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appalachiablue

(41,113 posts)
Wed Dec 23, 2020, 07:49 PM Dec 2020

What Election Day Revealed About Progressive Policies: Robert Reich

'What Election Day Revealed About Progressive Policies.' By Robert Reich. Dec. 22, 2020.

Voters have given Joe Biden and Congress a progressive mandate to enact real change. Americans are hungry for change, as evidenced by what happened on Election Day. Voters handily supported progressive ballot initiatives across the country.

In Florida, an amendment to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour passed with 61% support, even though the state went for Trump. And that wasn’t the only successful progressive ballot initiative to succeed in a redder state: Both Montana and South Dakota voted to legalize recreational marijuana, along with the bluer states of New Jersey and Arizona. Arizona continued its progressive streak by approving a tax increase on the wealthy to fund its education system, as did Colorado. Colorado also voted to fund a public paid family leave program.

And measures tackling our brutal systems of mass incarceration and policing prevailed in multiple states: California restored the voting rights of 50,000 people with felony convictions on parole, while Michigan overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment limiting police powers. On the local level, 18 ballot initiatives addressing police violence and accountability passed in major cities across the country. And in Los Angeles, voters passed a measure to invest in communities that have been impacted by our racist police and prison systems – prioritizing jobs, housing, and alternatives to incarceration.

All these ballot victories show that bold, progressive policies are enormously popular regardless of ideology. They’re proof that embracing humanity and dignity is both a sound moral choice and a winning electoral strategy.

Every incumbent House Democrat who co-sponsored Medicare for All kept their seat in the general election – including several of them in Republican-leaning districts, like Pennsylvania Representative Matt Cartwright, whose district went for Trump. And 92 out of the 93 co-sponsors of the Green New Deal legislation in the House won reelection, including four representatives in battleground districts. The success of these candidates shouldn’t be surprising, given the broad support for both of these policies.

A pre-election report from the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation found that 53% of Americans favor a national health-care option, including 58% of independents. Exit polling this year found that 66% of voters believe climate change is a serious problem. Support for systemic action doesn’t end there: early exit polls indicated that 57% of all voters across the country support the Black Lives Matter movement. The movement’s historic summer protests appear to have secured Democratic victories. A recent study found that registration of Democratic and unaffiliated voters surged in June, at the peak of the protests...

https://robertreich.org/post/638230937585532928

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What Election Day Revealed About Progressive Policies: Robert Reich (Original Post) appalachiablue Dec 2020 OP
Huge K&R. Thanx for posting this! zentrum Dec 2020 #1
For sure, the path for progress is expanding appalachiablue Dec 2020 #2
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