Democrats In The Wilderness

Murphy

Executive Branch Member
Apr 12, 2013
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Ontario
You really have to see a doctor soon. Your hatefulness is getting worse.

I pity you. If all you want to do is go from thread to thread spitting venom, that should be a sign that you need to see your doctor. Stop embarrassing yourself, Cliffy. Get help.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
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USA
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
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63
Nakusp, BC
Trumpsters are so busy deflecting attention from their commander in diapers that they are blind to his stupidity, ignorance and obvious mental illness. All they can do is sit in a circle and.... circle jerk. Sad. I'm sure they have a drug to rectumfy that.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
96
48
USA
Trumpsters are so busy deflecting attention from their commander in diapers that they are blind to his stupidity, ignorance and obvious mental illness.

From a guy that thinks he's a reincarnated Cree because he's a wannabee FN.
 

Murphy

Executive Branch Member
Apr 12, 2013
8,181
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36
Ontario
Cliffy, besides marijuana, what other recreational drugs do you take?If the RCMP came to your house, would they find any illegal substances there? You really need to speak with someone and get help.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
96
48
USA
All the tens of millions of dollars they blew on the special elections... POOF!

:lol:

Broke!
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
The story of the Democratic Party in 2017 has been one of timidity and stubborn resistance to real change.

In the immediate aftermath of the party’s preferred candidate facing a humiliating defeat in last year’s presidential election, questions swirled over what direction the party would take to respond to the new political reality. With Democrats at their weakest position in decades, having lost over 1,000 seats in states and Congress over the previous eight years, it appeared that a drastic shift in how the party operated was in store.

And the party was offered an early opportunity to embark on such a shift, with the campaign by Keith Ellison for Democratic National Committee chair. Ellison sported a resume as a bold progressive with popular support from rank-and-file Democrats and party activists alike. And he presented a clear break with the Democratic Party’s traditional establishment.

But rather than embrace the new direction presented by Ellison’s bid, party insiders conspired to instead elect Tom Perez, a candidate with much stronger connections to the party’s establishment wing. The result came as a dispiriting blow to many in the party’s base who hoped for a clear break in Democratic leadership.

In the ensuing months, the Democrats have turned to neoliberal architects such as Rahm Emanuel for advice, invested a historic amount of funding in centrist Jon Ossoff’s failed congressional campaign in Georgia and returned to the strategy of recruiting moderate “Blue Dogs” to run in the upcoming 2018 midterm elections.

And this week, the Democratic Party announced its new slogan and platform: “A Better Deal: Better Jobs, Better Wages, Better Future.”

Besides its possible plagiarism from Papa John’s tagline, the plan includes a repackaging of a number of longtime Democratic ideas, with some potential progressive offerings sprinkled in. But much like a pizza from Papa John’s, “A Better Deal” mostly amounts to an uninspired, stale and cheesy agglomeration stuffed neatly into a box.

One of the main policies included in “A Better Deal,” lauded by both Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi in their respective op-eds announcing the agenda, is a tax credit for companies to train workers in new skills. On its face, this initiative may come across as smart and sound policy aimed at retraining workers and incentivizing businesses at the same time. Except their plan has one problem: It doesn’t work.

As has been documented time and again, simply handing money to the private sector is an ineffective way to make sure that workers become retrained with new skills. In fact, as Corey Robin notes, when such programs have been instituted in the past, data and research over decades has shown that overall they’ve performed poorly.

In an In These Times article published in 1994, John B. Judis explained why job retraining, then touted by the Bill Clinton administration, failed to lead to wage increases for workers or growth in employment. To prove his case, Judis cited the Labor Department’s own studies.

What didn’t work in 1994 and in the intervening decades is not any more likely to work in 2017. And yet the plan sits as one of the centerpieces of the Democrats’ new strategy. Why?

This goes back to the issue of timidity. Schumer has called the plan “a strong, bold economic agenda.” In reality, promising more cash to companies is not bold at all: It is the plan least likely to offend or challenge the profit-maximizing model of corporate America.

The same holds true regarding the issue of jobs. “A Better Deal” sets a goal of creating jobs for 10 million .....

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The Democrats’ New Agenda Is Everything That’s Wrong With the Party - In These Times