Some
of Justice Democrats’ potency stems from the viral might of Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her close ties to the group. (Close ties? They own her lock, stock and barrel! She is just their mouthpiece.)
ED
Noor: Yes, the NYT!! This article works well with the video I have been pushing
hard for the past few days. Watch the video here before carrying on with the
article if you have the time. I post this article because it is behind a
paywall and that cannot be a way to keep this content from the world. It is
rare that I go to the NYT, but this piece is important. In their braggadocio these
Justice Democrats are exposing their own agenda against Americans. These are
the people who control AOC, Ilan and Tlaib. This, they say, is just the
beginning.
In regards to the title of this article I would say that the Justice League did not HELP AOC climb to power, they MADE her and choreographed the entire action. AOC was hired to act as a spokesperson for their policies; she passed an extensive "screen test", was shaped from barkeep to political type and told what to do, what to say. Thousands of people applied for these positions and she was short-listed because of her digital "star power" more than brains or political inclination. Her brother put in the application for her. These type of folks are what they seek to overrun more conservative Democrats.
Tlaib, Omar, Ocasio-Cortez: the three golden girls of the ambitious Communist oriented Justice Democrats. Not exactly American patriots and all winners of a hiring drive for applicants for political positions.
"The Green New Deal, which in the past month has come to define the progressive cause in Washington, exists in its most authoritative form as an eleven-page Google Doc. The document was written over a single December weekend by the staff of the freshman representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and three like-minded progressive groups, none of which existed two years ago: the Sunrise Movement, a grassroots climate organization; the Justice Democrats, which recruits and supports progressive candidates; and an upstart policy shop called the New Consensus. Just about everyone involved was new to lawmaking. “We spent the weekend learning how to put laws together,” Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff, Saikat Chakrabarti, told me. “We looked up how to write resolutions.” ~ SOURCE
Feb. 23, 2019
WASHINGTON
Less than a month into the 116th
Congress, Sean McElwee, the liberal
co-founder of Data for Progress, rattled off a list of sitting Democratic House
members who should face a primary from the left, his exposition punctuated with
dismissive expletives.
The list includes:
~ Representative Stephen F. Lynch of Massachusetts, a moderate, perennial primary target who voted against the Affordable Care Act in 2010;
.~ Representative Henry Cuellar of Texas, who raised money for a Republican House incumbent last year as a popular Democratic challenger was closing in;
.~ Representative Daniel Lipinski, an old-school Chicago-area politician who has voted against gay marriage and tried to sink Obamacare; and
.~ Representative Eliot L. Engel of New York, the Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee who has clashed with one of the highest-profile liberal freshmen, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota.
Mr. McElwee, a pollster and political adviser, has floated all of those names to Justice Democrats, a small grass-roots organization that burst onto the political scene last year after coordinating Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s stunning primary defeat of Joseph Crowley of New York, the No. 4 Democrat in the House at the time.
“These are a lot of ideological contests for the soul of the Democratic Party,” Mr. McElwee said.
So far, Justice Democrats has publicly
confirmed its intent on only one primary challenge ~ against Mr. Cuellar, who
infuriated the left when he raised money for
Representative John Carter as the Democratic challenger, M.J.
Hegar, was gaining traction.
.
.
But more are coming, and the
organization’s ambitions to replace more centrist Democrats with liberal
candidates have inspired other clusters of insurgency ~ and pushed progressive
policies to the forefront of the liberal agenda.
The conflicts ~ both generational and
ideological ~ burst into the open again on Friday when children with the
Sunrise Movement, a youth climate-change advocacy group, pressed Senator Dianne
Feinstein, a moderate California Democrat, to embrace the so-called Green New Deal
in an extended confrontation that instantly went
viral.
Full Senator Dianne Feinstein/Sunrise Movement VideoCreditCreditVideo
by Yashar Ali
.
Democratic lawmakers say their “big
tent” party must embrace varying degrees of liberal ideology to match the House
districts they hope to represent.
“I support the principle of open competition,” said Representative Ro Khanna, Democrat of California and an ardent liberal whom Justice Democrats claims as one of its own. But, Mr. Khanna added: “I’m not going to be spending any of my efforts recruiting, supporting candidates against my colleagues. I’d rather we build and form a consensus.”
Shaheed and other Justice Democrats in front of AOC's new office in government
.
Justice Democrats’ communications director, said primaries give the most involved, activist voters in solid blue districts the chance to choose what kind of Democrat they want representing them in Congress.
Justice Democrats’ communications director, said primaries give the most involved, activist voters in solid blue districts the chance to choose what kind of Democrat they want representing them in Congress.
“It takes movements like ours to push parties to prioritize what the base wants and what the values of the party are,” Mr. Shahid said. “That is the role of our movement, to give a policy vision for this country to a party that often lacks a clear policy vision.”
A spokesman for the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee, the campaign arm of House Democrats, said its
focus remained on defeating President Trump and expanding the current House
majority. (The committee has announced a slate of 32
seats held by Republicans it intends to challenge.) Mr.
Cuellar, asked last month about Justice Democrats’ challenge, reminded
reporters that this would not be his first round beating back a primary
opponent.
Mr. Cuellar, the latest on the Justice Democrat hit list does not plan to lie down.
Mr. Cuellar, the latest on the Justice Democrat hit list does not plan to lie down.
“What happened to the Democratic Party being a tent?” Mr. Cuellar said as he described a moderate Democratic constituency in his district, which stretches from the Mexican border to the suburbs of San Antonio. “An outside group that thinks they know southwest Texas politics better than I do are going to find out.”
Both supporters and opponents of
Justice Democrats say that with the 2018 election barely in the rearview
mirror, it is too early to assess how primary challenges might disrupt the
Democratic field. But in a presidential year, when turnout in the primaries is
often much higher than in midterm election seasons,
Justice Democrats has the potential to be far more disruptive than it was in 2018, and the group and its allies are in a fighting mood.
“We should absolutely be allowed to
contest what it means to be a Democrat,” Mr. McElwee said in an interview. “You
can’t have a tent that includes both people of color and people who work to
undermine the rights and humanity of people of color.” He pointed to Gov. Ralph
Northam of Virginia, who defeated a more progressive Democrat, Tom Perriello,
in the primary, only to be consumed in scandal for his
use of blackface in the 1980s.
.
.
Liberal primary challengers are not new
to the Democratic Party, but they can be costly. Steve Israel, a retired
congressman from New York who once led the campaign committee, recalled
instances in which lawmakers delayed contributions to the tight races of their
colleagues as they fought off primary challengers in their safe districts.
.
.
Now, the challenges carry more weight.
“It didn’t have the energy and the intensity that it does now,” Mr. Israel said, adding, “Every challenge has to be taken seriously.”
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez caught Mr. Crowley
off guard, but this time, Justice Democrats’ targets will see a challenge
coming ~ although awareness is not necessarily a guarantee for survival. Months
after Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s victory, Ayanna
S. Pressley, a Boston city councilwoman endorsed by the group, successfully
toppled Michael Capuano, a 10-term
Massachusetts congressman.
.
.
Mr. Shahid acknowledged that
Justice Democrats, with 12 full-time and part-time staff members, had some
missteps to learn from. He said the organization had to learn from “stretching
ourselves too thin and not being as laser focused.”
.
.
He noted that the group would back a
smaller group of candidates and focus solely on races in secure Democratic
districts. Group members, during a conference call last week, said they had
begun reaching out to people to discuss possible campaigns, but had not closed
the endorsement window.
In 2018, Justice Democrats endorsed 78 candidates and recruited 12 to run for office, serving as a grass-roots political consulting firm and jump-starting campaigns. Out of those 12, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez was the only one who won her general election. Six other endorsed candidates ~ three incumbents and three freshmen ~ also made it to Congress. All seven are in the House.
Many of the group’s candidates
challenged races in districts that leaned Republican, and in several cases the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee worked hard to beat them back,
worried that a Justice Democrats triumph in the primary would cost the party a
potential seat.
Lizzie Fletcher, for instance, beat
the Justice Democrats candidate, Laura
Moser, in a primary in the Houston suburbs, then went on to defeat the
Republican incumbent, John Culberson,
in a race that may have been far more difficult for her to win as a more
liberal candidate.
.
.
In more Democratic districts,
candidates supported by Justice Democrats came up disappointingly short. Marie Newman’s challenge to Mr. Lipinski, backed by some sitting
Democratic lawmakers, was seen as a real opportunity to take down a congressman
increasingly loathed by his own party. She lost, though Justice Democrats
speculates that had her primary been after Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s, the momentum
would have lifted her to victory.
.
.
This time around, the organization
intends to spend more on fewer candidates and is working to build a larger
infrastructure and a bigger fund-raising arm. During the monthly call last
week, members outlined a new fellowship program in which people could learn
about staffing a campaign and becoming part of a more permanent foundation for
candidates’ races.
.
.
Candidates are required to pledge not
to take any corporate political action committee or lobbying money, and are
expected to be aligned with Justice Democrats’ platform, which includes
abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement, advocating free public colleges
and trade schools, and ending the death penalty.
.
.
Mr. Shahid frequently raises
comparisons to, among other movements, the abolitionists in the Civil War-era
Republican Party. Eric Foner, a
historian and professor emeritus at Columbia University, said the group could
learn from them.
“You have to play the long game if you don’t command a majority right now,” he said. “I’m not advocating that they be quiet, but if you don’t have a majority, you’re automatically playing the longer game.”
Mr. Shahid, Mr. McElwee and their
allies argue that they do not need long-game patience. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, Representative Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ms.
Omar, all Justice Democrats candidates, have already pushed strong climate
change measures, higher taxes on the wealthy and support for a Palestinian
state into the mainstream debate surrounding Democratic ideals.
.
.
“Medicare for all,” a tenet of the
group’s platform, and the Green New Deal have become critical aspects of the
Democratic primary race for president in 2020. Even sitting Democrats have felt
pressure to endorse the programs ~ or, like Ms. Feinstein, have faced viral
wrath for appearing to not take the platforms seriously.
“We can’t have a 15-year power-building strategy,”Mr. McElwee said.“We have to have power now.We have to have it next election.”
Some of the group’s potency stems from
the viral might of Ms. Ocasio-Cortez and her close ties to the group: Two of
her top staff members helped found Justice Democrats, and Mr. Shahid worked on
her campaign. And she appeared in an eight-minute video with the organization’s
founders that circulated last month, explaining how Justice Democrats propelled
her campaign into existence and success.
.
.
Check out the full
video of @AOC
talking with the founders of Justice Democrats about the origin story of her
historic campaign and where the movement goes from here. https://t.co/yX7YtRQl2v
~ Justice Democrats
(@justicedems) January 16, 2019
.
.
“It’s an uncomfortable feeling to go against
the grain, but that’s what we’re here for,” said Corbin Trent, a spokesman for Ms. Ocasio-Cortez and a founder of
the group.
.
.
“Hopefully,” he added, “things are
getting shook up a little bit.”
Also read:
Also read:
A new post on a Monday! You're spoiling us, Noor.
ReplyDeleteI have just found this; I think you may enjoy it:
https://alethonews.com/2019/03/10/my-daughters-new-agenda-21-eco-friendly-bedroom/
Bonne semaine !