Monday, April 13, 2020

BUILDING A BIDEN CAMPAIGN THAT DRAWS ON THE PROGRESSIVE MAJORITY


Harry Targ

A variety of polling results over the last two years suggest that there exists a potential progressive majority in the United States. Majorities or pluralities of respondents to polls deplore economic inequality and the excessive power they believe the wealthy have in government. Majorities support a more equitable tax structure, some form of Medicare for All, free tuition for public universities,  and greater rights of workers to form unions. They also support some forms of openness to immigrants and reforms in the criminal justice system to eliminate racist applications of the law, particularly in reference to mass incarceration of people of color. Majorities of those who have heard of a Green New Deal support it.

Couple these attitudes with demographic data suggesting a growing percentage of potential voters who are millennials and Generation Zers and who are more educated than Baby-Boomers but less economically secure.  The percentage of the population who are Latinx and African American, compared to whites, has grown. Also there has been a decline of traditional marriages and less hostility to gay, lesbian, and transgender people. These suggest shifting values, beliefs, and forms of community. And all these changes are occurring while economic inequality in the society at large has grown. 

In  sum therefore, due to demographic changes, potential voters will be from younger generations, people of color, and women.  And with the changing character of the economy data suggests that a “new working class” of gig workers and growing numbers of workers who are economically insecure, sometimes called the precariat, will constitute increasing proportions of the voting population.

Add to demographic and attitudinal changes findings on the declining legitimacy of government. The most damning statistic uncovered in polling data is the response to the question asking whether “you trust your government.” According to these findings trust in government is lower now than it has been for the last sixty years. According to polls, respondents who trust their government in 2019 was down to seventeen percent. This is even lower than the period of American political turmoil in the 1970s after Watergate and the Vietnam War when approximately forty percent of the population said they distrusted their government. 

These political attitudes and demographic changes led candidates Sanders and Warren to generate enthusiasm from sectors of the voting age population. However, the progressive presidential candidates suffered major defeats in the spring, 2020 primary races. Senator Warren was forced to drop out of the Democratic Party race for party nomination as a result of poor showings in Super Tuesday primaries.  Senator Sanders, trailing centrist candidate former Vice President Joe Biden in early April, suspended his campaign, and later endorsed his rival.

Is there a potential progressive majority among the voting population in the country or is the data or analysis incorrect? Or if the core conclusions of the argument, the need for a progressive program and candidate remain true, why have the progressives performed so poorly in the Democratic primaries?

In my view the core data remains sound. But the centrist Democrats, the rightwing and white supremacist supporters of President Trump, the corporate media, and finance capital did everything they could to undermine the progressive political agenda advocated by Sanders and Warren. 

In addition, at the state and local levels, many in the demographic groups who would support a progressive agenda have been denied a vote, via the use of various techniques designed to limit voter participation. Wisconsin’s holding of a presidential primary and elections for state and local offices on April 7, in the midst of an escalating pandemic, is an egregious example of voter suppression. 

Finally, many of those potential progressive voters, experiencing lives of economic inequality, the prospect of a future of economic and environmental devastation, and increasing racism and misogyny, have been discouraged and have not voted. Having said this, I conclude that candidates and social movements with a progressive agenda, at the national, state, and local levels, must struggle all the harder to make their vision of a better future come to pass.

And quoting Senator Bernie Sanders before he withdrew his candidacy: “It is not just the ideological debate that our progressive movement is winning. We are winning the generational debate.”…While Joe Biden continues to do very well with older Americans, especially those people over 65, our campaign continues to win the vast majority of the votes of younger people….Today, I say to the Democratic establishment, in order to win in the future, you need to win the voters who represent the future of our country, and you must speak to the issues of concern to them.” (Democracy Now, March 12, 2020).

Also, he articulated many times that defeating Donald Trump remains the top priority of this election season. And to do so, progressives must pressure the presumptive Democratic Party candidate Joe Biden to “win the votes of younger people…and speak to the issues of concern to them.” Given the data, presumptive presidential candidate Biden, and his valuable supporters such as former President Obama, should launch a two-pronged campaign. First, candidate Biden must condemn in no uncertain terms the horrific policies and programs of almost four-years of Trump rule. These include environmental deregulation, militarism, and the initiation of economic blockades that are starving whole populations. Also it should be noted that Trump has packed the Supreme Court with racists and misogynists (a second term will allow him to appoint more vial Supreme Court Justices and life-time appointees to the federal courts).  He has inspired hate groups to flourish in the United States. And finally, in 2020, Trump has orchestrated policies that have exacerbated the misery and crisis of the coronavirus pandemic.

Second, Biden and his key surrogates must articulate a progressive agenda that speaks to the large sectors of the American people, particularly youth, people of color, women, environmentalists, the people who coalesced around the Sanders and Warren candidacy. This does not require embracing all of the Sanders or Warren program but to embrace it as a vision, a guide for future policy. In the end, and as Noam Chomsky suggested recently; “Letting Trump win is like spitting in Bernie’s face.”








The Bookshelf

CHALLENGING LATE CAPITALISM by Harry R. Targ

Read Challenging Late Capitalism by Harry R. Targ.