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Why We Need a Left Wing Tea Party
The Daily Beast ^ | September 9, 2014 | Sally Kohn

Posted on 09/09/2014 4:15:41 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

The pro-choicers don’t like the populists, who don’t like the…enough already! Factions of the left, please stop being so…factiony.

On Tuesday, barring any surprises, Democrats in New York will nominate Andrew Cuomo to serve as the party’s nominee—making it highly likely Cuomo will eventually serve a second term in the governor’s office. In his first term, Cuomo lowered taxes for the rich, increased corporate subsidies, undermined public sector unions, championed charter schools, and blocked campaign finance reform. Were it not for progressive stances on marriage equality and abortion, Cuomo might easily be mistaken for a Republican. Yet for his second term, Cuomo won the backing of the influential Working Families Party—the standard-bearer of progressive values in New York politics. This should come as no surprise. For progressives, electoral politics has always been a game of compromise.

My Daily Beast colleague David Friedlander recently published an essay suggesting that some progressive political groups are angry at Emily’s List because some of the women candidates it has backed have not been that strong on issues of economic populism. Of course, the critique could be made in the other direction. For instance, the Progressive Campaign Change Committee, the main critic of Emily’s List in Friedlander’s article, is backing Iowa’s Pat Murphy in his bid for Congress—despite the fact that in recent years, Murphy earned a 100 percent approval rating from anti-abortion groups in Iowa and a 0 rating from Planned Parenthood of the Heartland (not to mention less-than-enthusiastic support from grassroots progressive groups on the ground in Iowa).

But scrutinizing all these electoral trees misses the broader, ideological forest. What is far more interesting and ultimately transformational are those rare occasions when passionate issue advocates and progressive populist groups can unite, stand firm on a set of fundamental principles, and take a risk together. Perhaps the best example of this is Elizabeth Warren—drafted as a candidate early on by the PCCC but also backed by Emily’s List even before she announced her candidacy. In fact, the two largest donors to Warren’s initial campaign? The PCCC and Emily’s List.

Warren represents the anti-compromise—the strong-on-every-issue true believer who is such a star now among political progressives in large part because she’s so damn rare. Perhaps as a left we should spend less time condemning each other for failing to hew to our particular litmus tests, behavior that at the least amounts to a counter-productive circular firing squad and at worst suggests that, say, economic populism is more of a “true progressive” issue than reproductive freedom. Instead, the various parts of the progressive electoral infrastructure should criticize each other less and collaborate more—pooling criteria and cash to back more Warren types who score well on all our issues, ultimately forcing politics and politicians to yield to our agenda rather than all-too-often the other way around.

This is, of course, what the Tea Party has been impressively adept at doing—choosing uncompromising candidates to run in primaries, deeply threatening the mainstream Republican establishment by not being afraid of losing, and thereby pulling the Republican Party’s stance and leadership on issues decisively to the right. This is an even more impressive accomplishment given that, on most every issue, the Tea Party is out of step with mainstream American voters. Meanwhile, the opposite is true for progressives—from protecting reproductive freedom to passing sensible gun safety laws to raising taxes on the rich to strengthening public education, the progressive left represents a majority, and sometimes a strong majority, of the American people. And yet we can’t seem to convert those beliefs into concrete and uncompromising political power.

A Republican strategist once said that if electoral politics is a game of getting to 50 percent plus one—that is, you need half of the voters plus one more to win an election—what Democrats do is assume they start with 0 percent support and try to win over women voters plus black voters plus working-class white voters and hope the total rises above 50 percent. Whereas Republicans begin by assuming that 100 percent of the voters are with them and act accordingly—and then hope that, come Election Day, they haven’t alienated more than 49 percent.

This has always struck me as both accurate and profound. Despite being extremely out of step with the vast majority of American voters today (not to mention the even greater majority of voters of the future), Republicans continue to push their extremist agenda with an evangelism that is breathtakingly audacious. And meanwhile Democrats, including progressive Democrats, worry they have to prioritize among their core issues despite having all the wind of electoral demography and opinion polling at our backs.

Even analyzing, let along arguing about, whether we should back the pro-choice woman candidate versus the economic populist white guy candidate reflects a form of self-defeatism from the get-go that is not responsive to political reality but rather endemic to the Democratic psyche. How dare we expect, let alone demand, our elected officials to fully represent all of the views and values of the progressive movement and the American people?

This particular progressive self-defeatism echoes the historic rift on the left between economic justice issues and identity politics. Although progress has been made—for instance, the labor movement is much better on gay rights and race and gender than generations ago—the experience of identity issues being forced to take a back seat to the “more important” and allegedly universal issues of economic populism haunts many activists on the left. The implication here, for instance, is that “multi-issue” groups like the PCCC or Democracy for America are looking out for all people, while Emily’s List is just looking out for women.

That not only fundamentally misrepresents identity politics—which aims to transform society to be more fair and equitable for everyone, not simply those in a given identity group—but it reveals the inherent blind spots in the traditional Democratic/progressive straight white male infrastructure that reinforces the need for identity politics in the first place. In researching this piece, I was pointed to an effort in 2012 through which a number of progressive political groups—including the PCCC, DFA, MoveOn.org, Working Families Party and more—articulated a common questionnaire for candidates on “critical issues.” “I’m sure there are questions on there about choice,” my source told me. There weren’t. Not even one.

What this boils down to is what winning looks like. Groups like Emily’s List, the PCCC, Working Families Party and the rest exist explicitly because of the diversity failings and substantive timidity of the Democratic Party. Together, these groups help push the mainstream party further to the left. Each group plays a distinct role—Emily’s List explicitly elects pro-choice Democratic women while groups like the PCCC press an economic justice agenda. But no one push will do it. Instead of criticizing one group or another for loyalty to its piece of the progressive agenda or fighting to rank whose issue or strategy is “more progressive,” isn’t there something better everyone could be doing?

Maybe it is the WFP model—getting involved in local races, grooming candidates early on, and eventually electing genuine progressives to higher and higher offices (maybe not the governor’s mansion yet, but NYC mayor at least…). Or maybe all these groups could agree to throw down extra hard together when candidates come along who check off all the boxes—who are strong on every progressive issue and add essential diversity to our supposedly representative democracy. Maybe then we’d spend less time bickering and more time winning—and have more candidates worth fighting for in general, so Elizabeth Warren wouldn’t be so damn lonely.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: democrats; elizabethwarren; leftists; teaparty
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Gallup, Battleground, and Conservatism: Conservatives in America outnumber Liberals 58-37
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1 posted on 09/09/2014 4:15:41 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“convert those beliefs into concrete and uncompromising political power.”

Listen to these Nazis. Need to give them the Mossad treatment. Just sayin’


2 posted on 09/09/2014 4:19:23 PM PDT by Viennacon (ILLEGALS ARE VIRAL WEAPONS!!)
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: 2ndDivisionVet

Bring it, Obamaholes.

CW-II is closer than it appears.


4 posted on 09/09/2014 4:20:41 PM PDT by Da Coyote (00)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I'm not really sure what the 'teat party' is... is it a single organization, a collection of disparate clubs and associations, a figment of the fevered left's imagination?

I'm inclined to believe the latter, as the left (like leftwing tyrannies & kleptocracies around the world) always need a hobgoblin to scare their feeble minded followers.

5 posted on 09/09/2014 4:25:37 PM PDT by skeeter
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To: skeeter

That was a typo, honest,


6 posted on 09/09/2014 4:25:57 PM PDT by skeeter
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

what’s the point of one? the Dem politicians are in lockstep with leftwingers.


7 posted on 09/09/2014 4:26:11 PM PDT by RginTN
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Clearly Ms. Kohn doesn’t understand that it’s TEA, not Tea, Party.

A left-wing TEA Party? That’s like being a conservative abortionist.


8 posted on 09/09/2014 4:28:33 PM PDT by workerbee (The President of the United States is PUBLIC ENEMY #1)
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To: DeepInTheHeartOfTexas

It would never be feasible because there is absolutely nothing left wing about the tea party

Doesn’t it mean taxed enough already?

Leftist tea party would be tax everyone astronomically


9 posted on 09/09/2014 4:28:34 PM PDT by Califreak (Hope and Che'nge is killing U.S.)
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To: RginTN
what’s the point of one? the Dem politicians are in lockstep with leftwingers.

It doesn't look that way to them.

In fact, some of them might say that RINOs and rightwingers are in lockstep.

10 posted on 09/09/2014 4:30:00 PM PDT by x
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To: skeeter
That was a typo, honest

No, its perfect. Think about it... the "Teat" party: the party of suckling its constituents on government largess, and of womb-to-tomb dependence.

11 posted on 09/09/2014 4:30:09 PM PDT by Spirochete (GOP: Give Obama Power)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Left wing Tea Party? Why, what about the Coffee Party? I heard they had some gatherings where the crowd numbers hit double digits!


12 posted on 09/09/2014 4:30:34 PM PDT by Freestate316 (Know what you believe and why you believe it.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

So sayeth Sally Commie-Kohn.


13 posted on 09/09/2014 4:31:20 PM PDT by Lurkina.n.Learnin (It's a shame nobama truly doesn't care about any of this. Our country, our future, he doesn't care)
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To: Califreak

Taking Everyone’s Assets or To Each According


14 posted on 09/09/2014 4:32:17 PM PDT by Freestate316 (Know what you believe and why you believe it.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Why We Need a Left Wing Tea Party

The Stalinists could call it "Not Yet Enough Tax". (NYET)

15 posted on 09/09/2014 4:33:07 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (Celebrate "Republicans Freed the Slaves" Month.)
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To: Freestate316
Left wing Tea Party? Why, what about the Coffee Party? I heard they had some gatherings where the crowd numbers hit double digits!

I think they announced something last year too; a "Coffee Party 2.0" kind of deal. The Coffee Party was back in 2009 or 2010.

16 posted on 09/09/2014 4:33:37 PM PDT by Steely Tom (Thank you for self-censoring.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Factions of the left, please stop being so…factiony.

Anyone with even a passing acquaintance of the history of the Left would laugh silly at that exhortation. They have more isms than trees have leaves and actually kill people over them.

This is an even more impressive accomplishment given that, on most every issue, the Tea Party is out of step with mainstream American voters.

Members of the Left are also susceptible to holding articles of faith that are unsupported by either available data or eventual results, which is why a swing to the right always seems to take them by surprise. This one shouldn't, but it will. I look forward to hearing a few screams in early November.

17 posted on 09/09/2014 4:34:36 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Spirochete

Lol.


18 posted on 09/09/2014 4:34:38 PM PDT by skeeter
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

left wing TEA party? why? They control the media, the schools, the government and have 100,000 left-wing organizations across the country

Why exactly does the establishment need a “TEA Party”?


19 posted on 09/09/2014 4:38:02 PM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

A left wing tea party is a contradiction.

The tea party is grass roots and leftists are purely top down.


20 posted on 09/09/2014 4:38:40 PM PDT by cripplecreek ("Moderates" are lying manipulative bottom feeding scum.)
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