Source: TMI
No doubt, you have been told to keep quiet. Just put on your big boy pants, they say, and find the impulse control to at least muzzle yourself for the next 72 days until the election happens. After that, fine ā then and only then will you maybe be permitted to speak your mind and politely ask the Democratic Party to match its rhetoric with its policy agenda.
But until then, you are told to āāshut the hell up and grow up,ā as former Obama and Mike Bloomberg pollster Cornell Belcher put it during an emblematic MSNBC segment berating progressives.
This kind of hectoring has become a defining part of the Democratic Partyās culture. As the late great journalist Bill Greider lamented in this must-watch clip: āThe way the Democratic Party is run for quite a number of presidential cycles is they pick a nominee in a kind of half-assed process that doesnāt really represent much of anybody and then they tell everybody to just shut up — donāt bring up anything that will complicate life for your nominee… shut up, turn off your brains.ā
Thereās a superficial logic to this call for omerta ā after all, Donald Trump is destroying everything and he must be defeated. But hereās the problem: The demand to shut up is only being aimed at the progressive base of the party, while the corporate wing floods the zone with rhetoric that could demobilize voters.
Indeed, at the very moment many good progressives are blunting their criticism and making clear that defeating Trump is of utmost importance, Corporate Democrats arenāt being asked to wait or hold their tongues. In fact, they are doing the opposite: Rahm Emanuel ā who has been advising Biden ā just went on television to show that the corporate wing of the party is intent on using the stretch run of the Most Important Election Of Our Lifetime⢠not to doggedly focus on actually winning the election, but to instead try to predetermine post-election policy outcomes.
Emanuel and his ilk depict themselves as evincing a non-ideological ājust win, babyā attitude. But they are most decidedly pushing a very clear corporate ideology ā and they are doing so in dangerously divisive ways that could depress the big turnout thatās desperately needed to defeat Trump.
āThereās No New Green Deal, Thereās No Medicare For Allā
The larger dynamic at play was exemplified by Emanuelās television appearance on a CNBC segment dubbed āDemocrats 2020 Agenda: Whatās at stake for business?ā As progressives are being told to keep quiet and not even so much as tweet their concerns, Emanuel used the platform to demand that during this health care and climate emergency, a prospective Biden administration must reject the two major initiatives that polls show are popular.
āTwo things I would say if I was advising an administration,ā said Emanuel, who left the Chicago mayoralty in disgrace after his city officials suppressed a video of the police murder of a teenager. āOne is no thereās no new Green Deal, thereās no Medicare For All, probably the single two topics that were discussed the most. Thatās not even in the platform.ā
Emanuel is hardly a disinterested observer here. As Obamaās chief of staff, Emanuel helped kill the idea of a public health insurance option. Now, he works for a Wall Street firm that advises big health care and fossil fuel companies on mergers, acquisitions and bankruptcy restructuring. Earlier this year, Emanuel was set to be part of the featured entertainment at an oil lobbying group’s annual meeting, during a $125-per-plate luncheon with GOP strategist Karl Rove, before the event was cancelled due to COVID.
Emanuel also isnāt just some random blowhard pundit spewing a corporate line. The Chicago Tribune in May reported that āEmanuel is having regular conversations with presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and his top advisers about economic policy.ā
So when Emanuel is refusing to self-censor in the name of āunityā and making these kinds of divisive declarations that stomp on progressive voters, heās speaking from a position of real power. And heās not just tweeting these comments, which could depress voter enthusiasm. Heās making them to a giant national television audience.
Corporate Democrats Are Not Holding Their Tongues
Now sure, you could try to write off Emanuelās rhetoric as just the anomalous bloviations of notorious super-villain who pushed NAFTA and anti-immigration policies and who famously called progressives āf-ing retarded.ā But sorry, this isnāt a one-off ā this is part of a larger pattern over the last few weeks and months.
As progressives are told to keep quiet, Democratic Party officials engineered a convention light on policy proposals, but one that gave prime convention speaking slots to the anti-climate-science, anti-union former Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio and to Colin Powell, who lied America into a war that killed hundreds of thousands of people. In his CNBC interview, Emanuel said āthis will be the year of the Biden Republicanā ā and he noted that promoting these figures was designed to help Biden deliberately send an anti-progressive message to voters because āJohn Kasich and Colin Powell donāt exactly endorse (or) support big-P progressive policies.ā
This is the kind of move that is potentially disillusioning for Democratic voters who were previously told that a Democratic victory isnāt just a return to status quo ā but a step forward in strengthening the movements for climate action, worker rights and a more sane foreign policy.
Similarly, as progressives are told to shut the hell up, Democratic aides on Capitol Hill leaked word that the partyās lawmakers may immediately replay the 2009 debacle and block a public health insurance option after the election ā a move that is potentially demotivating for millions of Americans currently losing their private health insurance.
As progressives are told to mute themselves, Team Biden last week publicly signaled that a new Democratic president might prioritize deficit reduction and budget austerity in the middle of an economic crisis ā a move that is potentially deflating for millions of voters who have previously been told that President Bidenās agenda makes him the next FDR.
As progressives are told to keep quiet, Bidenās campaign leaks to Politico that the transition team building Bidenās prospective administration is being advised by Wall Street pal Larry Summers and former corporate super-lobbyist Steve Richetti.
And as progressives are told to muzzle themselves, Corporate Democrats went scorched earth and spent $15 million to intervene in primaries, stymie progressive Democratic candidates and tilt intraparty contests to business-friendly candidates. Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi works to unseat Democratic Sen. Ed Markey, one of the Senateās few progressive lawmakers, and to crush a spirited primary challenge to Rep. Richard Neal, who has used his committee chairmanship to block even modest health care reforms.
āHold the line. Win. Lead.ā
Clearly, this is a coordinated campaign by the right-wing of the Democratic Party to prioritize its policy goals above everything ā even motivating core Democratic voters to turnout in record numbers during the general election.
The best response to such an onslaught isnāt to ignore it or succumb to dishonest unity-themed demands for silence and fealty. After all, the folks making those demands donāt actually want unity ā they are aiming for corporate victory at all costs, even if waging a war for that intraparty win could depress enthusiasm for the Democratic ticket.
The smarter response is to follow the lead of Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who last week pushed back against the Corporate Democratsā attempt to resurrect GOP-style austerity politics. Rather than just sitting there and staying silent, she declared that if the party wins in November, it must make āmassive investment in our country or it will fall apart. This is not a joke. To adopt GOP deficit-hawking now, when millions of lives are at stake, is utterly irresponsible. Hold the line. Win. Lead.ā
The brilliance of this kind of response is that it accomplishes two objectives: It stands up for a real change, and it reassures Democratic voters that there are at least some people who are serious about going to Washington and fighting for what the party purports to believe in.
Put another way, it fortifies the progressive agenda and it helps energize Democratic voters to turn out, because it casts the election not just as a meaningless charade that wonāt matter after November because everyone will sell out anyway. It instead depicts the election as an event with high stakes beyond Trump ā a turning point that can create new policies that will actually matter in peopleās lived experience.
This is how you avoid the 1988-Dukakis-collapse debacle and motivate the big turnout that can defeat Trump.
You donāt tell voters that ānothing would fundamentally change.ā
You donāt blast out a story about how the Democratic presidential nominee told his Wall Street donors that he isnāt proposing new legislation to change corporate behavior.
You donāt turn your party convention into a pageant for Republican icons.
You donāt have the disgraced-mayor-turned-Wall-Street guy advise your presidential candidate ā or have him go on Corporate Americaās favorite television station during a health care emergency and a climate crisis to effectively laugh at progressives who are pushing Medicare for All and a Green New Deal.
To paraphrase one of the best tweets in history, you donāt try to turn the election into a centrist rally for the idea that better things arenāt possible ā and you sure as hell donāt ask progressives to shut up.
You instead focus intently on telling your partyās voters how the election will materially improve their lives.
Of course, the Democratic Party machine and the Biden campaign arenāt really interested in doing that right now. They want to run an anti-Trump campaign, and nothing else.
In light of that, progressives shouldnāt unilaterally disarm and stay silent when Corporate Democrats are getting bolder and more brazen about using this pre-election period to push their depressing, better-things-arenāt-possible policy agenda.
Staying quiet in the face of that pablum doesnāt help. The real way to help boost turnout and energize voters is for progressives to push back against the corporate propaganda and make clear that ā whether the establishment likes it or not ā this election can and will offer the opportunity to achieve something even bigger than just getting rid of Trump.
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1 Comment
Some respected commentators have stated, as they usually do at every election, to vote the Democrats in and then work to get those Democrats to introduce a liberal agenda. But it never works. Putting faith in these people is the definition of stupidity – doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. For someone who is properly left, an actual socialist, who cares if Trump or Biden wins? We’re getting plutocratic neoliberal capitalism (with fundamentalist religious undertones) that’s probably going to kill most of us anyway.