2020 Democratic presidential primary

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but the ugly nuts and bolts of maintaining party unity (and often shaky majorities) isn't as easy to accept or process as handy conspiracy theory narratives about all-powerful and all-corrupt officials dictating positions to a party apparatus from on-high, that just isn't how the party works.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:22 (six years ago)

Pelosi goes where the caucus goes, this is part of why she's such an effective leader. when a majority of her caucus is behind something, she brings it up. when they aren't, she tries to tamp down dissent and maintain unity on the points where there *is* majority support.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:23 (six years ago)

unless you think congressional democrats really do want Medicare For All but have just been playing 13th dimensional chess for the last several decades while the poorly insured literally die. clever! i'm sure we'll get there some day, when the time is right.

― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Friday, August 2, 2019 9:11 AM (nine minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

A majority of House democrats now support future Speaker of the House Pramila Jayapal's Medicare for All Act of 2019 (HR 1384), it has 117 cosponsors

president of deluded fruitcakes anonymous (silby), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:24 (six years ago)

House Democrats, as a caucus, support Medicare for All and are ready to pass it.

president of deluded fruitcakes anonymous (silby), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:25 (six years ago)

One of their establishment guys got dethroned by a 29 year old bartender who champions every single cause that Dems worry makes them "unelectable".

Haven’t read the article yet and I will. But as much as I think AOC is the future of the party, god bless the Green New Deal and any neo keynesian policy proposals, I am just not certain her electability would be the same across both democratic and national maps than in the Bronx, NY where she got her victory. For each AOC, how many progressive lost to middle of the road candidates?

Van Horn Street, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:26 (six years ago)

I'm sure once that bill makes it out of the 6 committees it's been referred to that Pelosi will bring it to the floor.

xp

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:27 (six years ago)

I can't tell if that's snark

president of deluded fruitcakes anonymous (silby), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:28 (six years ago)

it is not, it will pass those committees, it will pass a floor vote, and then McConnell will refuse to bring it up in the Senate. Pelosi lent her support to the bill when she gave the green light in January to hold hearings on the proposal.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:29 (six years ago)

Nine times out of ten, to ascend to the level of congressperson you have to already be part of the ruling class. If you're not already there, then once you do get the job then the money and power that suddenly becomes available to you and the social circles you start traveling in are going to do wonders at co-opting you. There are very few high-profile Democratic politicians who have strongly-held interests that diverge from that social class. Most of them look at the general population as a "great beast" (as Hamilton put it) that must be either beaten down or bribed with the smallest handouts possible to keep them at heel.

The few politicians that significantly diverge from this tend to have two attributes that differentiate them:

1. They were not raised upper-class, so they didn't grow up with the ideological baggage and priorities of the upper class.

2. They have a strongly held political ideology with a concrete program of action (e.g. democratic socialism) that makes it harder for them to be co-opted once they enter the upper class upon being elected.

Unfortunately, there aren't very many politicians like this in the US right now, but the number is beginning to increase thanks to the actions of electorally-oriented leftist organizations like the DSA, who see the Democratic Party as a fundamentally undemocratic institution that could potentially be taken over and turned toward democracy.

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:31 (six years ago)

What I'm saying does not require any conspiratorial thinking, just class consciousness.

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:31 (six years ago)

stupid dems whining abt "attacking Obama" in debates

like somehow not slavishly burnishing the reputation of an ex-president has fuck-all to do with anything this year

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:33 (six years ago)

Nine times out of ten, to ascend to the level of congressperson you have to already be part of the ruling class.

this is demonstrably untrue nonsense do you want me to break down the income levels and racial make-up of the Dem House caucus.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:33 (six years ago)

You tend to believe the same stuff as the people you play golf with every day.

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:34 (six years ago)

I am just not certain her electability would be the same across both democratic and national maps than in the Bronx, NY where she got her victory.

Of course not, which is why the collective panic about is hilarious.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:34 (six years ago)

I think you confuse House leadership (which, yes, hangs out with rich donors, duh) and House members, Onesecond.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:35 (six years ago)

Yeah, the stuff I'm saying does apply more to leadership than regular members for sure.

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:36 (six years ago)

The median net worth of a senator was $3.2 million, versus $900,000 for members of the House of Representative

https://qz.com/1190595/the-typical-us-congress-member-is-12-times-richer-than-the-typical-american-household/

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:36 (six years ago)

it ain't just leadership

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:37 (six years ago)

Of the Top 50 wealthiest members of the Senate/Congress, only 14 of those are Democrats in the House, and you can probably guess who at least a few of them are (Pelosi, Kennedy, Delaney, Khanna).

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:40 (six years ago)

I think that speaks more to the astronomical wealth of Republican senators than it does to the merely great wealth of congresspeople in general

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:43 (six years ago)

^^^

sleeve, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:45 (six years ago)

You can look up the Democratic caucus' net worths here:
http://www.rollcall.com/wealth-of-congress

You can clearly see by filtering for Democrats the large majority of the House caucus is worth less than $0.5 million, with the lowest member actually being $2.4 million in debt (I feel for sorry Alice Hastings)

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:47 (six years ago)

yes was abt to:

I stand corrected it does turn out only 13 of those 50 are R senators : /

though the four wealthiest of those appear to be democrats

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:48 (six years ago)

Having a debt load in the multimillions is an upper class thing.

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:50 (six years ago)

generally true rules of thumb: Senators on average are way wealthier (although it's always interesting to see who isn't), and Republicans on average are a wealthier caucus than the Democrats

xp

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:50 (six years ago)

Hastings is in debt because of legal fees for corruption charges from 80s FYI

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:51 (six years ago)

Hastings is a classic corrupt South Florida machine politician who will never die.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:52 (six years ago)

exactly. idk if I would call him "upper class" as much as just garden variety sleazy

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 16:53 (six years ago)

John Delaney is so rich

Jeff Bathos (symsymsym), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:54 (six years ago)

the top 2 richest congressmen are real dickheads, hmmm

Jeff Bathos (symsymsym), Friday, 2 August 2019 16:55 (six years ago)

"the "most votes of any presidential candidate ever" argument is symbolic but mostly meaningless -- the country's population is going up, which also means the population of voters"

For sure. The only real import it has is a counterpoint against the argument that the electorate is too misogynistic to vote for Harris or Warren...65 million Americans still voted for Hilary even after all the bullshit.

Jeff Bathos (symsymsym), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:02 (six years ago)

also worth noting that that data isn't for the current Congress, which (given the influx of new members and flipped Districts) is probably a bit different now. Issa is gone, for ex.

xp

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:03 (six years ago)

That is not several decades.

Goes back to the National Health Act of 1939.

IIRC, there was a vote among the Democratic House caucus in 1993, in which a majority of Dems favored single-payer. Not enough to win over Blue Dogs or certainly bill passage, but single-payer has been in discussion a very long time.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:14 (six years ago)

Goes back to the National Health Act of 1939

Medicare was created in 1966

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:15 (six years ago)

Dem bills encouraging universal coverage extend back to the New Deal. Great Society, some 27 years later, is when they finally got partial coverage for the olds.

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:17 (six years ago)

I was referencing a specific post that specifically called out Medicare for All, not single payer or universal health coverage. words mean things.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:18 (six years ago)

Thought this was a great graphic, that should be shared widely (especially to any rube who suggests there isn't a difference between the parties):

https://www.economist.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/640-width/20190727_WOC449.png

hedonic treadmill class action (Sanpaku), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:20 (six years ago)

If you want to talk the history of government funded healthcare that's fine, but let's not pretend that the reasons the National Health Act didn't even make it to a floor vote in 1939 are the same as the reasons Medicare only applied to the olds in 1966 or the reasons single payer didn't make it into Obamacare or the reasons Medicare-for-All took this long to get majority support in the House.

xp

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:22 (six years ago)

hi Shakey, let me put it another way, though I'm really just echoing OneStepBefore, who you were incredibly rude to: The Democratic Party has, with a handful of honourable exceptions, acquiesced to the notion that the principles of an unregulated finance industry are essentially the principles that should rule us all, and has been complicit in selling out the interests of the working class who have now unsurprisingly abandoned them in droves. do you reckon that's a "deluded" point of view?

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:27 (six years ago)

words mean things.

― Οὖτις

can't believe you still think this at this late date

president of deluded fruitcakes anonymous (silby), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:29 (six years ago)

do you reckon that's a "deluded" point of view?

considering the Democrats are the only party to consistently pass legislation regulating the finance industry, yep. also don't think it's accurate to say the working class has abandoned them in droves.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:31 (six years ago)

poor white people have abandoned them in droves, because they aren't as racist as they used to be, is more or less how I break it down.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:32 (six years ago)

As the party of bland neoliberal technocracy, the Democratic Party is obviously better at throwing sops to the working class than the bloodthirsty, reactionary, fascist Republican Party. But our entire government has steadily ratcheted ever to the right since the New Deal era.

Calling the working class racist is a terribly classist way to try and apologize for the Democrats' complicity in this rightward shift.

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:35 (six years ago)

Obama the neoliberal who did a whole bunch of things neoliberals hate like a stimulus package, the ACA, environmental regulations, financial regulations, raising taxes, and all sorts of neo-keynesian stuff that the Chicago school has tried to dismantle for decades.

Van Horn Street, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:42 (six years ago)

Calling the working class racist is a terribly classist way

lol read a book

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:43 (six years ago)

I mean I see the frame you're fitting everything into and it's ahistorical and innacurate, sorry to be a dick about it.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:44 (six years ago)

no u read a book

Why do I even bother

OneSecondBefore, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:46 (six years ago)

Calling the working class racist is a terribly classist way to try and apologize for the Democrats' complicity in this rightward shift.

Defining the working class as the angry white people who think Sharia Law is coming to take the country away from them is also racist.

brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:46 (six years ago)

Didn't mean to imply those were the only working class voters who have abandoned the Democrats!

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Friday, 2 August 2019 17:49 (six years ago)

loads of the working class are still hardcore Democrats - Richard Trumka isn't a Republican, large majorities of non-white low-wage workers are a core Democratic constituency etc. The constituency that has abandoned the Democratic party are non-college educated white males. This is a demographic fact. If you want to argue that those people represent the "working class" in this country I think you are sadly mistaken and also maybe a little racist.

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 August 2019 17:49 (six years ago)


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