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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Monday, 20 February 2017
Liberal voters warn Democratic officials: resist Trump or be replaced
Activists are pressuring lawmakers to ‘fight Trump or we’ll find
someone who will’, but they must also worry about those facing elections
in states Trump won
Activists have already circled a number of Senate Democrats who have
failed to meet their standards, including vulnerable and increasingly
rare red-state Democrats.
Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters
On the evening Donald Trump announced his supreme court nominee, thousands of protesters gathered outside of Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer’s
Brooklyn apartment. They chanted “Just vote no” and “Obstruct” while
carrying signs – “Get a spine, Chuck” – and a prop skeleton to
illustrate their point.
The protesters are part of a sudden swell of liberal activism that has drawn millions to city streets and airport concourses across the US, in a startling show of resistance to Trump’s presidency.Emboldened by this groundswell, some progressives have started using the word “primary” as a verb – and as a threat.
For Democrats
in Washington, many of whom are still surprised by the scale and
furiousness of backlash, the challenge is how to convert this energy
into electoral success.
Schumer has significantly slowed the pace of Trump’s cabinet
confirmations and excoriated many of the president’s nominees. But the
activists outside Schumer’s home on that January night were unimpressed
by his votes in favor of Trump’s nominees to represent the US in the UN
and to lead the Pentagon, CIA and Department of Homeland Security.
“Our message to Democrats is simple: fight Trump or we’ll find
someone who will,” said Waleed Shahid, a co-founder of the progressive
group All of Us and a former organizer with the Bernie Sanders campaign.
This week, the group launched the political action committee We Will Replace You, the latest in a series of projects to warn Democrats that failures to oppose Trump’s agenda will have consequences.
The group argues that Democrats need to exercise the little political
power they still have. The activists have a long list of demands: votes
against “all Trump appointees”, opposing his supreme court nominee,
using congressional procedures to “bring all business to a crawl to
block Trump’s agenda and demand Steve Bannon be fired”. Elected
officials, they say, should “publicly support impeachment if Trump is
found to have broken the law or violated the constitution”.
The activists have already circled a number of Senate
Democrats who have failed to meet their standards, including vulnerable
and increasingly rare red-state Democrats, such as Joe Manchin of West
Virginia and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota. Both Democrats are up for
re-election in 2018.
“The Democratic party establishment wants the support of the Tea
Party of the left but they don’t want to earn it,” Shahid said, alluding
to the 2010 movement that mobilized rightwing activists, confronted
moderate Republicans and helped the party take control of the House in a
wave.
“They say they love the grassroots activism, but they don’t want to take the next step and challenge the Democratic leadership.”
Their demands put leaders such as Schumer in a bind. With his party
shut out of power in Washington, public shows of support are arguablyits
most powerful weapon, but he must also worry about the lawmakers in his
caucus facing elections in states where Trump won.
Their demands puts leaders such as Chuck Schumer in a bind. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
Democrats must defend 23 Senate seats in the 2018 election cycle, 10
from states that Trump won in November. Already, outside groups have
targeted these vulnerable red-state Democrats to try to soften their
opposition to Trump’s nominees for the cabinet and supreme court.
“The activists threatening to primary [support a primary challenge
to] Democratic candidates live in a bubble,” said Jim Kessler, a former
Schumer aide and co-founder of a centrist thinktank, Third Way. “They
have no idea how to win in places that aren’t sky blue already.”
Kessler believes the path back to power will require the Big Tent
party to grow geographically, and not just move sharply to the left with
its demands. In his view, red-state Democrats are an endangered species
worth protecting – not threatening.
The activists’ campaign says its goal is not necessarily to primary
the candidates and that the threat “becomes a tool that successfully
pushes Democrats to fight Trump harder”.
Blanket obstructionism has proven to be a tall order – even for
progressive politicians from safely Democratic states. Senator Elizabeth
Warren, a progressive favorite from Massachusetts, has already been
forced to defend her vote for Ben Carson for secretary of housing and
urban development.
A number of activists who support using this tactic agreed that the
real test will be the supreme court battle. Senate Democrats have the
ability to filibuster Trump’s nominee, Neil Gorsuch, meaning that
Republicans need to earn support from at least eight Democrats to
confirm Gorsuch – unless the controlling party changes the rules.
“This nominee cannot be allowed to ever take the oath of office. It
just cannot be allowed to happen,” said Anthony Rogers-Wright, a
Seattle-based climate and environmental activist who was a surrogate for
the Sanders campaign.
“If any Democrat does not take part in a mass filibuster – they’re disqualified.”
Already, a handful of senators have flatly refused to support
Gorsuch, arguing that Republicans “stole” the seat from Barack Obama
when they refused, for a record 293 days,
to hold a hearing for his nominee, Merrick Garland. But more have said
Gorsuch deserves a fair hearing, and that they will wait to hear more
about his views and background before making a decision.
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