OPINOINS BASED ON
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THINGS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED (TYMHM)
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Jan.
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TYMHM Vol 15 - No 1
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Jan.
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Feb. 03, 2015
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Feb. 23, 2015
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May 19, 2015
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May 26, 2015
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May 29, 2015
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July 28, 2015
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Sept. 15, 2015
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Sept. 20, 2015
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Sept. 27, 2015
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Oct. 07, 2015
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Oct. 13, 2015
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Nov.
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Agenda
1. SHORT, FROM FLOYD
2. To
Understand the Presidential Primaries, Recognize the Impact of Movements.
3. DNC LEADERSHIP MINIMIZE THE
EXPOSURE OF DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT
4. DNC
LEADERSHIP MINIMIZE THE EXPOSURE OF DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT
5. FROM BERNIE
SHORT, FROM FLOYD
Just to let you know, I have been in the hospital and my son has
fallen and broke both bones in one leg.
Trying to get back with you.
If you think our Democracy is in bad shape read this first
article. It tells us where we really
are.
~~~
To Understand the Presidential Primaries, Recognize the
Impact of Movements
Authors:
Kevin Zeese Margaret Flowers
NationofChange Op-Ed
Confusion reigns in the Democratic and Republican
primaries. Huffington Post political
reporters write, “It’s Time To Admit: Nobody Knows Anything About The 2016
Campaign,” now that “the old ‘rules’ of presidential politics no
longer seem to apply.”
Why the confusion? Media pundits have not given credit
to the popular movements on both the right and left. This election cycle is
showing the impact of social movements on the primary campaigns — both in the
polling results and in the candidates’ rhetoric.
Tea
Party and Occupy change the political culture
On the Republican side, Tea Party anger is showing
itself. Republicans co-opted this movement, but its members are dissatisfied
with elected Republicans and are turning to non-politicians. Why are they angry?
Because the core of Washington
politics continues: crony capitalism, wherein government writes the rules and
doles out the cash for their big business donors.
One example of many was giving President Barack Obama
fast-track trade authority to negotiate deals that undermine our democracy,
economy and sovereignty. Voters know that these crony capitalist trade deals,
like the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which is larger and farther-reaching than
NAFTA, have been bad for the U.S.
economy. Speaker John Boehner was forced to resign
because of his heavy-handedness in insisting Republicans support fast track for
Obama and punishing those who led opposition to it.
The role of corporate Democrats has been evident in the
Democratic Party for a long time. The Democratic Leadership Council, founded by
Bill Clinton, Al Gore and others, was successful at destroying Howard Dean, an insurgent, but
definitely not a radical one. The DLC has evolved into the Third Way Democrats, whose donors are funding
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and will seek to ensure the defeat of
Sen. Bernie Sanders.
The Democratic Party needs a complete overhaul away
from its pro-corporate, “Third Way ”
stance if it wants to be in synch with the grassroots. The Occupy movement and
its offshoots — Fight for $15, Black Lives Matter, OUR Walmart, Strike Debt,
and United We Dream, among others — hold views opposite from corporate
Democrats.
Occupiers were never part of the Democratic Party
because the Democrats are in bed with Wall Street, while Occupy saw Wall Street
as a root of corruption. The Sanders campaign could not have existed without
Occupy changing the corporate political culture. Clinton has had to mold her rhetoric to fit
the new political reality. Again, the TPP is one example of many where the
“gold standard” TPP has now become unacceptable to the former Secretary of
State. Why? The movement that has developed against it is so broad that the TPP is “Toxic Political Poison.”
More revolts are coming as Washington continues on the same corrupt
path.
Movements
and electoral politics
Mass movements need an electoral arm, one that comes
out of the movement with candidates who are accountable to the movement. In
fact, to help achieve that, Margaret Flowers, co-director of Popular
Resistance, will be taking a leave of absence as she seeks the Green Party
nomination for the U.S.
Senate in Maryland .
The movement needs to build an alternative to challenge
the United States ’
mirage elections and pro-corporate parties. U.S. elections consist of two
corporate candidates running against each other. The two political parties rig the system to prevent
insurgent challenges inside the duopoly and to stop third alternatives outside
the duopoly.
Movements have a lot of work to do to create
real democracy; basics include universal voter registration, uniform ballot
access, verifiable voting systems and public funding of public elections. Much more
needs to be done to create a representative democratic system that allows for
minority parties to have a voice in the legislature, i.e. proportional representation, as well as a break
from monopoly voting districts to protect the
duopoly. We also need to build more direct democracy like voter initiatives and
participatory budgeting. These are a few
examples of how the U.S.
badly needs to update its electoral system to catch up with world experience.
Experiences
outside the US
The U.S.
is the most ingrained two-party system in the world; that is not a compliment
but a description of a system that does all it can to prevent alternatives to
the two corporate parties. People in the U.S.
can look at Spain , Greece and even Canada to see how alternatives to
the two corporate parties can advance and represent the interests of the
people.
In Canada ,
people were astounded earlier this year to see a third party elected to lead Alberta , the oil capital of Canada . Writing for EcoWatch, David Suzuki describes how the voters gave the
New Democratic Party a strong majority in response to austerity measures taken
by the Conservative Party that reigned for 44 years in Alberta . The NDP is a long-time third party
in Canada
that was born out of the labor movement in 1961 and is credited with bringing
Medicare to all Canadians. Its first leader, Tommy Douglas, remains the most
popular Canadian in history. He explains the futility of two-party politics in this
video.
Embed video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqpFm7zAK90
“On Sunday, May 24, the two parties that have ruled Spain
since the country’s transition to democracy in the late 1970s were dealt yet
another substantial blow, this time in regional and municipal elections.
Nationwide, the ruling Popular Party saw support fall from the nearly 11
million votes they received in 2011 to just under 6 million this year.”
This means that candidates from the Indignado Movement
will actually govern. In Barcelona , a “prominent
anti-evictions activist Ada
Colau won the city’s mayoral race.” In many of
the largest cities, the mayor will not belong to either of the two major
parties. How did these parties build their power? Delclós reported:
“. . . [T]heir roots in prominent local struggles,
their independence with respect to the established parties and their
willingness to spearhead bottom-up processes seeking a confluence between new
or smaller parties, community organizations and political independents around a
set of common objectives determined through radical democratic participation.”
The Spanish elections, like the Greek elections earlier
this year, are an example of bottom-up, grassroots organizing and
power-building. The roots of this success are longer than is often discussed:
“In Catalonia ,
the Popular Unity Candidacies of the left-wing independence movement have had a
notable presence in smaller towns for several years (they also quadrupled their
2011 results on Sunday, for what it’s worth). At the southern end of the
country, the Andalusian village
of Marinaleda is a well-documented
experiment in utopian communism that has been going on for over three decades
now.”
The new electoral movement is a “municipal movement,”
participants tell their story in a video that provides a “recipe” for such a
movement.
As we have seen with Syriza’s election in Greece ,
governing in a new way is no easy task. In an interview with Alexandros
Orphanides for In These Times, Frances Fox Piven, a social movements scholar, discussed the complex challenges in Greece as
being “not so much to do with Syriza but with the ability of a nation-state,
especially of a small nation-state, and its elected political rulers to
determine its own economic policy in a very interconnected and global world, in
which the centers of financial power are very ominous and powerful.”
In discussing Syriza, Piven talks about the differences
between movements and electoral politics:
“Anybody who is running for an election wants to win
enough votes to take the seat for which she or he is campaigning. To do that,
they tend to be conciliatory; they don’t want to make any enemies. They want to
win just enough to get over the electoral barrier. They tend to be consensual,
they tend to not want to make trouble. They want to keep everyone that voted
for them last time and add the few more that they need to get over the hump.
Movements are very different. They are dynamic. How
they grow, how they succeed is very different. Protest movements, in
particular, do two things. They identify issues that politicians want to
ignore, because the politicians want to paste together a coalition that can
win. Movement leaders, on the other hand, want to identify the issues that can
mobilize people. They don’t care about voting, because we don’t know a movement
exists by the number of votes it can get—we know by how many people it can pull
into the streets. So movement leaders are attracted to contentious issues that
make trouble for the parties.
And movements often have a capacity for disruption, for
withdrawing cooperation, for bringing things to a halt, for various kinds of
strike actions. Parties don’t do that.”
And that is why many recognize the importance of
continuing to build an independent movement even if movement candidates win
elections. There continues to be a need to disrupt the system to pressure other
forces that seek to block progress.
In Spain ,
a group of militants who see the declining numbers of people in the streets
because of electoral progress are seeking to build new street actions. The group, Apoyo Mutuo (Mutual Aid), has doubts
about the electoral path and wants to return to popular horizontalism outside
of government. They see their work as parallel to Podemos, not in reaction
to it but because “politics cannot be limited to the election of
representatives at the ballot box every four years. We can’t delegate our
responsibility; as a pueblo we need to be active agents in the decision-making
process.”
The US electoral
system
The U.S.
is very different from Europe . Each country in
Europe is the size of one state in the U.S.
Countries in Europe have systems where even
parties that get a minority percentage of votes can be represented in
parliament. While many countries have two parties that dominate the political
system, there is a greater possibility of participation.
This June an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found that 50 percent of
Americans consider themselves independent and fewer than 30 percent align with
either major party. A 2015 Gallup poll similarly found a record high number of Americans — 43 percent — consider
themselves independents, with only 30 percent considering themselves
Democrats and 26 percent considering them Republicans. The independent nature
of U.S.
voters is not reflected in elections, which makes it very difficult for
alternatives to the duopoly to participate. At the same time, elections are funded by a shrinking group of
the extremely wealthy. The U.S.
is now widely recognized as an oligarchy, where big business and moneyed
interests rule, and where democracy is a mirage.
There have been some recent examples at the local level
where people from outside of the duopoly have won elections. Most notable is
Kshama Sawant, the Seattle City Council member, who Chris Hedges describes as the “most dangerous
woman in America .”
Sawant ran with Socialist Alternative, winning
93,000 votes in a citywide race. Sawant came out of the Occupy Movement, fought
housing foreclosures and made the Fight for $15 her signature issue. Sawant is
up for re-election on Nov. 3 this year; she won the first round of voting in
August with 52 percent.
In 2013, Ohio
showed a break between the Democrats and labor. Two dozen city councilors were
elected on an “Independent Labor” ticket. Lorain County
AFL-CIO President Harry Williamson explained: “When the leaders of the
[Democratic] Party just took us for granted and tried to roll over the rights
of working people here, we had to stand up.”
In 2007, Richmond, California, elected a Green mayor,
Gayle McLaughlin, with Greens, independents and progressive Democrats
controlling the City Council through the Richmond
Progressive Alliance .
Big Oil failed in its attempts to defeat them in last year’s elections.
The
confusion of the Bernie Sanders campaign
Bernie Sanders, a lifelong independent, is running for
president in the Democratic primaries and pledging to support whomever the
Democrats nominate if he is not elected. He has entered a rigged Democratic primary system that has
successfully blocked insurgent candidates in every election in the last 35
years. The rigging begins with super delegates who make up 20 percent of the
delegates needed for nomination, it includes the frontloading of primaries so
there are 23 states voting in March requiring hundreds of millions of dollars.
And this year they limited debates to only six, when in 2008 there was more
than two dozen. This is all designed to stack the primary in favor of
establishment candidates like Hillary Clinton or Joe Biden.
Howie Hawkins, the recent New York Green Party
gubernatorial candidate, writes in “Bernie Sanders is No Eugene Debs” that Debs,
the five-time Socialist Party presidential candidate between 1900 and 1920,
understood that it is essential for a movement to have its own political
vehicle as a matter of principle. Hawkins recognizes that Sanders is good on
most domestic issues (not as good on foreign policy) but:
“… [H]is positions on the issues is secondary to the
question of whether his politics are helping the working class act for itself
or subsume itself under the big business interests in charge of the Democratic
Party. By entering the Democratic primaries with the promise of supporting Clinton as the lesser evil
to the Republicans, Sanders is not helping the working class to organize, speak
and act for itself.”
Sanders has called for a revolution against the
billionaire class, but accomplishing that inside a political party owned by
Wall Street and other big business interests is an absurdity.
While Sanders is misleading people to stay inside the
Democratic Party, he is doing useful education on domestic economic issues.
This is valuable to the movement’s task of building national consensus.
But, when Sanders loses, which is a near certainty in the rigged Democratic
Party primaries, people need to understand the problem is not his positions on
the economy but the corruption of the Democratic Party. People need to flee the
party and support a third-party alternative like Jill Stein,
who is likely to be the strongest third-party candidate in 2016. This is not a
wasted vote — though the media will try to convince people that it is. It is
voting for what you want and help building an alternative to the corporate
duopoly.
How
independent movements and third parties have won transformational change
In his article, Howie Hawkins points out that from the
1840s to the 1930s there was a series of independent parties tied to movements
to end slavery, secure voting rights for women, allow the development of
unions, empower workers, and break up monopolies. The combination of an
independent movement and independent electoral politics built power. In 1936,
the unions decided to work within the Democratic Party, undermining both
independent politics and the union movement.
The Nader campaigns of 2000, 2004 and 2008 raised
the banner of the “Tweedledum” and “Tweedledee” nature of the two parties. Now
the American public is catching on, with a majority being independent of the
corporate duopoly. The combination of an independent mass movement and
independent electoral politics is once again on the horizon. We already see the
movement creating confusion in the duopoly; if the movement continues to grow,
an independent electoral movement will follow to accomplish the task of the era
– end corporate rule and bring economic, racial and environmental justice.
~~~
DNC LEADERSHIP
MINIMIZE THE EXPOSURE OF DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT
It has become
obvious the DNC under the "leadership" of Debbie Wasserman-Schultz
are deliberately trying to minimize the exposure all the Democratic candidates on free media to the American
Public before they cast their votes in most of the primaries
By Simon
Rosenberg
Before we get
into the devilish details, it’s important to look at next’s year’s very
front-loaded Democratic primary calendar: The four early states – Iowa, New
Hampshire, Nevada, and South Carolina – vote in February, followed by 21 more
states between March 1 and March 15. The
result is that the Democratic nominee will be effectively locked in by
mid-March, only six weeks after primary voting begins. It is potentially a very compressed calendar.
As of today, the
Republicans have ten debates scheduled before mid-March, while the Democrats
have four. Of those debates, the GOP has six debates scheduled in the ten weeks
closest to the actual voting, while the Democrats have just one.
This has to be
seen as a stupendous tactical blunder by the whole DNC not just Debbie Wasserman-Schultz.
In 2016, the GOP will
have debates in Iowa , New
Hampshire , Texas , Florida , and twice in South Carolina – all consequential states.
The only debate the Democrats have scheduled currently in 2016 is on the Sunday night of the Martin Luther King Day
weekend in South
Carolina .
Rather than being
close to the voting – when people are paying attention – the only Democratic
debate scheduled for Iowa is taking place 10 weeks before the caucuses, on a Saturday night, and the only
New Hampshire debate is happening on Dec. 19, the last Saturday before Christmas,
when the last thing on anyone’s mind will be politics.
Of the eight debates the GOP has scheduled
with actual firm dates, six are during the week when viewership is higher. Of the four Democratic debates with firm
dates, only one is during the week. The rest are on the weekend, and two – the Iowa and South
Carolina debates – are also during holiday weekends.
The only possible
reason I can see for Debbie Wasserman-Schultz's abysmal scheduling is to
minimize free media for the campaigns without a lot of money, and maximise the
role money plays in getting a candidate's message out. It would appear that Debbie Wasserman-Schultz
and her DNC are deliberately sabotaging the Democratic debates not only by
restricting the number but by trying to minimise the Democrats' media exposure
with scheduled times that are the least likely to attract viewers.
The Democratic Party simply has no other tool as powerful as these debates
to engage the millions of people needed to win elections in 2016 up and down
the ticket in all fifty states. And this tool
should be more aggressively deployed for the good of the whole party.
The DNC dismiss the
critical role debates have had in expounding on our party's values for a large
audience and making the Democratic Party attractive to Independents and even
some Republicans who's votes we'll need in the general election.
~~~
FROM BERNIE
Floyd -
I want to talk with you about last
night — but not what happened in Vegas. I want to talk about what happened across the
country.
Our supporters organized more than
4,000 debate watch parties in homes, pubs, and public venues, and more than
100,000 people came together to watch the debate at these events.
In American politics, there are two primary sources of power:
organized people and organized money. Last night proved that we have the
people and that we’re well organized.
Now let's show them that we can
compete with the billionaire class, too.
Your contribution will help us continue to build a movement that
will win the White House for the people.
If you've
saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation will go
through immediately:
(↑ Our average donation this past week ↑)
The debate watch parties that you
organized — again, more than 4,000 of them — serve as the backbone of the
organization that will turn out votes and help us win this election.
We heard from so many hosts of these events,
and I want to share some of their stories with you, because I think that it
speaks to this special moment we have together.
“I'm in a
rural part of Texas
that is overwhelmingly Republican. I met a kindred soul in this sea of red and
we hit it off.” - Barbara in Texas
"I got a
big hug from a gentleman who thought he was alone in our rural area and was so
glad to see so many like minded people." - Marian in Missouri
"Awesome
night last night. Bernie - words can't describe what a tremendous job he did."
- Tom in Nebraska
“When Bernie
mentioned the debate parties, we all clapped and cheered. It definitely made us each feel as though we
are part of this movement. It was
wonderful!” - Heidi in New Jersey
"What a
great debate! I appreciated how the candidates
kept it respectable and concentrated on the issues that face us. It was fun sitting with fellow Bernie
supporters and cheering him on. There is
a real buzz about him in North Iowa . I look forward to the next debate." - Steve
in Iowa
“There are
very few progressives in this rural corner of SC, we were all really happy to
have found each other. Lively
conversation, good food, cold beer .... plans to watch the rest of the debates
together.” - Barbara in South Carolina
"We had a
wonderful, intergenerational group. Everyone was engaged in the night's
discourse. We laughed; we cheered; it was amazing. I have a small apartment,
and I set the capacity at 6 not including me and my roommates. Then people
started calling, and my party grew to 8. Then 10. Then 12. Then 14 in my tiny
apartment!" - Nikki in Missouri
"There
were a large number of people in my apartment and no one really knew each
other. Sven came to my first hosting
party in August and last night brought a table to sign people up for volunteering
based on precincts. So we are off and
running.” - Diane in Colorado
When we started this campaign, a lot
of folks wrote us off. Well, I think last night showed them wrong, and that we can win. We are indeed off and running.
Nothing significant in this country
happens in terms of change unless a strong grassroots movement takes place.
That’s what we’re building together, and people should not underestimate us.
Thank you for all you do.
In solidarity,
Bernie Sanders
~~~
If the good Lord is
willing and the creek don't rise, I'll talk with you again sometime in the not
too distant future.
God Bless You All
&
God Bless the United States of America
Floyd
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