Friday, November 3, 2017

Democrats – Desperate, Decimated, Divided in Complete Disarray



“We got wiped out… We’re toxic in the Midwest, and we’re toxic in the South.”                                                          
 Ohio Democrat Tim Ryan in his failed effort to unseat House Minority Leader, Nancy Pelosi
Leaving one of America’s most popular presidencies in modern history (the Obama administration), to put it mildly, the Democrats went from top to bottom on November 8th. They lost the low-hanging-fruit – the presidency itself – though hubris, mismanagement and a complete failure to understand social media and how to use it. Recent accusations from Donna Brazile, who became interim chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, echoed by Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, that the Clinton campaign marginalized and manipulated the DNC through severe financial controls, reflect the backroom infighting that has hurt the Party’s image and efforts toward unity.
The jury is out if Russian attempts to sow discord among the electorate, through a clever and often robotically-implemented social media campaign, created the final tipping point. Clearly, the American voting structure itself – electoral districts vs a popular vote – gave rural voters a disproportionate edge, effectively disenfranchising the approximately 3 million voters who took the majority of the popular votes to Hillary Clinton. The House, Senate and Presidency… and increasingly the Supreme Court… are now under GOP control.
Now what? With Democratic traditionalist Clinton crushed by GOP populist Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders’ strong showing in the primary process, the progressives in the Democratic Party felt justified to move their platform to the fore… time for a new surge to the left, a new direction, a new message. Single payer healthcare and dealing with the untenable student loan debt that was crippling recent college grads were high priorities. Lots of taxes on the rich and deep scrutiny, suspicion and regulation of corporate America. A really hard sell to “Americans in the middle,” the typical deciders in any presidential election. A concept that might be inevitable but clearly not yet ripe to most Americans.
Clinton-Traditionalists, led by super-fund-raiser House Minority Leader, Nancy Pelosi, want to return to their fundamental platforms: making the rich pay higher taxes, passing a higher minimum wage, fixing Obamacare, reinstituting financial and environmental regulation and focusing on institutionalized injustices to minorities of every race, religion and ethnicity. Not enough to get Hillary elected, and now that the stock market and GDP are up, real estate prices are soaring and unemployment statistics show a pretty low unemployment rate, Republicans can take the high ground on the economy… even though rosy numbers belie those already purged from the work world and the gnawing feeling that we all share that a bubble burst is looming.
The Dems have lost a big chunk of their traditional “working class” constituency to Trump, a pile of voters who are terrified that the new economy is cutting them out and leaving them irretrievably left behind. These voters have focused on the evils of “globalization” as having cost them their jobs. They still have not grasped that globalization is not remotely the job-destroyer that automation has become. These disenfranchised millions bought into the undeliverable anti-globalization, GOP pledge of getting their old jobs and earning power back; they believe the deeply discredited Republican trickle-down economic policies (rewarding the rich – now falsely labeled as “job creators” – with deregulation and lower taxes) and all that “good economic news” noted above. And if these “deliverables” don’t show results, Trump has already set the stage to blame the swamp, Dems and “disloyal” Republicans.
Will America buy this strategy? After all, Trump’s “base” is less than 30% of the electorate. First, Trump isn’t running in 2018, even though if you look at the campaign platforms of local Democratic candidates, unable to produce a coherent party platform, you might think he is. Second, somebody forgot that “all politics is local” and “it’s the economy stupid.” The 2018 mid-terms are all local elections! Third, the Dems have completely failed to address the job disruption that is increasingly robbing domestic jobs, white and blue collar, and pushing more money to the rich owners of those “machines” and away from the folks who used to do the work that automation has rendered obsolete. Income inequality on steroids.
The mid-terms aren’t even a reflection of the administration’s increasingly failing foreign policy, with “terrorism” and a nuclear war with North Korea being the only real fear factors that concern most ordinary Americans. Trump isn’t on the ballot!!!
Is Bernie the Dem’s “savior”? Hey, Bernie ain’t a Democrat no more! It was a very short stint as a Dem, but Bernie is back to being a Vermont “independent.” Left-leaning Elizabeth Warren is currently the leader of that progressive movement. Sorry, Elizabeth, but you are probably a decade too early to convince that “middle-or-the-road” packet of election deciders into a new socialist direction. Bernie may rail and complain, but his choice of leaving the Democratic Party pulls him out of much of the platform-forming process. So far, the progressive voice has been brushed aside by Party leaders.
What’s more, the Dems have other factions jockeying for planks in a going-forward platform: the Black Caucus, the Hispanic Caucus, the conservative Blue Dogs and the New Democrats, among others. As fiscal conservatives with a conscience leave the increasingly radical Trump Republican Party – the latest to drop out is Arizona Republican Senator, Jeff Flake – there is growing group of “middle-of-the-road” Republicans without a voice. Democrats-in-training? But all the Dems could muster is a pile of generic hogwash called a “Better Deal,” a stunningly underwhelming attempt at rebuilding a new pan-Democratic message. And the same-old-same-old stumbled forward… or sideways.
Back on November 30th, Nancy Pelosi produced a two-thirds plurality to get reelected House Minority Leader. “[Her] only opponent was Tim Ryan, a young congressman and former high school quarterback star from Ohio’s 13th District, the ailing industrial region surrounding Youngstown and Akron…
“Pelosi won easily, but fully a third of the Democratic caucus voted against their leader, and Ryan’s insurrection seemed to have left a mark: After the election, three well-liked and nonrebellious members — Cheri Bustos of Illinois, Hakeem Jeffries of New York and David Cicilline of Rhode Island — were chosen by the caucus to help manage the rebranding of the party. The three of them spent the first half of 2017 dutifully interviewing nearly every member of the caucus and conducting more than a dozen listening sessions with authors, pollsters and former Obama cabinet secretaries. They hosted a dinner at which the party’s various factions [of the Democratic Party] mingled as if meeting for the first time…
“In late July, Pelosi, Bustos, Jeffries and Cicilline stood on a stage with six other Democrats under a wiltingly hot summer sky in the city park of Berryville, Va. — a town of 4,306 residents in a purple district within easy driving distance of Washington — and unveiled their new agenda, titled ‘A Better Deal: Better Jobs, Better Wages, Better Future.’ The phrase, which had been poll-tested by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, was an intentional echo of F.D.R.’s New Deal — and, less intentionally, of a Papa John’s pizza slogan. But its biggest debt was to the author of ‘The Art of the Deal,’ and to his crimson-jowled populism.
“‘A Better Deal’ called for retraining in America’s fading manufacturing sector [seriously skipping over the automation issue], renegotiating trade deals [a Trump cry], raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour and fighting the corporate consolidation that had affected the prices of everything from eyeglasses to beer. None of the 10 speakers invoked President Barack Obama. In fact, one of the key provisions in ‘A Better Deal’ — renegotiating drug prices for Medicare recipients — was an implicit rebuke of the former president, who had agreed with the pharmaceutical industry to freeze Medicare drug prices in exchange for its support of the Affordable Care Act.
“But even before the rollout, Pelosi diminished the substance of ‘A Better Deal’ in an interview with The Washington Post, clarifying that it was not ‘a course correction, but it’s a presentation correction.’ A Quinnipiac poll in August found that only 33 percent of Democrats and 12 percent of independents had a favorable opinion of the new Democratic agenda. The self-consciousness of the rebranding, one congressman mused to me at the time, ‘seems like what you would do in a different era.’…
“[San Diego House Democrat, Scott Peters said,] “organizationally, the party is in disarray. We’re at the lowest level of elected officeholders since Hoover. We got a bit lazy and found ourselves relying on Barack Obama’s charisma, and it left us in bad shape.’
“Barring seismic developments, [since there are more long-standing GOP incumbents than Dems running in the mid-terms,] the G.O.P. is still likely to control both the White House and the Senate until at least January 2021. But nine months into Trump’s presidency, the chances of the Democrats’ retaking the House are much better. Multiple polls in recent months have shown generic Democratic candidates beating generic Republicans by as many as 15 points— a spread that, in past elections, correlated with winning more than enough seats for the Democrats to gain a House majority next year. And if they do, the consequences will be enormous. A Democrat-controlled House in 2019 would very likely derail the Republican legislative agenda. It could also conceivably set the stage for impeachment proceedings against the president — a move that many Democrats have openly proposed for months now.” New York Times, November 1st.
The Democrats need to update their message, embrace the obvious, and focus heavily on voter turnout – even as that GOP majority of state legislatures clings to imposing voter restrictions and depends on gerrymandering – among minorities and younger and usually better-educated voters (who stayed away in droves on November 8th). If they do not take over at least one branch of Congress – the House or Senate – they will be forced to watch the United States reconfigure into Trump’s vision of America… as passive but helpless witnesses to that ugly transition.


I’m Peter Dekom, and somewhere, the Dems need to listen to the man who lost to Nancy Pelosi or enjoy the disaster they will foment.

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