Democratic (Party) Direction

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Xpost It wasn’t just the delivery of the speech, something felt distinctive and confident in content/message

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Monday, 19 March 2018 18:49 (eight years ago)

I'm curious enough to want to hear more about her ideas for ending mass incarceration and tacking inequality, and who she's working with to craft those strategies. Right now all we have is a nice speech and a nice video.

Simon H., Monday, 19 March 2018 18:52 (eight years ago)

already better than cuomo

NBA YoungBoy named Rocky Raccoon (m bison), Monday, 19 March 2018 18:53 (eight years ago)

she's already netted one major endorsement

Cynthia Nixon may run for Gov of NY. She has collaborated with Israel haters Jewish Voice for Peace and Vanessa Redgrave in boycotting Israel. Do not support her bigotry.

— Alan Dershowitz (@AlanDersh) March 17, 2018

Simon H., Monday, 19 March 2018 18:55 (eight years ago)

i love when guys like dershowitz have to use the transparently hilarious words "israel-haters Jewish Voice for Peace"

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 19 March 2018 18:56 (eight years ago)

From day one, Dem Gov. Andrew Cuomo has enabled GOP control of the state Senate in deep-blue New York by signing their extreme gerrymander & protecting a caucus of Dem defectors who side with the GOP. It's time he faces consequences for blocking a slew of progressive policies https://t.co/XnwpFqTBsq

— Stephen Wolf (@PoliticsWolf) March 19, 2018

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 19 March 2018 19:06 (eight years ago)

Ryan Cooper posted a worthwhile thing:

http://theweek.com/articles/760739/how-democrats-wipe-gop-fix-america

Below, I will outline a draft platform that would both accomplish worthy goals and provide political benefits. Since the conventional wisdom on political feasibility and popularity has proved to be highly unreliable of late (see: President Donald J. Trump), I have focused on things that will provide immediate and concrete partisan benefits, while strengthening democratic liberties. The ideas are grouped under three headings: political reform, domestic policy, and foreign policy. Let's get cracking.

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Monday, 19 March 2018 19:59 (eight years ago)

1. Make Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C., states.

It's just that easy!

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 19 March 2018 20:21 (eight years ago)

I like it, but it's missing anything on campaign finance reform.

xp

DJI, Monday, 19 March 2018 20:23 (eight years ago)

Also, just skimming it, does that article address the future GOP minority reverting to their role as an aggressively obstructionist party? This is a group of assholes so adept at being assholes they successful kept Obama from appointing a SC justice.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 19 March 2018 20:24 (eight years ago)

I don't understand why go to the constitutional trouble of giving PR and DC statehood and leave out AS, Guam, USVI and the Marianas. That always annoys me.

El Tomboto, Monday, 19 March 2018 20:57 (eight years ago)

The language on Nixon's website about Cuomo is MUCH much sharper than that gauzy rollout video. This is going to be an aggressive campaign pic.twitter.com/oUOd6Xtx6u

— Shane Goldmacher (@ShaneGoldmacher) March 19, 2018

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Monday, 19 March 2018 21:33 (eight years ago)

https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/03/17/behind-the-dodd-frank-freakout-217645

Moo Vaughn, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 02:05 (eight years ago)

no signs of bias there right from the URL lol

The bill’s Democratic defenders believe it’s pretty good, especially for a piece of Trump-era legislation. But they believe with more conviction that it’s an excellent way to satisfy a powerful industry’s pent-up demand for deregulation without serious damage to financial oversight. Congress tends to pass only one major banking bill a decade, and the Crapo bill, they argue, is a relatively harmless way to mollify the influential community bankers and signal a willingness to work across the aisle while preserving most of Dodd-Frank as the status quo. They’re incredibly frustrated that arcane disputes over “SIFI’s” and “HMDA” and “FSOC”—don’t ask—could end up fracturing a party that needs unity to fight Trump and take back Congress.

“Are we really going to kill each other over a carve-out in the supplemental leverage ratios for predominantly custodial banks?” an aide to a moderate Senate Democrat complained. “Right now, there are bigger threats to the world.”

yeah pardon me if I see red flags littered all over the language used throughout this piece

Simon H., Wednesday, 21 March 2018 02:18 (eight years ago)

an excellent way to satisfy a powerful industry’s pent-up demand

well that's that then

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 02:20 (eight years ago)

--don't ask--

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 02:24 (eight years ago)

no signs of bias there right from the URL lol

― Simon H., Wednesday, March 21, 2018 2:18 AM (seventeen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

You, otoh, are utterly lacking in bias

Moo Vaughn, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 02:36 (eight years ago)

if you're not at the very least profoundly skeptical of financial deregulation efforts then uhh idk enjoy the next crash I guess

Simon H., Wednesday, 21 March 2018 02:46 (eight years ago)

The Democrats who support the Senate bill all voted for Dodd-Frank. They argue that bipartisan buy-in for modest adjustments to Obama’s Wall Street reforms would essentially enshrine their permanence, something they’ve tried but failed to do for Obama’s health care law.

Not all these people are morons - some are grifters, many are both.

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 09:50 (eight years ago)

they believe with more conviction

as dean baker never tires of pointing out, this is bad reporting: we don't know what they actually believe, much less with what degree of conviction. we know what they say, and what they do, that's it. i mean thank goodness politico is here to tell us what these democrats really "believe" otherwise we might think they were actually interested in cosying up to the sources of potential campaign contributions

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 11:43 (eight years ago)

Thoughts about Illinois? Lipinski seems to have won :(

Frederik B, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 11:49 (eight years ago)

idk guys but if a literal Nazi had run unopposed as a Democrat and won - even in a safe/ uncontested GOP stronghold - i feel like i'd hear a lot more about it.

from the GOP/FOX/RW mediaverse something along the lines of "All Democrats Are Literal Nazis", and then very serious "both sides" people would be writing in newspapers/on the internet and saying on TV very serious things about how Democrats have really got to deal with this ascendant Nazi problem

constitutional crises they fly at u face (will), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 15:04 (eight years ago)

good mourning!

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 15:06 (eight years ago)

"What is it about the current incarnation of the Democratic Party that a literal Nazi feels comfortable running as one, and that registered Democrats are actually willing to show up and vote for him?"

constitutional crises they fly at u face (will), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 15:08 (eight years ago)

The voice of politico reporting is the echo of all the staffers used to source every story. Staffer life inside those buildings is the absurd realized in a way that can only be surpassed in wartime. Everyone is there to make a difference, but none of it really matters, push the rock.

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 15:37 (eight years ago)

Also, I seem to recall mutliple male actors announcing their gubernatorial runs ( and winning, including one that went on to be POTUS) and not getting the shit Cynthia Nixon is right now. And seriously, AT LEAST SHE PLAYED A LAWYER AND NOT THE FUCKING TERMINATOR.

— Cher (@thecherness) March 19, 2018

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:30 (eight years ago)

Not especially invested in that race but "at least she played a lawyer" = classic argument

No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:34 (eight years ago)

it's Cher, it's funny

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:36 (eight years ago)

Ha

No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:48 (eight years ago)

or rather the main point precedes the punchline

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:50 (eight years ago)

I forgot about Sonny Bono. Did he get shit when he ran?

Yerac, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:52 (eight years ago)

Not enough to keep him from being elected.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:56 (eight years ago)

the seven-term incumbent’s 1500-vote win in a district gerrymandered specifically for him means centrism hasn’t completely failed https://t.co/S3gVGD4x3W

— Paul Blest (@pblest) March 21, 2018

Simon H., Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:58 (eight years ago)

(btw, i'm sorry, that's not THE Cher) xp

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 16:59 (eight years ago)

From Public Policy Polling: “But 19% of people voting in the primary approved of Trump. And Lipinski won those folks 85-10. Trump supporters in this open primary were responsible for saving Lipinski from a resounding defeat yesterday.”

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Wednesday, 21 March 2018 17:47 (eight years ago)


Since Trump’s victory, however, Democrats have flipped 39 statehouse seats, counting the 15 Virginia pickups plus four in New Jersey. Amazingly, 20 of these victories have come in special elections, mainly in districts carried by Trump, some by very large margins, in places as varied as Wisconsin, Missouri, Kentucky, and Florida. Democrats have taken five GOP statehouse seats in purple New Hampshire, four in red Oklahoma, and a big one in Washington State last November 7, when activist Manka Dhingra grabbed an open seat formerly held by a Republican, flipping the State Senate to blue. Almost immediately, Washington passed a statewide automatic-voter-registration law, which Governor Jay Inslee signed on March 19. Earlier in March, a bill was passed banning so-called conversion therapy for LGBTQ folks. Elections have consequences.

Nationwide, there are 7,383 state legislative seats, and 6,066 of them, in 87 out of 99 chambers, will be on the ballot this November. Democrats aren’t quite running a 7,383-seat (or a 6,066-seat) strategy—at least not yet. But after years of frustration and neglect, it’s no longer impossible to imagine the day when the party contests every single statehouse seat in every state in the Union. Party insiders, activists, resistance groups, and candidates—from Maine to Minnesota, from Arizona to Georgia, and all the GOP-dominated states in between—are gearing up for an unprecedented number of races in 2018. In dozens of states, Democratic leaders are vying to bring about “the next Virginia,” in the words of North Carolina Representative Graig Meyer, who is part of a recruitment effort that has enlisted a Democratic challenger for every Republican incumbent in both houses of the state’s General Assembly for the first time in recent memory. In 2014, by contrast, 34 GOP incumbents in the State House of Representatives and 12 in the Senate went unopposed. Ohio Democrats have likewise recruited a challenger in every legislative district in the state. And in Pennsylvania, the number of Democrats who have filed to run for the State House and Senate outnumber Republicans 56 percent to 44; most of the Republicans are incumbents.

https://www.thenation.com/article/the-7383-seat-strategy/

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 March 2018 15:05 (eight years ago)

now that's a little bit heartening.

lol dis stance dunk (Doctor Casino), Friday, 23 March 2018 15:11 (eight years ago)

word

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Friday, 23 March 2018 15:17 (eight years ago)

To quote a friend's excellent take on Nixon/Cuomo:

"Why do we need some rich celebrity to run against Cuomo? Why can't we have someone with real political experience?"

That's a great question! Allow me to explain:

1) Cuomo has spent the last eight years selling influence in Albany to rich people for millions of dollars. It's enormously hard for a middle-class person to challenge someone who can sell the entire regulatory apparatus of state government to the highest bidder to raise money.
2) Cuomo is powerful and vindictive and will do his best to destroy the career of anyone who challenges him (see De Blasio).
3) Since the one thing that unites all sitting Democratic politicians is a collective interest in protecting incumbency as some sort of sacred right, it's immensely hard to convince anyone to challenge an incumbent; when Democratic state senators were *voting with Republicans* on a regular basis it took several years of grassroots pressure to get anyone to challenge them, because incumbents. In other news the Democrats in the Assembly are willing to gerrymander the state senate Republican for decades if it allows them to protect their own incumbency against primary challengers.
4) Given the enormous difficulty of challenging incumbents in these circumstances, the only reason we ever have competitive elections at all is because there are two parties. But in New York statewide elections, much like in all of New York City, we're de facto under one-party rule, which means that plenty of districts can go a decade or more without seeing a competitive election at any level of government. Of all the glaring contrasts between the US system of government and what a hypothetical liberal democracy might be like, this is perhaps the least noticed.
5) For all these reasons it's enormously hard to find anyone to challenge an incumbent, particularly in such a large race; it's virtually necessary that the person doing it be independently wealthy and independently famous. We're lucky we found a rich celebrity from a working-class background with decades of public-education activism under her belt rather than some asshole, frankly.

In conclusion, New York incumbents are well-enough-protected from incumbency as it is; given how well advantaged they are by the rules they wrote for the game they play, they don't also need your idiot technocratic concern-trolling about how governing should be left to the enlightened few to help them maintain their stranglehold on the levers of power. Thanks for your time!

Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 23 March 2018 17:04 (eight years ago)

damn

lol dis stance dunk (Doctor Casino), Friday, 23 March 2018 17:14 (eight years ago)

can i share that anonymously elsewhere, man alive?

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 23 March 2018 17:30 (eight years ago)

I think leftists outside of NYC who are (rightfully) confused about why a rich celeb is suddenly good now just underestimate the burning hatred we carry in our hearts for Cuomo

— Brandy Jensen (@BrandyLJensen) March 22, 2018

Simon H., Friday, 23 March 2018 17:32 (eight years ago)

oh it's your friend's not yours; i don't expect you to be able to OK that, then

but very cogent

xp

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 23 March 2018 17:32 (eight years ago)

I think those who carry burning hatred in their hearts for Cuomo are confused about their numbers

Moo Vaughn, Friday, 23 March 2018 18:16 (eight years ago)

Leftists, Moo. She's talking about leftists.

Simon H., Friday, 23 March 2018 18:18 (eight years ago)

don't even try, Simon

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 23 March 2018 19:03 (eight years ago)

it's nice to know that our #1 Dem mover/fantasist approves of a gov who keeps NY Repugs in power though

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 23 March 2018 19:05 (eight years ago)

Nixon’s years and levels of activism and involvement w non-profit orgs seem to indicate that she does actually have experience. Seems preferable to highlight that than the “political experience is bad actually” takes I’ve seen the last couple of days.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Friday, 23 March 2018 19:34 (eight years ago)


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