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The Republican Party Is Waging War Against Free and Fair Elections in This Country Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Friday, 14 June 2019 13:06

Pierce writes: "The Kris Kobach-led voter fraud commission is being exposed as a bigger scam with each passing day."

Americans cast their votes in 2016. (photo: Aaron Josefczyk/Reuters)
Americans cast their votes in 2016. (photo: Aaron Josefczyk/Reuters)


The Republican Party Is Waging War Against Free and Fair Elections in This Country

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

14 June 19


The Kris Kobach-led voter fraud commission is being exposed as a bigger scam with each passing day.

here is a fascinating lawsuit playing out in New York and, as far as I can tell, the only outlet that fully realizes its importance is Josh Marshall's Talking Points Memo,which has put reporter Tierney Sneed on the case.

In brief, Matt Dunlap, Maine's Democratic Secretary of State, is suing the president*'s phony, and now defunct, "voter-security" commission in order to obtain internal commission documents that Dunlap claims were withheld from him, even though he also was a member of the commission. His primary targets are emails exchanged between Kris Kobach, J. Christian Adams, and Hans von Spakovsky.

To those of us who follow voter suppression efforts around the country, that poxy trio is the Legion of Super Villains. Their very involvement in the commission belied the good-faith basis for its existence anyway, but Dunlap's lawsuit has proven to be a gold mine of information as to what a thoroughgoing bag-job—to say nothing of what a waste of time and money—the commission was.

However, another now-public email, sent in February 2017, showed that von Spakovsky had complained to allies of then-Attorney General Jeff Session about the “disturbing” news that the White House was considering naming Democrats and “mainstream Republicans” to the panel. The email was forwarded to Sessions himself. “There isn’t a single Democratic official that will do anything other than obstruct any investigation of voter fraud and issue constant public announcements criticizing the commission and what it is doing, making claims that it is engaged in voter suppression,” von Spakovsky wrote in February 2017, in an email that cc’d Adams. “That decision alone shows how little the WHouse understands about this issue."

Apparently, the primary concern of these guys was that the White House wasn't putting together a big enough bag-job. As Sneed reports, the judge in the case is being as careful as she can. She's paused her order mandating the release of the documents to Dunlap because there is some question as to whether some of the emails he's seeking were exchanged before Adams and the rest of them had been appointed formally to the commission. Nevertheless, what we already have learned from Dunlap's lawsuit is proof enough that the commission was an important weapon in the Republican Party's war against free and fair elections in this country.

It is all of a piece. The commission. Mitch McConnell's resolute opposition to doing anything to safeguard elections in the Senate, which on Thursday was manifested by Tennessee's Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn, that twit, who rose to deny unanimous consent on a bill that would have mandated that any approach to a candidate from foreign actors be reported to the FBI. The staggering number of voter-suppression tactics and laws out in the states—and the equally staggering tangle of lawsuits that have been filed against them. And, of course, the president*'s blithe admission that, sure, he'd take some help from Russian ratfcking in 2020.

The only person making sense of the matter is Ellen Weintraub, the chair of the Federal Election Commission, who responded with both barrels to the president*'s astonishing assertions.

"Let me make something 100% clear to the American public and anyone running for public office: It is illegal for any person to solicit, accept, or receive anything of value from a foreign national in connection with a U.S. election. This is not a novel concept. Electoral intervention from foreign governments has been considered unacceptable since the beginnings of our nation. Our Founding Fathers sounded the alarm about 'foreign Interference, Intrigue, and Influence.' They knew that when foreign governments seek to influence American politics, it is always to advance their own interests, not America's. Anyone who solicits or accepts foreign assistance risks being on the wrong end of a federal investigation. Any political campaign that receives an offer of a prohibited donation from a foreign source should report that offer to the Federal Bureau of Investigation."

She then added:

“I would not have thought that I needed to say this."

In a functioning democracy not run by idiots, bunco artists, and fools, you wouldn't. If the elections are a sham, what the hell does all the rest of it matter?

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Bernie Sanders Has Laid Out the Stakes of the 2020 Election: Democratic Socialism or Barbarism Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=37895"><span class="small">Miles Kampf-Lassin, In These Times</span></a>   
Friday, 14 June 2019 13:06

Kampf-Lassin writes: "In a widely touted speech, Sanders explained why an unapologetic democratic socialist vision is the only antidote to the oligarchy and authoritarianism embodied by President Trump."

Sen. Bernie Sanders delivered an unwavering defense of democratic socialism. (photo: Sarah Silbiger/Getty)
Sen. Bernie Sanders delivered an unwavering defense of democratic socialism. (photo: Sarah Silbiger/Getty)


Bernie Sanders Has Laid Out the Stakes of the 2020 Election: Democratic Socialism or Barbarism

By Miles Kampf-Lassin, In These Times

14 June 19


In a widely touted speech, Sanders explained why an unapologetic democratic socialist vision is the only antidote to the oligarchy and authoritarianism embodied by President Trump.

he opening salvo of Donald Trump’s reelection campaign came not in a defamatory speech or presidential tweetstorm, but in an overlooked report put out in October 2018 by his White House Council of Economic Advisers titled “The Opportunity Costs of Socialism.”

The bizarre document featured a mash-up of Margaret Thatcher quotes, paeans to Nordic truck drivers and allegories about Christmas sweaters, but its central conceit—that a socialist menace haunts the American public—has come to animate Trump’s talking points as he sets his sights on 2020.

In his State of the Union address in February, Trump thundered, “Tonight, we renew our resolve that America will never be a socialist country.” At the Conservative Political Action Conference in March, he claimed, “We believe in the American dream, not the socialist nightmare.” During a National Republican Campaign Committee fundraiser in April, he said, “I love the idea of ‘Keep America Great,’ because you know what it says is we’ve made it great. Now we’re going to keep it great, because these socialists will destroy it.”

Such fear mongering is not new. Barack Obama was consistently derided as a freedom-hating socialist by everyone from billionaire David Koch to former Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Indeed, from William Jennings Bryan in the 1890s to Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1930s to Bill Clinton in the 1990s, conservatives have attempted to tar Democratic presidential candidates as socialist agents.

The difference in 2020 is that this time around, one of the Democratic front runners embraces the socialist label. On Wednesday, at George Washington University, Sen. Bernie Sanders delivered an unwavering defense of democratic socialism in a major campaign speech.

“Democratic socialism to me requires achieving political and economic freedom in every community in this country,” said Sanders.

Presenting a defense that tethered the principles of democratic socialism to battles throughout U.S. history to expand freedom and provide a better life for the American people, Sanders said that the task today is to “take up the unfinished business of the New Deal and carry it to completion.”

But Sanders made clear that his vision goes beyond that of FDR’s. “We must recognize that in the 21st century, in the wealthiest country in the history of the world, economic rights are human rights,” Sanders said, making a case for enshrining not only healthcare as a right, but also education, employment, housing and the ability to live in a “clean environment.”

This conception of democratic socialism sees such basic human needs as inalienable, and demands they not be subject to market forces. During the speech, Sanders raised the question of whether people are truly free if they can’t afford to go to the doctor, or if they have to work 80 hours a week to make a living.

With inequality levels mirroring those of the Gilded Age, and corporate profits at an all-time high, democratic socialism is finding a fervent audience: More than 6 in 10 Americans are unhappy with the current size and influence of corporations, and the same proportion say the current distribution of money and wealth in our society is unfair. Medicare for All, Sanders' trademark proposal, is now backed by 70 percent of Americans, and his calls for a jobs guarantee, tuition-free college and a Green New Deal all boast majority support. How would such programs be paid for? More than 75 percent of Americans say we should soak the rich.

Sanders has similarly proposed a democratic socialist approach to workers’ rights. He advocates expanding union rights, increasing employee ownership and creating a worker-run fund that would pay them out dividends.

If the constituent parts of Sanders’ socialist vision are increasingly popular, so is the term itself. Despite the Right’s best attempts to stigmatize socialism, 4 in 10 Americans now say they would rather live in a socialist country than a capitalist one, and majorities of women, young people and Democrats all now say they favor socialism over capitalism.

In his speech, Sanders did more than repeat his calls for a more egalitarian politics and bold left-wing policies. He argued that we are up against an oligarchy that has captured our political system, and that we must stand in solidarity with the movements of working people who are demanding fundamental change—from striking teachers, to climate justice organizers to women fighting for reproductive freedom.

Sanders made the case that the term “free market” is an oxymoron. Citing the Wall Street bailouts of 2008 and subsidies heaped each year on the fossil fuel industry and monopolistic enterprises like Amazon, Sanders said that Trump and his fellow oligarchs have long engaged in a form of “corporate socialism” that uses the power of the state to guarantee their continued profitability. Quoting Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who said “this country has socialism for the rich, rugged individualism for the poor,” Sanders argued that nothing short of a full-fledged economic transformation can reverse this arrangement.

By reframing the debate around socialism to rebuke the greed of Trump and corporate America, Sanders attempted to turn the tables on critics who dismiss his democratic socialist agenda. “The issue of unfettered capitalism is not just an academic debate,” he said. “Poverty, economic distress and despair are life-threatening issues for millions of working people in the country.”

He linked the turn toward oligarchy and authoritarianism in America to the pantheon of rightwing authoritarian leaders who have consolidated power around the world. He named names: Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, Vladimir Putin in Russia, Xi Jinping in China, Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines, Muhammed bin Salman in Saudi Arabia, Viktor Orbán in Hungary and America’s own Donald Trump.

“These leaders meld corporatist economics with xenophobia and authoritarianism,” said Sanders. “They redirect popular anger about inequality and declining economic conditions into violent rage against minorities—whether they are immigrants, racial minorities, religious minorities or the LGBT community. And to suppress dissent, they are cracking down on democracy and human rights.”

In contrast to such hate-mongering, Sanders counterposed democratic socialism which he said seeks “a higher path, a path of compassion, justice and love.”

With hate crimes on the rise across the country, and the Trump administration engaging in such policies as the caging of migrant children, Sanders argued that democratic socialism is not some radical philosophy to be feared, but rather the antidote to the growing dogmas of bigotry—one that could overcome the hate-filled fantasies of the Steve Bannons of the world.

Trump has made his game plan for 2020 abundantly clear: attack the Democrats as the party of socialism. No matter who wins the nomination, whether it’s Sanders, Joe Biden or Kamala Harris, they will surely be smeared as socialists. With his full-throated defense of democratic socialism, Sanders welcomed such a debate, trusting that the American people will be on his side.

Never in modern U.S. history has there been a more clear-cut contest between the forces of “socialism and barbarism,” as the old Marxist idiom goes. If Sanders’ speech is any indication, it’s a fight he’s eager to have.


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FOCUS: Trump Is a Walking, Talking National-Security Danger Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46833"><span class="small">Barbara McQuade, The Daily Beast</span></a>   
Friday, 14 June 2019 11:00

McQuade writes: "After two years of Mueller's investigation, Trump still doesn't understand that accepting foreign help in elections is illegal. It's also a recipe for blackmail."

People gather to protest U.S. president Donald Trump's declaration of a national emergency to build a border wall, at Trump International Hotel & Tower in New York, Feb. 15, 2019. (photo: VOA)
People gather to protest U.S. president Donald Trump's declaration of a national emergency to build a border wall, at Trump International Hotel & Tower in New York, Feb. 15, 2019. (photo: VOA)


Trump Is a Walking, Talking National-Security Danger

By Barbara McQuade, The Daily Beast

14 June 19


After two years of Mueller’s investigation, Trump still doesn’t understand that accepting foreign help in elections is illegal. It’s also a recipe for blackmail.

fter two years of investigations, President Donald Trump remains unconvinced that there is anything wrong with accepting help from a foreign government to win an election.

During a television interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, Trump said he would not tell the FBI if he were offered information on a political opponent from a foreign government. He said “Give me a break, life doesn’t work that way.” When reminded that FBI Director Christopher Wray has said that candidates should report contacts from foreign governments, Trump said, “The FBI director is wrong.”

Trump later conceded that “maybe” he would go to the FBI if he thought that “something was wrong,” but only after he met with the foreign representative to listen.

Trump spoke in the context of defending his son Donald Trump Jr., who was interviewed yesterday by the Senate Intelligence Committee. Among the topics Trump Jr., was expected to discuss was a meeting with Russians in June 2016.

“Even sitting down and listening to an overture from a foreign government puts a candidate at risk of blackmail.”

According to special counsel Robert Mueller’ report, Trump Jr., accepted an offer communicated to him by email to meet with Russians to receive “some official documents and information that would incriminate Hillary [Clinton] and her dealings with Russia and would be very helpful to your father.” The email further stated, “This is very high level and sensitive information but is part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump..." Trump Jr. famously responded to the email by replying, “If it’s what you say, I love it....”

The meeting took place a few days letter, attended by Trump Jr., as well as campaign chair Paul Manafort and Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. The meeting participants say that they did not receive any of the kind of information that had been promised.

As Mueller’s report notes, however, the United States has a “compelling interest” in preventing “foreign influence over the U.S. political process.” For that reason, U.S. law prohibits foreign nationals from making donations in connection with elections, and prohibits any person from accepting soliciting, accepting, or receiving a “donation of money or other thing of value” from a foreign national in connection with an election. In other words, we don’t want foreign governments or individuals having any say in who wins our elections because we are a self-governing democracy in which only American citizens get to vote and influence the outcome of elections.

The federal statute has two specific requirements: The violation must be willful, that is, the person must know that his conduct is illegal. In addition, the value of the contribution must exceed $25,000. Mueller found insufficient evidence in this case to establish either of these elements. He was unable to show that Trump Jr., Manafort, or Kushner knew about the legal prohibitions on foreign contributions. He was also unable to put a dollar value on the promised opposition research, in part because it never materialized.

In light of public attention to the law that accepting a thing of value from a foreign national is illegal, Trump would be unable to hide behind a lack of willfulness defense in the future. 

The failure to prove these two elements should not obscure what Mueller did show: that high-level members of the Trump campaign were willing to accept assistance from a foreign government. Even if the conduct did not technically violate the law, it violated every rule of national security.

In addition to permitting foreign actors to have a say in the outcome of our nation’s democratic election, the Trump campaign also exposed itself to foreign influence. This threat is why Trump’s new comments are so alarming. Even sitting down and listening to an overture from a foreign government puts a candidate at risk of blackmail. Many intelligence operations are based on offering someone something that they want–money, access, sex–and then using that enticement as a trap to coerce compliance with demands. The foreign adversary doesn’t even need to say out loud that it will expose the person’s betrayal to his country. The mere knowledge that the foreign government could expose a person’s unpatriotic acts may be sufficient leverage to induce someone to act in the best interests of the adversary and contrary to the best interests of his own country. The meeting alone compromises the candidate.

Trump compounded the harm of the meeting with Russians by editing a press statement about the incident to omit any reference to the purpose of the meeting: to share information about Clinton. This act further compromised him with Russia because it created an additional opportunity for them to leverage against him his lie to the American people. 

Trump’s comments that he would listen, and report to the FBI only if something was wrong, is wrong as a matter of good counterintelligence practice, and profoundly wrong as a matter of patriotism.

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Sanders Is Right - We're All 'Socialists' Now Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=38755"><span class="small">Eric Levitz, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Friday, 14 June 2019 08:27

Levitz writes: "From a certain angle, Bernie Sanders's case for socialism is the same as Margaret Thatcher's for 'free market' capitalism: 'There is no alternative.'"

Sen. Bernie Sanders. (photo: David McNew/Getty)
Sen. Bernie Sanders. (photo: David McNew/Getty)


Sanders Is Right - We're All 'Socialists' Now

By Eric Levitz, New York Magazine

14 June 19

 

rom a certain angle, Bernie Sanders’s case for socialism is the same as Margaret Thatcher’s for “free market” capitalism: “There is no alternative.”

In a speech at George Washington University on Wednesday afternoon, the Vermont senator made several arguments for his political philosophy. Many of these aimed to dispel the misconception that the self-avowed socialist and his “political revolution” are trying to do anything “particularly radical.” Rather, Sanders suggested that what he calls “democratic socialism” is akin to 21st-century New Deal liberalism. Seventy-five years ago, the United States had a president who insisted that “true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence” and proposed the establishment of a “Second Bill of Rights” — one that would guarantee all Americans health care, housing, and “a useful and remunerative job.” In a sense, Sanders’s modest ambition is to revive and update the conventional wisdom of the Democratic Establishment circa 1944.

This is a sound rebuttal to the claim that Sanders’s vision is extreme or un-American. Though, for that reason, it does little to clarify why the senator insists on branding his ideology with a term that much of the American electorate still associates with Soviet communism.

Nevertheless, by coopting the right’s expansive definition of “socialism” — which holds that any major government intervention in the economy (that conservatives don’t like) is a fulfillment of Marx’s vision — Sanders was able to recast the terms of America’s economic debate.

“In 2008, after their greed, recklessness, and illegal behavior created the worst financial disaster since the Great Depression, with millions of Americans losing their jobs, their homes and their life savings, Wall Street’s religious adherence to unfettered capitalism suddenly came to an end,” Sanders said Wednesday. “Overnight, Wall Street became big-government socialists and begged for the largest federal bailout in American history — over $1 trillion from the Treasury and even more from the Federal Reserve. But it’s not just Wall Street that loves socialism — when it works for them. It is the norm across the entire corporate world.”

One can pick many bones with Sanders’s wording here (e.g., Wall Street was a beneficiary of “big government” largesse long before 2008). But his remarks call attention to an important fact: Americans already live in a country where unelected bureaucrats pick economic winners and losers, where public policy exerts a massive influence over the distribution of income, where some indolent Americans live off the hard labor of others, and where the state directs investment toward official, conscious ends. If these are the defining features of socialism, then the United States lost the Cold War before it began, and the real debate between left and right in the U.S. isn’t over whether “big government” should intervene in markets, or even how much it should, but rather who should have a say over how it intervenes — and whose interests such “socialism” should serve.

There may be more politically optimal ways of making this point (or at least, ones that do less violence to Marx’s conception of socialism). But Sanders’s broad argument is a vital one.

America’s existing political economy is much easier to defend if one posits that the gross inequities it produces are ordained by an invisible hand. If some natural economic process dictates that wage growth must be tepid while corporations sit on cash, or that urban workers must be rent burdened while landlords live high off their labor, or that major financial institutions must be insulated from risk while underwater homeowners are left to drown, then one can plausibly argue that government action to alter such outcomes would be hubristic and self-defeating. Who is man to challenge the wisdom of the market gods? By contrast, if the electorate were to recognize that these outcomes are largely determined by public policy, then apologists for the existing order would have a much harder time rationalizing acquiescence.

Of course, many libertarians will readily concede that the state has its grubby fingers all over American capitalism. They disdain the bank bailouts, the corporate subsidies, and the massive government jobs program that is the military-industrial complex. Some may even object to the generous patent protections the state uses to shelter drug companies from the threat of competition. But even if it were politically possible to excise all these “distortions,” our nation’s economy would still bear the imprint of human hands.

After all, legal markets are themselves a kind of “big government” program. Absent a sovereign entity capable of enforcing contracts by commanding a monopoly on violence, mass commerce between strangers is nigh-impossible. Less abstractly, the introduction of private property across the North American continent required massive state violence and investment. Meanwhile, some human agency must decide roughly how much sovereign currency should be in circulation at any given time, and this decision will inevitably have large, economy-wide implications on how markets function and whose interests they best serve. Tight money will privilege those rich in cash by increasing the value of their holdings — and thus, the interest rates they can charge for lending them. Loose money can privilege borrowers by triggering inflation that reduces the cost of their debts.

These points may seem banal. Sophisticated conservative thinkers are well aware that money doesn’t grow on trees and markets do not make themselves. But efforts to naturalize the economy’s basic ground rules — by obscuring the state’s inescapable role in setting them — remain pervasive in America’s political discourse.

Which is unfortunate. The case for “re-politicizing” the foundations of our economy has rarely been stronger than it is today. As Sanders suggests, the 2008 crisis exposed the depths of the financial industry’s dependence on the U.S. government — and simultaneously the U.S. government’s extraordinary capacity to shelter its favorite constituents from the slings and arrows of outrageous irresponsibility. Less transparently, the crisis and the long, lackluster recovery also exposed the profound, and inescapably political, powers wielded by the Federal Reserve.

As Mike Konczal and J. W. Mason wrote for the Roosevelt Institute in 2017:

During 2007 and 2008, it was the decisions of the Fed that determined which troubled financial institutions would survive, which would be absorbed by other institutions, and which, like Lehman Brothers, would be allowed to fail. During the summer of 2008, when the commercial-paper market that provides short-term financing to the nation’s largest corporations had essentially ceased to function, the Fed stepped in to replace private lenders. By making loans directly to nonfinancial as well as financial businesses that had previously borrowed in the commercial-paper market, the Fed effectively replaced private banks as the source of short-term loans for corporate America.

During the slow recovery that followed, the Fed continued purchasing large volumes of mortgage-backed securities as well as longer-dated treasuries through the [quantitative easing] programs. The explicit logic of these policies was to induce private financial institutions to hold a different mix of assets than they would have chosen on their own— ultimately in the hopes of financing activities that would eventually boost aggregate demand.

In other words, unelected bureaucrats picked the finance industry’s winners and losers, created a public option for short-term corporate financing, and manipulated asset prices by creating artificial demand for various securities, all for the sake of promoting their conception of the public interest.

These moves, combined with the Fed’s more mundane decision to start hiking interest rates (which is to say, to deliberately cool the economy) even as labor-force participation, wages, and inflation all remained aberrantly low, were among the most consequential policy choices of the past decade. By driving up the value of financial assets, quantitative easing exacerbated wealth inequality. By suppressing demand in a noninflationary environment, the Fed’s rate hikes since 2015 have served to needlessly consign Americans to involuntary unemployment and reduce the leverage workers exercise over their employers. When one further considers the myriad other ways the Fed could have attempted to stimulate demand — but chose not to — the weight of its decisions grows even heavier. And yet the supposedly self-governing American people were almost unanimously oblivious to these decisions, which were treated as purely technical matters that required little to no democratic input.

Elite conservatives attuned to these developments did not hesitate to criticize the Fed for its socialistic violations of the free market’s purity. But as Konczal and Mason explain, this critique is naïve:

For many — both inside and outside the Fed — these kinds of large-scale asset purchases represent undesirable “distortions” of financial markets. But, as Bernanke (2017) notes, these criticisms are incoherent. The goal of all monetary policy is to “set financial conditions consistent with full employment and stable prices.” So it is always going to produce a different pattern of asset prices and yields than it would have obtained otherwise.

And in any case, there is no such thing as “undistorted” values of interest rates, terms, and risk premia, etc. — these are always influenced by the policy choices of both the central bank and the elected government … We should adopt a more expansive — and thus more realistic and more politically productive — view of the central bank’s role in directing credit and shaping outcomes in financial markets. The crisis and the response to it are not exceptional. They reflect the need for, and the reality of, conscious planning in financial markets.

When the Federal Reserve first began purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the aftermath of the crisis, it did so to facilitate interbank lending by removing “toxic assets” from the private sector’s balance sheets. But by keeping the policy in place long after financial stability was restored, the central bank has effectively been encouraging banks to make more housing loans by inflating demand for mortgage-backed securities. Which may be a fine policy. But if our central bank is now in the business of subsidizing certain forms of credit creation — to advance specific social goals (such as home ownership) — should we perhaps have a democratic debate about which social goals we would like to pursue? For example, if the demos decided that long-term human survival was a worthy objective, perhaps the Fed could “finance investments that address climate change, including the development of non-carbon energy sources and building retrofits to reduce energy use.

Judy Shelton, the top candidate for Donald Trump’s next Fed nomination, understands the hazards of acknowledging that America already resembles a socialist country, at least in the nomenclature of a conservative polemicist. Like many other conservatives, Shelton recoils from the realities of modern monetary policy and (naïvely) advocates a return to a natural, prepolitical market economy. As she told the Financial Times:

“How can a dozen, slightly less than a dozen, people meeting eight times a year decide what the cost of capital should be versus some kind of organically, market-supply-determined rate? The Fed is not omniscient. They don’t know what the right rate should be. How could anyone?” Ms. Shelton said.

“If the success of capitalism depends on someone being smart enough to know what the rate should be on everything … we’re doomed. We might as well resurrect Gosplan,” she said, referring to the state committee that ran the Soviet Union’s planned economy.

Sanders’s implicit argument is quite similar: If our “capitalist” economy depends on constant discretionary interventions by policy-makers, we might as well determine those interventions through democratic debate — and aim them at advancing the best interests of the 99 percent.

We are all “socialists” now. Some of us just happen to be democratic ones.

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Elizabeth Warren Is Proving Her Doubters Wrong Print
Thursday, 13 June 2019 13:07

Vanden Heuvel writes: "What truly distinguishes Warren, however, is that her ideas add up to a bold and coherent vision for the future."

Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: John Locher/AP)
Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: John Locher/AP)


Elizabeth Warren Is Proving Her Doubters Wrong

By Katrina vanden Heuvel, The Washington Post

13 June 19

 

wo months ago, Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s presidential hopes appeared to be fading. The Massachusetts Democrat’s poll numbers were stuck in the mid-single digits, placing her fourth or fifth among Democratic candidates. After swearing off high-dollar fundraisers, she had brought in less money in the first quarter than South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, a relative unknown who was still building a national profile. Media coverage of Warren’s campaign focused less on her bold ideas than her perceived lack of “electability.” Summing up the conventional wisdom, one CNN headline proclaimed, “Why is Elizabeth Warren struggling? Democrats aren’t looking for policy.”

Yet, to borrow a phrase, Warren persisted. And with the first debate quickly approaching, she has jumped in the polls and emerged as the clear leader in the Democratic “ideas primary.”

Last week, Warren unveiled a sweeping new plan for what she calls “economic patriotism.” Her proposal calls for $2 trillion investment in clean energy, which she says would create more than a million jobs and advance the goals of the Green New Deal. In a boost to workers, the plan would require federal contractors to pay a $15 minimum wage and offer 12 weeks of paid family leave. It would also convert the Commerce Department into a new Department of Economic Development, focused on job creation. By linking the causes of environmental and economic justice in one package, Warren is reimagining the American Dream for these times.

This deeply thoughtful and ambitious approach to policy has fueled Warren’s rise in the polls and spawned her unofficial (and highly memeable) campaign slogan, “I have a plan for that.” Just consider the range of issues on which Warren has not only offered a detailed policy but also influenced the terms of the debate. She has a plan to establish a universal child-care program that would relieve the burden on families and, importantly, raise caregivers’ pay. She has a plan to cancel the student debt of millions of Americans, staking out an even more aggressive position on the issue than Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). Warren even has a plan to pay for her other plans with a wealth tax on the richest 0.1 percent of Americans.

On the stump, Warren has shown an ability to effectively connect these proposals to her own experiences, from the threat of losing her house as a child to her struggle to find affordable child care as a young mother. Meanwhile, she has rolled out several plans in shrewdly chosen locations. Warren introduced her $100 billion plan to address the opioid crisis ahead of a visit to West Virginia, the state with the highest rate of opioid overdose deaths. And she announced her plan to break up big tech companies ahead of a visit to Long Island City, N.Y., where Amazon intended to build its new campus before a backlash from local activists caused the company to reverse course.

What truly distinguishes Warren, however, is that her ideas add up to a bold and coherent vision for the future. In contrast with former vice president Joe Biden, who has said that President Trump is a historical “aberration,” Warren grasps how systemic corruption, which took root over the course of many years, created the conditions for Trump’s election. (For example, she has introduced anti-corruption legislation in the Senate to “padlock the revolving door between big business and government.”) And she’s offering a powerful, populist vision for ending American plutocracy.

That vision is clearly resonating with voters. Today, the candidate with supposed “electability issues” is drawing large, energetic crowds. While she remains behind Biden and Sanders, she is gaining in the polls and earning respect from people Democrats lost, either to Trump or to apathy, in 2016. A recent focus group of Trump voters in Iowa showed strong support for Warren’s policies, while a BlackPAC poll conducted in April found her in third place among black voters, with especially high favorables among those following the race closely. Far from being a divisive presence, as some predicted, Warren is showing how a bold, progressive agenda can be a unifying force.

Warren is certainly not the only Democrat in the field running on innovative, important ideas. Sanders, in particular, has built on his transformative 2016 campaign, with bolder proposals for public education and Medicare-for-all. One also hopes that Warren will show the same audacity and vision in foreign policy as the campaign continues. But no matter what happens, it’s now obvious that pundits who argued that Warren had missed her moment were wrong. The presidential race is better because she is in it.

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