Onward Together

Onward Together

Saturday, January 22, 2022

Democrats Unite

 Democrats need to Unite

 

One of the great things about the Democratic party is that it is a big tent organization which welcomes members who span the spectrum of ideas and voices on the left of the political divide. One of the bad things about the Democratic party is that it is a big tent organization that has difficulty uniting to achieve broad based political agendas which some view as too far left.  

 

The recent spectacle in the United States Senate demonstrates both aspects of our party.

 

While Senate Democrats all agreed that voting rights are critical to the continuation of our democracy, they could not agree on how to achieve greater protection of voting rights in the face of Republican efforts in many states to curtail the ability of citizens to cast their ballots. 

 

With a bare majority of Senators, all 50 Democrats needed to agree to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights bill already passed by the House of Representatives. Two Democratic Senators, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona refused to follow the leaders in the Senate and amend the rules to by-pass the filibuster rule that requires 60 votes to pass legislation. All the Republican members of the Senate refused to vote for the bill or the rule change that would allow passage of the bill with 51 votes. The 51st vote would have come from Vice President Kamala Harris sitting as President Pro Tem of the Senate when there is a tie vote. 

 

The Senate filibuster rule is a holdover from the Civil War era. It was created to mollify Southern Senators who feared passage of civil rights legislation benefitting former slaves after the Union won the war. It has been modified or dispensed with periodically throughout its subsequent history when one party or the other has controlled the Senate. The most notable recent deviations occurred when Republicans controlled the Senate and Leader Mitch McConnell did away with it to deny the Supreme Court appointment of Merrick Garland proposed by President Obama and then to approve Court appointments proposed by the former President after the election in 2016.

 

The filibuster can prevent passage of legislation opposed by the minority in an evenly divided chamber and is profoundly undemocratic in a society generally governed by simple majority rules. 

 

A similar fate apparently awaits passage of President Biden’s signature Build Back Better social agenda. Biden acknowledged as much in this week’s press conference when he indicated the large package of legislation would need to be broken up into small chunks of biils, each with its own topic. By doing that, there is a glimmer of hope that at least some of its provisions will find bipartisan support for passage. 

 

Progressive Democrats will most likely mount primary challenges to both Manchin and Sinema hoping to replace them with those more willing to support voting rights and other progressive legislation as well as doing away with the filibuster. We will also work diligently to replace some of those vulnerable Republican Senators, like our own Ron Johnson, in this year’s mid-term elections. By giving, Democrats a larger Senate majority the hope is that the filibuster can finally be consigned to the dust bin of history where it belongs and voting rights can be protected from the efforts of those who want to retain power by making much harder for poor people, those with disabilities and people of color to cast their ballots. 

 

Ron Johnson is vulnerable on a few fronts. When he ran initially, he promised to serve just two terms. He recently broke that promise and is running for a third term. While in office, Johnson promoted and voted for tax breaks that directly benefited some of his wealthiest donors and himself as he cashed out of his business. His net worth has increased significantly in the 12 years he has been in the Senate. He has been one of the former Presidents staunchest supporters and continues to support the Big Lie that the last election was stolen. Most concerning is Johnson’s continuing misinformation campaign about COVID-19. He has championed wacky cures, opposed common sense measures to combat its spread and opposed vaccine mandates. He is so far off the political spectrum to the right, that I am surprised that no one from the more sensible wing of his party has not stepped up to offer voters a choice. 

 

Democrats will choose among a strong field of candidates in the fall primary for Johnson’s challenger. It will be a hard-fought statewide campaign that Democrats are very likely to win.

Saturday, January 8, 2022

January 6

 Don’t Let it Happen Again

 

On January 6, 2021, we witnessed, the world witnessed, a violent attempt to overthrow the hallmark of our democratic form of government, the peaceful transfer of power from one administration to another after a full, fair, and fraud-free election. Through our televisions, computers, tablets, and phones we watched in horror as a violent mob stormed the halls of Congress searching for congressional leaders and chanting, “hang Mike Pence.” The attack was planned to stop the congressional certification of the Electoral College vote for President and Vice-President. It was encouraged at the highest levels of the outgoing administration and coordinated with alt-right groups like the Oath Keepers, Proud Boys and others. They erected gallows with a hanging noose outside the Capitol to prepare for a lynching. Some wore printed t-shirts proclaiming a new Civil War was starting that day.

 

On the one-year anniversary of the insurrection, President Joe Biden addressed the nation on television and finally took the former president and his supporters to task for their roles in fomenting the riot and then doing nothing for hours to stop it. 

 

President Biden’s remarks deconstructed the lies that are being continually circulated that the presidential election was really won by the former occupant of the White House. He noted that every challenge mounted in courts where oaths are taken to tell the truth and evidence required to prove one’s claims failed to carry the day. He noted that the only election claimed to be tainted was the one for the top of the ticket while Republicans did well in the other races that day for state governorships, Senate seats and House of Representative positions. He noted that we cannot unite until we stop those who would “put a knife to the throat of Democracy.”

 

Up to this point, President Biden has refrained from calling out the defeated former president for his role in starting the carnage, to “fight like hell,” then watching it from the White House on TV and not doing anything to stop it for hours.  Even after calls from GOP congressional leaders and Fox media pundits to speak out against the violence, the former president could only manage a weak call for the violence to stop while praising the rioters as “patriots.”

 

Biden is correct. We are still at war for the soul of our democratic form of government and must reject political violence and autocratic leaders who care more about their egos and the retention of power than they do about any of us or our institutions. We cannot move forward while trapped by a strongman cult.

 

At the heart of the call is the sacred right to vote and to have the might of government pass from one group to the next peacefully after fair and full elections. These are the same issues raised here and elsewhere about gerrymandered electoral districts and voter suppression measures being passed by Republican state governments. They are echoed in the failed electoral “investigations” championed by the likes of our own Assembly Majority Leader Robin Vos and his lacky, former short-term Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice, Michael Gableman. 

 

As noted by our own County Board Chairman Don Kriefall, we must unite to do battle, not with an undefined amorphous “left,” but with those who would dismantle the great American Experiment in self-rule. It is time we had fair maps of our electoral districts and ensure that everyone born on these shores or naturalized to citizenship is able to cast their ballot for representatives to govern the body politic. 

 

It is only when we have a universal franchise that the goals of equality and inclusion will be realized. We need not fear the voices of the many or the views of the newly arrived, America was built on them and has thrived because of them. 

 

United, we will reject violence as a means to achieve and maintain the power to govern. United, we will once again embrace we are one people with a common goal to have a safe and prosperous place to live and raise our families. United, we will care for each other by following the science to cure disease and help us all live healthy lives. True Freedom comes from recognizing that we are all in this together and can only succeed if we all succeed. 

 

We must hold those who created, launched, and crashed through the gates of the Capitol a year ago responsible for their traitorous actions to make sure that those who might try to repeat that experience will rethink the wisdom of those plans. We must never forget what happened on January 6, 2021, if our democratic republic is to survive.