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2016 Postmortem
Showing Original Post only (View all)Sanders Fights On for ‘the Strongest Progressive Agenda That Any Political Party Has Ever Seen’ [View all]
Sanders Fights On for the Strongest Progressive Agenda That Any Political Party Has Ever Seen:Platform fights have always mattered.
By John Nichols
APRIL 29, 2016
The Nation
snip
Sanders made it clear that his campaignwhich has won 18 contests and 1,355 delegates and has the potential to win more primaries and delegateswould go on. The people in every state in this country should have the right to determine who they want as president and what the agenda of the Democratic Party should be. Thats why we are in this race until the last vote is cast, said the senator. Then he offered a framework for how that campaign might influence the direction not just of the party but of politics in the years to come. [This] campaign, said Sanders, is going to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia with as many delegates as possible to fight for a progressive party platform that calls for a $15 an hour minimum wage, an end to our disastrous trade policies, a Medicare-for-all health care system, breaking up Wall Street financial institutions, ending fracking in our country, making public colleges and universities tuition free and passing a carbon tax so we can effectively address the planetary crisis of climate change.
snip
Let me make this clear, so there is no confusion: We are in this campaign to win, and become the Democratic nominee, Sanders told the students in Indiana. We are in this campaign to win, but if we do not win, we intend to win every delegate that we can so that when we go to Philadelphia in July, we are going to have the votes to put together the strongest progressive agenda that any political party has ever seen.
On Thursday in Eugene, Oregon, and again on Friday at the Indiana statehouse, where he rallied with steelworkers whose plants are threatened with closure as part of a corporate relocation to Mexico, Sanders made trade policy central to his demand for a new politics that champions working families over CEOs.
The Democratic Party, up to now, has not been clear about which side they are on, on the major issues facing this country. You cannot be on the side of those workers who have lost their jobs, because of disastrous trade agreements, and support those corporations who have thrown millions of our workers out on the street, Sanders told the crowd of 8,000 in Oregon.
The Democratic Party has to reach a fundamental conclusion: Are we on the side of working people or big money interests? the senator thundered. Do we stand with the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor or Wall Street speculators and the drug companies and the insurance companies?
On Thursday in Eugene, Oregon, and again on Friday at the Indiana statehouse, where he rallied with steelworkers whose plants are threatened with closure as part of a corporate relocation to Mexico, Sanders made trade policy central to his demand for a new politics that champions working families over CEOs.
The Democratic Party, up to now, has not been clear about which side they are on, on the major issues facing this country. You cannot be on the side of those workers who have lost their jobs, because of disastrous trade agreements, and support those corporations who have thrown millions of our workers out on the street, Sanders told the crowd of 8,000 in Oregon.
The Democratic Party has to reach a fundamental conclusion: Are we on the side of working people or big money interests? the senator thundered. Do we stand with the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor or Wall Street speculators and the drug companies and the insurance companies?
snip
Political and media elites, whose default position is to focus on the horse race (and the personalities associated with it), are quick to dismiss fights over agendas and platforms. With no sense of history, they imagine politics as little more than a progression from one dominant figure to the next. Movements, and the political trends and progressions that extend from movement-oriented campaigns, are invariably dismissed.
But it was a movement, and a movement politics, that forced the Democratic Party to embrace a more muscular civil-rights platform than Harry Truman wanted in 1948; it was a movement, and movement politics, that began to open up the Democratic Party in ways that Lyndon Johnson had resisted in 1964. And it was the dismissal of movements, and movement politics, that proved to be disastrous for the Democratic Party in 1968.
But it was a movement, and a movement politics, that forced the Democratic Party to embrace a more muscular civil-rights platform than Harry Truman wanted in 1948; it was a movement, and movement politics, that began to open up the Democratic Party in ways that Lyndon Johnson had resisted in 1964. And it was the dismissal of movements, and movement politics, that proved to be disastrous for the Democratic Party in 1968.
snip
But no one should buy into the fantasy that this discussion is inconsequential. Platform debates always matter. Thats why the candidates (front-runners and challengers) always take them seriously; thats why key players in political parties (governor, mayors, legislators, union leaders) participate in them; thats why interest groups try so hard to influence them.
Platforms define parties, not just for the purposes of a campaign but for the future. It mattered when the Democratic Party embraced civil rights in a meaningful way in 1948, and in a more meaningful way in 1960 and 1964. It mattered in the 1980s when the Democratic Party moved (at the behest of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow Coalition campaigns) toward more aggressive opposition to South African apartheid, and when it moved (at the behest of the Jackson and Gary Hart campaigns of 1984) toward an embrace of the principle that the United States should work with allies rather than engage in unilateral military action. It mattered when the Democratic Party began to embrace LGBTQ rights in a meaningful way in its 1980 platform, and when it embraced marriage equality in 2012.
And it matters, now, that Sanders is talking about put[ting] together the strongest progressive agenda that any political party has ever seen.
Platforms define parties, not just for the purposes of a campaign but for the future. It mattered when the Democratic Party embraced civil rights in a meaningful way in 1948, and in a more meaningful way in 1960 and 1964. It mattered in the 1980s when the Democratic Party moved (at the behest of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow Coalition campaigns) toward more aggressive opposition to South African apartheid, and when it moved (at the behest of the Jackson and Gary Hart campaigns of 1984) toward an embrace of the principle that the United States should work with allies rather than engage in unilateral military action. It mattered when the Democratic Party began to embrace LGBTQ rights in a meaningful way in its 1980 platform, and when it embraced marriage equality in 2012.
And it matters, now, that Sanders is talking about put[ting] together the strongest progressive agenda that any political party has ever seen.
snip
What was true three decades ago remains true now: Platform fights on issues of conscience and consequence, inspired by insurgent campaigns and insurgent movements, are always worth waging.
*(all bold/underline emphases mine)
Read in full:
http://www.thenation.com/article/sanders-fights-on-for-the-strongest-progressive-agenda-that-any-political-party-has-ever-seen/
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