democrats are calling for Bernie to drop out. They say that Joe Biden is so far ahead that the time has come for party unity, for focusing on Donald Trump. While we agree about the necessity of defeating Donald Trump, we arrive at the opposite conclusion: The Democratic Party, and all Americans, will benefit from Bernie continuing his campaign in this historic moment.

The severity of the COVID-19 national emergency has changed everything in this election year. Coronavirus has revealed, with tragic consequences, the failings of our public health institutions and economic safety net-- in ways that Bernie Sanders has been warning against for decades. Thus, it comes as no surprise that Bernie's platform directly addresses these failings; in marked contrast to his rival's. As many observers have noted, with each passing day the COVID-19 pandemic is proving the wisdom of the Sanders agenda.

In particular, Medicare for All needs to be the official policy of the Democratic Party and it's presidential nominee in 2020. The pandemic has exposed America's current healthcare system for the disaster that it is. There can be no denying that having tens of millions of Americans unable to access affordable care greatly increases the public health risk for everyone. America needs universal single-payer health care; and the only way to get there is through the Democratic Party. Yet Joe Biden opposes Medicare for All, while Bernie Sanders is its leading proponent.

In the wake of COVID-19, Medicare for All isn't merely a winning political issue; it's a political landslide issue. Even if Bernie doesn't win the nomination, by continuing to campaign and win delegates to the convention, he could leverage Medicare for All into the party platform. For this, America, the Democratic Party, and even Joe Biden, should want Bernie Sanders to stay in the race. We also need Bernie to stay in the race to insure that his voice is heard as we enter the peak days of the crisis. Over the past few weeks, Bernie has fought tirelessly on behalf of average Americans in the battles over the stimulus bills. As one of only three viable candidates for President, Bernie has a powerful platform. That will change overnight when his campaign ends; and his influence will wane, leaving Americans even more at the mercy of a political class that, on balance, prioritizes big money interests over those of the vast majority.


Of course, Bernie's campaign going forward is not just about building support for policies, however essential, because of one fact: the race isn't over. Joe Biden may have a significant delegate lead, but it's nothing that a string of 70-30 results wouldn't reverse. That might be a longshot, but it's not impossible. Think about it this way: Bernie's policies match this moment just like FDR's did in the early 1930s; and FDR won his share of landslides. Calling for Sanders to step aside is anti-democratic. Let the candidates campaign and let the voters decide.

On this final point, consider the parallel with FDR in light of the recent unemployment statistics. Only one period in American history resembles the wholesale devastation that is currently shredding the American economy, the Great Depression. How did we get out of that? After three years of Hoover's impotent response, FDR re-energized America with a revolutionary program that transformed the country forever, the New Deal-- an updated version of which was a central plank of Sanders' platform, the Green New Deal.

The President who will be inaugurated in January will have a unique opportunity to define the direction of the country for the foreseeable future. Do we want to re-affirm a society that only works for the few while the rest of us work multiple jobs, live entwined in debt, with underfunded public schools, and a broken health care system with little hope of overcoming America's endemic crises? Or do we choose a new path that brings both our society and the planet back into balance and ensures that America will lead the world in addressing the biggest challenges of the next century?

Be honest folks, the Bernie Sanders agenda made a lot of sense before COVID-19, now it makes all the sense in the world. It's the vision that the Democratic Party needs to unify behind. The only way that happens is if the Sanders campaign continues.

The world has changed irreparably since early March when most primary votes were cast. The fallout from COVID-19 will define politics in the 2020s. We will all benefit by having the country's leading advocate for strengthening the public sector make his case in our new, transformed, reality.

Stay in the race Bernie Sanders. America needs you now more than ever.





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4 Comments:

At 3:41 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"America-- And The Democratic Party-- Needed Bernie To Stay In The Race"

I agree with Saagar Enjeti, and hence am really disappointed in Bernie. Bernie really does not have the stomach for a fight that a revolution needs. Bernie "Joe is my friend, and Joe is a good guy" Sanders really did not have it in him what a revolutionary needs.

 
At 4:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

He was never a revolutionary. He just ran on shit that nobody else would run on and hoped it would catch on. It did but not enough.

When he repudiated himself by endorsing the anti-Bernie, he should have lost all of his supporters. Some he did lose, as evidenced by his coming up far shorter than last time.

And to say that America needs him... I guess I can go along with that. Except he's clearly not what you all want him to be. And America roundly, this time, said no thanks. Not his fault, really. See below.

To say that the democrap party needs him is utter horse shit. the party loathes and fears him. They rigged it in '16 to keep him from the nom (for fuckssakes, read donna brazilles book) and they rigged it again this time. Iowa should have made that perfectly clear. But there are the omnipresent $uperdelegates who are carefully selected BY the party that loathes and fears him.

Now that Bernie has dropped out, whichever of his voters are stupid or terrified enough will still vote for trump-the-lesser (biden, in case you got lost). Those who are sentient will have to lose an argument with themselves to vote democrap. Some number (in the millions) will win the argument and either stay home or, hopefully, find someone else to vote for (not trump, of course. In case your pathology is only binary).

Those conditions were not dependent on WHEN Bernie dropped out or was officially ratfucked out of the nom at the convention.

"I hope you agree as well-- and agree enough to contribute to congressional candidates who are running on Bernie's issues"

Any democrap running on Bernie's issues that gets elected will immediately be shunted to his seat, to keep it warm, as Pelosi and scummer take total charge and decide, unilaterally, how best to serve the money. hint: mfa and gnd are NOT going to be among the money's programs to affect. never will be.

just so you know... flush your money as you wish.

 
At 4:12 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

voters this cycle are measurably worse than voters last cycle. In view of this, Bernie was never going to do as well.

The voters demanded a 'worse than even $hillbillary' nom, because the voters are worse.

 
At 6:15 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am very disappointed that Bernie chose to drop out even while I understand the pressures he faced to do so. But in reality, Bernie chose to drop out before Super Tuesday when he didn't hammer Biden over his corruption and his lies denying wanting to eliminate Social Security and Medicare. He pulled one punch too many, and it would have been delivered too late in any case.

Bernie is already sheepdogging. Sadly for him, I don't bleat prior to being sheared. I won't be going into the fold, because I refuse to participate in the farce of having only two senile corporate crooks as my selection list. The nation needs better options and I won't justify providing anything else.

 

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