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portlander23

(2,078 posts)
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 09:23 AM Dec 2016

Democrats Hone a New Message: Its the Economy, Everyone

Democrats Hone a New Message: It’s the Economy, Everyone
Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin
New York Times

There is little appetite among most Democrats to substantively revise their stances on issues like abortion, gay rights, gun control and immigration, where trends on the national level continue to favor the party. By constructing a platform focused on an overarching theme of economic fairness, Democrats are hoping to avoid yoking their candidates to a more divisive agenda that could sink them in states like North Dakota and West Virginia, which are crucial to control of the Senate.

This is markedly different from the approach that party leaders have taken over the last eight years, when President Obama defined the party from top to bottom with his personality and policies. Instead, Democrats intend to focus on a sparer agenda of bread-and-butter priorities that can win support from both liberal and moderate officeholders — and appeal to voters just as much in red states as along the two coasts.

Beyond that, they expect wide variance in how officeholders handle Mr. Trump and his agenda, from moderates who seek out accommodation to blue-state leaders who pursue total war. Their emerging message is likely to focus on protecting Medicare and Social Security, attacking income inequality and political corruption, and blocking legislation that might restrict access to health care.


This is worrisome. It's great that the party is getting it that people in the country are hurting and economic justice needs to be on the table, but when I read things like "Democrats are hoping to avoid yoking their candidates to a more divisive agenda that could sink them in states like North Dakota and West Virginia", it sounds like they're willing to look the other way while some members of the caucus throw people and groups under the bus.

That is not only unacceptable, it's learning the wrong lesson. The lesson of 2016 is that economic justice isn't separable from equal rights and social justice. Dropping economic justice made it easier for some portion of Trump voters to ignore his racism.

Here's what Bernie Sanders had to say on this:

The Democratic Party is the party of diversity. We have proudly led the fight against racism, sexism, homophobia, xenophobia, and for the rights of immigrants. Especially under a Trump administration, we are not turning back. We are going forward. There can be no compromise on bigotry.

Our job is to expand diversity. We want more women, more African-Americans, more Latinos, and individuals of all ages, colors and creed to be involved in the political process. But to think of diversity purely in racial and gender terms is not sufficient.

Yes, we need more candidates of diversity, but we also need candidates – no matter what race or gender – to be fighters for the working class and stand up to the corporate powers who have so much power over our economic lives. We need all of our candidates to have the courage to stand up to the Koch Brothers, Wall Street, drug companies, insurance companies, oil companies, and fight for working families -- not just the top one percent.

Our rights and economic lives are intertwined. Now, more than ever, we need a Democratic Party that is committed to fulfilling, not eviscerating, Dr. Martin Luther King’s dream of racial, social, and economic justice for all.

Not every member of the caucus has to agree on every issue, but basic human decency should be the price of admission. Democrats shouldn't compete for racist voters. They should compete for voters who are in economic distress and are looking for anyone who'll offer them a way out.
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RKP5637

(67,086 posts)
1. It would seem they could focus on "The Economy" while not throwing others under the bus.
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 09:43 AM
Dec 2016

Endlessly in the US it's always this or that, us or them. I'm so F'en tired of it.
Always chasing after the republicans to catch up, FFS, here go the democrats again, wannabees, hey, we're just like the republicans, vote for us.

uponit7771

(90,301 posts)
2. Or they can simply say "THE ELECTION WAS HACKED" and say it every 2nd word and stop ignoring
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 10:10 AM
Dec 2016

... the facts.

That would be way more progressive

Chasstev365

(5,191 posts)
3. And that will suddenly wake up Billy Bob, why?
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 10:23 AM
Dec 2016

Face it; the party needs new leadership and new messages. What they're doing isn't effective at all.

 

RBInMaine

(13,570 posts)
5. Damn it, NO ONE IS THROWING ANYONE UNDER THE BUS!! NO ONE IS SAYING THAT !! ENOUGH!!!
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 10:46 AM
Dec 2016

STOP this talk about "throwing people under the bus" or trying to "appeal to racists"!!!!!!!

No one is saying that. We are saying to stop ignoring ANYONE, and yes, that mean STOP IGNORING WHITE WORKING CLASS PEOPLE IN SMALL TOWN AND RURAL AMERICA! The "party of the people" means EVERYONE, not just urban liberals. We need urban liberals too, but we were ALWAYS the party of the rust belt and small town working folks and we have LEFT them and it is KILLING US!!!! The vast majority of them are NOT "racists". They are good people who want JOBS because they have been royally screwed over by shitting trade deals and other things and they are HURTING. Trump gave them a strong economic message. We did not. And that is why he won. Plain and SIMPLE. We need to get back to being champions of working people again, PERIOD.

 

portlander23

(2,078 posts)
6. I agree with you
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 05:49 PM
Dec 2016

And I agree with Bernie Sanders. What I'm concerned about is there's been language coming from the Democratic leadership in the Senate that seems to imply they intend to disassociate economic justice from other issues and let parts of the caucus "go their own way". I think that's a mistake.

 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
7. Clinton is the trendsetter.
Sun Dec 11, 2016, 05:53 PM
Dec 2016

She pretty much used that exact line at campaign stops and commercials. It's about an economy for everyone. Clintons and the parties platform are our perfect springboard for these issues. We need to keep building off the economic push that was one of the cornerstones of Clintons campaign.

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