Onion headline
Oh my god, that is amazing.
Onion headline
We're going for Kansas on a national scale!!WaPo: Trumps treasury secretary: The tax cut will pay for itself
Keep trying. The nth time is sure to be the one that works!
Since he's making himself the arbiter of who is progressive or not, he should be called out for supporting non-progressive candidates.Why would anyone think that being pro choice is important for Bernie.
Why would anyone think that being pro choice is important for Bernie.
Anybody Dems prop up on a so-called "Unity Tour" needs to care about women's rights a bit more than low-key attacking pivotal candidates who he suspects aren't progressive enough.
In fairness, they don't mention who is being unified with who. Using Bernie as a blunt cudgel to try and get his precious snowflake wannabe progressive bothsidesers on board I can live with.
Y'all right that Bernie is incredibly gross about this sorta thing, but then, what else is new?
It's just frustrating to see someone with so much influence over the party continually push aside the issues of key, reliable Democratic constktuenties in order to chase after unreliable voters who may or may not vote for the Democratic. It's a running theme at this point.
No problem with Bernie supporting Heath Mello. But he shouldn't call him progressive and imply Ossoff is not. He really just didn't need to say anything about Ossoff at all other than "He's a great candidate and person and I wish him the best of luck," but apparently he is unable to do such a thing.
Honestly at this point I'm tired of the need to slap on label on someone as if a progressive sticker on their shoulder is a be all end all. Bernie in particular needs to stop treating it like a sticker pack her walks around with and decides who gets one.It's just frustrating to see someone with so much influence over the party continually push aside the issues of key, reliable Democratic constktuenties in order to chase after unreliable voters who may or may not vote for the Democratic. It's a running theme at this point.
No problem with Bernie supporting Heath Mello. But he shouldn't call him progressive and imply Ossoff is not. He really just didn't need to say anything about Ossoff at all other than "He's a great candidate and person and I wish him the best of luck," but apparently he is unable to do such a thing.
Honestly at this point I'm tired of the need to slap on label on someone as if a progressive sticker on their shoulder is a be all end all. Bernie in particular needs to stop treating it like a sticker pack her walks around with and decides who gets one.
Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
No matter how much I accomplish during the ridiculous standard of the first 100 days, & it has been a lot (including S.C.), media will kill!
6:50 AM · Apr 21, 2017
He mad.
Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
No matter how much I accomplish during the ridiculous standard of the first 100 days, & it has been a lot (including S.C.), media will kill!
6:50 AM · Apr 21, 2017
He mad.
"Including" SC? Dude it was only SC and they had to change the rules just to get your shitty candidate through.Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
No matter how much I accomplish during the ridiculous standard of the first 100 days, & it has been a lot (including S.C.), media will kill!
6:50 AM · Apr 21, 2017
He mad.
We need to be working on assuring and courting our reliable base entirely independently of Sanders. Like you say, he shouldn't be saying shit like that, but he's an idiot with his head up his ass and can't help himself. Can't rely on Saint Bernard for messaging on that front, so we need to be getting some other surrogates on Unity Tours focused more on the rest of the party.
Kind of a shame we didn't get Maxine Walters to do some speaking engagements with Ellison or Perez during the recess.
We need to be working on assuring and courting our reliable base entirely independently of Sanders. Like you say, he shouldn't be saying shit like that, but he's an idiot with his head up his ass and can't help himself. Can't rely on Saint Bernard for messaging on that front, so we need to be getting some other surrogates on Unity Tours focused more on the rest of the party.
Kind of a shame we didn't get Maxine Walters to do some speaking engagements with Ellison or Perez during the recess.
Disgusting...
Rain of frogs? Are are we already at the locusts?
Ugh why do I keep thinking it's not possibleThat is incorrect. It's entirely possible for the President to fire the FBI director.
Ossoff isn't especially progressive, though. I'm looking at the economy section of his website, and leaving outside the white noise that every candidate puts (who ever said they didn't want a dynamic economy with a responsible fiscal policy? or planned to handicap small businesses?), we've got:
- Reduce the tax burden on small businesses
- Reduce healthcare premiums
- Equal pay for equal work
- The minimum wage as a living wage, but implemented only as fast as employers can adapt
None of these are especially harmful, per se, but they're all incredibly milquetoast. For genuine small businesses, the tax burden is pretty low - 15% company tax on the lowest bracket is lower than most of other OECD economies (e.g., the UK small profits rate is 20%) already. If anything, reducing the tax burden on 'small businesses' by adjusting the scaling normally helps large businesses more - for example, if my business makes $65,000 a year and I'm a sole proprietor, then reducing the company tax to 10% means I get an extra $3,250 - which is great and all, but if my business makes $100,000 a year, then I get an extra $3,750, because I extend all the way through the $75,000 bracket to make the most of it.
Equal pay for equal work is incredibly misleading. Women do get paid almost equal pay for equal work (about 96% of what a man would make); and their right to do this is enshrined in statute and has been for decades. There are minor fixes here and there you could make - better enforcement, campaigns to raise awareness and encourage people to come forward when they realise they are being given discriminatory pay - but these are minor changes. What is happening is that people are mostly getting equal pay for equal work... but the work they receive is unequal. Women are much more likely to be represented in jobs that pay less, like teaching or nursing - same with minorities. If you wanted to fix that, you'd need concerted government action to tackle sexism and racism at root, like offering retraining and reskilling programmes for minorities, pouring enormous amounts of time and money into schools in minority areas, improving housing conditions in the poorest cities, offering stronger state maternity support - which change the nature of the workplace and help women and minorities into jobs that are currently colonised by men. That's progress, and something that (for example) Sanders has committed to, rather than Ossoff's ida to promise to do something that is, more or less, already in place.
Committing to raising the minimum wage at a rate employers are happy with is basically doing nothing. They have a vested interest in making a great deal of noise about it. Not to mention the minimum wage is a sticky plaster for a pre-existing failure - the weakness of labour compared to business, something a progressive would actually want to address.
Conservatives love to lift up Reagan, but presidents are still evaluated by the standard of FDR, which tells you all you need to know.I actually agree that "the first 100 days" is an arbitrary time frame that people are only obsessed with for Narrative reasons.
That said, when the president starts calling out the arbitrariness of the 100 days, it's because the Narrative isn't good. :lol
But "Ossoff isn't a progressive" lolSanders pushed back against the criticism. "The truth is that in some conservative states there will be candidates that are popular candidates who may not agree with me on every issue. I understand it. That's what politics is about," Sanders told NPR.
"If we are going to protect a woman's right to choose, at the end of the day we're going to need Democratic control over the House and the Senate, and state governments all over this nation," he said. "And we have got to appreciate where people come from, and do our best to fight for the pro-choice agenda. But I think you just can't exclude people who disagree with us on one issue."
Heath Mello has a 100% Planned Parenthood rating for 2015 and 2016, though. He changed his political beliefs on this issue, as does happen. Consequently, one can say "he is currently a progressive", while also saying "Ossoff is not currently especially progressive". I agree that I'd like someone with more consistency of belief, if only because you can have more confidence they'll continue their current beliefs in the future, but as it currently stands, Mello is a progressive candidate - more so than Ossoff.
EDIT: Like, I don't remember this much fuss being made about Tim Kaine, who has a much worse record in this respect? Kaine approved a number of anti-abortion bills as the Governor of Virginia, some of which are still in force today. This isn't whataboutery - I think they both made bad choices - I'm pointing out that you're being incredibly inconsistent. I could go back and find quite a few "Daddy Kaine" posts from many of the people currently complaining about this issue.
Fundamentally, the only reason you're reacting so viscerally to the fact a guy had different stances to the ones he had five years ago is because he is associated with Sanders, and you're still bitter about the primaries. Get over it, guys.
Heath Mello has a 100% Planned Parenthood rating for 2015 and 2016, though. He changed his political beliefs on this issue, as does happen. Consequently, one can say "he is currently a progressive", while also saying "Ossoff is not currently especially progressive". I agree that I'd like someone with more consistency of belief, if only because you can have more confidence they'll continue their current beliefs in the future, but as it currently stands, Mello is a progressive candidate - more so than Ossoff.
EDIT: Like, I don't remember this much fuss being made about Tim Kaine, who has a much worse record in this respect? Kaine approved a number of anti-abortion bills as the Governor of Virginia, some of which are still in force today. This isn't whataboutery - I think they both made bad choices - I'm pointing out that you're being incredibly inconsistent. I could go back and find quite a few "Daddy Kaine" posts from many of the people currently complaining about this issue.
Fundamentally, the only reason you're reacting so viscerally to the fact a guy had different stances to the ones he had five years ago is because he is associated with Sanders, and you're still bitter about the primaries. Get over it, guys.
But Ossoff disagrees on lots of issues. His platform is not very similar to Sanders' ideal at all.
Sanders's ideal is not the ONLY ideal of the Democratic Party. There were plenty of people here before him who built the progressive party it is today, and there are plenty of people who disagree with Sanders's ideal.But Ossoff disagrees on lots of issues. His platform is not very similar to Sanders' ideal at all.
I think that Bernies comments are not helpful, Carlos Moreno, the founder of an Indivisible group in Georgia that has been working to support the Ossoff campaign, said in an interview. If you look at Jons positions on civil rights, the environment, a woman's right to chose, healthcare, youll see that he really is very much a progressive candidate. He is someone who shares the values of Democratic voters, who wants to fight corruption, protect access to the ballot box, and promote good education.
I think that Bernie seems to have a rather extreme point of view, that if a candidate wants to do anything to create jobs, that hes not a progressive, Moreno added.
David Nir, the political director for Daily Kos, which has been instrumental in channeling grassroots support for Ossoff into an influx of small-donations, respond to Sanders comments on Twitter by saying: Bernie Sanders isnt helpinghe's hurting. He should either endorse Ossoff and raise money for him, or keep his silence. Nir later added, on second thought, Sanders shouldnt endorse Ossoff. He should just remain silent and not hurt the efforts of those of us helping in #GA06.
No fundamentally I'm reacting viscerally to the fact that Sanders is essentially acting like the national guard of who is progressive and not. I think, honestly, that both candidates were worth support and will form valuable allies if they get elected, although I understand that for a lot of people Mello's abortion stuff is a complete no-go and I don't resent if they choose not to support him because of it (and even then, I'm more "tolerant" than "support") but if Sanders is going to remain on the national stage we get to discuss him regardless of whatever happened in the primaries and this current whiplash between who he did and didn't use his large platform to anoint as progressive is telling
There's an implication here which I think should be the main point. It shouldn't matter whether Ossoff and Sanders are close in ideals, because there's an argument to be made that Sanders should not be a taste-maker of the Democratic Party.
To me, it's very interesting that Hillary has moved to one-side as the "leader" of "her wing", but Sanders continues to push people he believes in in terms of progressive ideology. Surely the Dems should be at the stage where Sanders should retreat into the background on such things, in order to unify the party behind new blood untainted by the 2016 election process?
https://democrats.senate.gov/2005/05/19/senator-harry-reids-floor-statement-on-advice-consent/Saw a meme quoting Reid back in 2005 saying Senate weren't under any constitutional obligation to vote in a Supreme Court Justice nominee and juxtaposed to last year when he complained the Republicans weren't voting for Garland.
What was the context of the 2005 quote?
Listen, I don't care if we have to get a god damn ham sandwich as our 2020 candidate, Democrats need to fucking unite already and get Trump out of office.
Bernie's saying dumb stuff but it seems to me that a lot of this is overblown hemming and hawing that isn't going to mean a whole lot when it comes to getting votes out.
This, I think, is a more honest argument. You're not upset that Sanders is setting gates, because everyone does that all the times, we just set different gates. You're upset at what Sanders' gates are, and think they should be different. So why not set out the case which makes those points?
Well, because of Ellison blaming Obama, the most popular politician to the Dem's most loyal base, it's not a Clinton defender Bernie's gonna have to deal with.
More than likely? It'll be black voters. Which I don't understand, because it shouldn't be difficult to NOT piss them off.
This, I think, is a more honest argument. You're not upset that Sanders is setting gates, because everyone does that all the times, we just set different gates. You're upset at what Sanders' gates are, and think they should be different. So why not set out the case which makes those points?
Why would he do that? He doesn't want new blood "untainted" by the 2016 election process. He wants the next election process to be as influenced by his ideas and policies as much as he possibly can! You're assuming being associated with Sanders in 2020 would be a bad thing. Looking at favourability ratings, it would be a very good thing for that candidate (ceteris paribus).
The problem seems to be a general frustration from this thread that nobody has taken up Clinton's mantle and consequently Sanders' view is dominating and having the most influence on those who lean Democrat. But that problem starts with you, not him. Start asking yourself: well, why don't metropolitan elite Democrats have a standard-bearer? Why do we have no prominent national figure fighting our case?
No fundamentally I'm reacting viscerally to the fact that Sanders is essentially acting like the national guard of who is progressive and not. I think, honestly, that both candidates were worth support and will form valuable allies if they get elected, although I understand that for a lot of people Mello's abortion stuff is a complete no-go and I don't resent if they choose not to support him because of it (and even then, I'm more "tolerant" than "support") but if Sanders is going to remain on the national stage we get to discuss him regardless of whatever happened in the primaries and this current whiplash between who he did and didn't use his large platform to anoint as progressive is telling
Sanders was less interested in the Ossoff race. Hes not a progressive, he said. He was endorsing Democrats based on their economic populism; they could differ from progressives on social issues but not on the threat of the mega-rich to American politics. Soon, he said, the 5-to-4 majority on the Supreme Court was likely to make it legal for the wealthy to give unlimited sums to candidates, and the only way to fight back was grass-roots politicking and small donations.
If you are running in rural Mississippi, do you hold the same criteria as if youre running in San Francisco? he said. I think youd be a fool to think thats all the same.
Sanders had said this before, and each time, he had sparked anger from a center-left ready to accuse him of abandoning women or nonwhite voters. On Thursday, he was set to campaign in Omaha for Heath Mello, a Democrat running for mayor who had previously backed a bill requiring ultrasounds for women considering abortions.
But Perez and Sanders were on the same page about candidate diversity. I live in the peoples republic of Takoma Park, Perez said. If you demand fealty on every single issue, then its a challenge. The Democratic Party platform acknowledges that were pro-choice, but there are communities, like some in Kansas, where people have a different position.
.https://www.reddit.com/r/PoliticalD...ie_recently_said_ossoff_is_not_a_progressive/Sanders pushed back against the criticism. "The truth is that in some conservative states there will be candidates that are popular candidates who may not agree with me on every issue. I understand it. That's what politics is about," Sanders told NPR.
"If we are going to protect a woman's right to choose, at the end of the day we're going to need Democratic control over the House and the Senate, and state governments all over this nation," he said. "And we have got to appreciate where people come from, and do our best to fight for the pro-choice agenda. But I think you just can't exclude people who disagree with us on one issue."
Sanders' favourability among black voters is 77/13, or 85.5/14.5 adjusting for DK. Obama's is 86/9, or 90.5/9.5 adjusting for DK. If you were to pick a black voter entirely at random from those who hold an opinion on both, the odds are only 1 in 20 that you'd find someone who liked Obama but disliked Sanders. If you excluded people who posted in this thread, it'd be 0 in 20.I joke, I joke
Honestly?
This has been a thing since the primaries. And it hasn't died down one bit, unlike Obama/HRC.
At some point, it's gonna have to be addressed straight up or the Dem party's just gonna be in disarray till election time.
Says the man who spent his campaign hyping up what he would accomplish on day one. He failed on his day one promises and is failing with an even longer time period.Donald J. Trump‏ @realDonaldTrump
No matter how much I accomplish during the ridiculous standard of the first 100 days, & it has been a lot (including S.C.), media will kill!
6:50 AM · Apr 21, 2017
He mad.
That's probably because unlike HRC, Obama won and HRC losing meant Orange Julius was elected God King Emperor. I'm sure if Obama lost to McCain the Dem party would have squabbled a bit, too.
I'm not trying to disregard it, but worrying every time Bernie opens his mouth when it doesn't seem to be all that important isn't helping any more than Bernie is.