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Impossible to argue with unless youāre a fool who wants 4 more years of Trump
Deval Patrick and the Return of the Ballad of Johnny Unbeatable
Former Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick has entered the 2020 Democratic presidential primary, thus joining the many, many candidates for the nomination who I (a) like and (b) am basically annoyed at for running. For months now, I've been puzzled with every new entrant into the Democratic field. What's their lane? What makes them look upon the (literally!) dozens of excellent people who already declared for the race (and also Tulsi Gabbard) and think "there's a niche here that nobody but meĀ would be occupying"? How can it be that we have what seems to be a historically strong primary field and yet people still cast their eyes outward for an option not on the menu? But over the past few weeks, other aspects of my personal life have given me renewed insight into what I think is going on. Here's my best thrust: Democrats want to beat Trump. That's all we want. We're desperate for it. This primary is barely about ideas or vision or policy disputes. The overwhelming question driving us is "which candidate will beat Trump in 2020?" And of course, since we expected Trump to lose in 2016, we're feeling especially anxious about our own apparently malformed instincts on the question -- we don't know how to answer the question we're asking. What we wantĀ is "Johnny Unbeatable". Johnny Unbeatable is the candidate who is guaranteedĀ to beat Trump. He (or she) has all upside, no downside. Every aspect of their biography, every vote they've taken, every policy stance they've taken, every speech they've given, is perfectly tailored to appeal to swing voters while revving up the base. They can lock down Wisconsin and Michigan while turning Arizona and North Carolina (and even Georgia and Texas!) blue; they are a comforting presence for Boomers and Gen-Xers while representing exciting, sweeping change for Millennials and Gen-Z. If Johnny Unbeatable was the nominee, we could rest easy knowing the election was safe in hand. The problem, of course, is that there is no Johnny Unbeatable. There can't be, even in concept. Not only is nobody perfect, and not only do elections carry intrinsic uncertainty, but we don't know what Johnny Unbeatable looks like. Take gender as just one example: Is Johnny Unbeatable a woman, designed to rev up the base of pink pussy hat wearers radicalized after Trump's inauguration? Or is he a man, a safe choice who'd better appeal to heartland voters? It seems Johnny Unbeatable would have to be a woman and a man -- combining the "best" political attributes of both -- but for the love of God not non-binary (you see the problem?). No candidate can be Johnny Unbeatable, which means all candidates who have declared will always have that residual feeling of existential dread -- they could well lose -- attached to them. The quest for another option, another choice, stems from that persistent feeling of dread and anxiety that none of the candidates can fully dispel. Those Democrats on the outside of the race can sense that anxiety as much as anyone else, and see -- in some ways accurately -- that none of the declared candidates has an unbreakable grip on their supporters. Everybody is looking for something they don't yet have. We're all still looking for Johnny Unbeatable. via The Debate Link https://ift.tt/2XivpAS
Day One Hundred One
Oh man. My day was SUCH a whirlwind. It started with the opening rounds of Court Madness in APUSGOV: Roe v. Wade against New York Times Company v. United States (Roe, by one vote), Gideon v. Wainwright against Schenck v. United States (Schenck, by three votes). These debates over the casesā significance were EPIC; I was so impressed with the work all the groups put in. Theyāre so fierce when they speak.Ā
I got to see that on display again, about two hours later, when they sat down with Deval Patrick for a Q&A. So, hereās the thing: I know candidates have tight schedules, so when their staffers ask me if such and such a time is all right for a visit, I just say yes and make it happen. In this case, it wasnāt difficult because Governor Patrick arrived at 10:00. Block 2 ends at 10:10, and then itās flex time, so my APUSGOV students just had to leave their classes a smidge early and come to my classroom for flex. Of course, I have my own Block 2 students, but Mrs. T and Mr. F each took half of them once Governor Patrickās advance staffer arrived (funny thing: I had the ninth graders tell this staffer, whoās probably thirty or so, what year they were born in because itās so painful to folks who arenāt around the teenagers everyday, heh) so that I could straighten up the room and make sure everything was ready.Ā
The governor was really nice, and made a point to say hello to The Principal and all the office staff on the way into the school. Once he got to my classroom, he gave a quick speech about himself and then took questions about climate change, cap and trade, education, gun safety, prescription drug costs, partisan gridlock, and more... Iād told his staffers that I teach impressive kids, but they were still kind of blown away by the questions.Ā So that was fun and awesome.
My Block 4 World class was so low-key by comparison. I defined vocab words- student choice words, this time- and the boys in class decided these were excellent words. They told me so after Iād defined them. The words:
Ardent
Fastidious
Capricious
Amenable
Misnomer
Ubiquitous
Frivolous
Zeal
Divergent
Malleable
Indigenous
Precarious
Obfuscate
Scintilla
Divulge
Capitulate
Insouciant
Equanimity
Diaspora
Cognizant
After that, students finished watching Promises. Weāll discuss that next time!
Democratic presidential candidate Deval Patrick canceled a campaign event Wednesday night after only two people showed up for the event.
Democratic mega-donors are clearly not satisfied with their partyās field: Thereās Joe Biden, whom many of them love, but they fear he is a weak front-runner; there are Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, whom the donors either fear or think canāt win a general election, or both; and Pete Buttigieg, interesting but untested. These jittery nerves are behind recent entries by [Deval] Patrick and Michael Bloomberg, as well as the literally incredible claim that there are āmany, many, many peopleā clamoring for another Hillary Clinton candidacy. But itās not clear that the mass of Democratic voters share any similar enthusiasm for new candidates, much less these particular ones.
David A. Graham in The Atlantic
Full thread here by @Delo_Taylor
So I read,Ā āWhy leftists don't trust Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, and Deval Patrickā and the argument really bothers me. Especially this:
In other words, there are quite substantive reasons why a leftist might not trust any of those candidates. The probably accurate perception that all three candidates are being groomed by the same big-money donors that clustered around Hillary Clinton will only deepen the divide, because it suggests that ā like pro-union rules, or the public option in ObamaCare ā any adoption of Sanders-style proposals are mostly bait to be cast aside when it comes time to actually pass something.
If they want to win over the left ā and Harris, who has expressed at least mild support for tuition-free public college (for families with income less than $140,000), a $15 minimum wage, expanded Social Security, and Medicare for all, would probably be the most credible person to attempt this ā they need to first explain their recent history.
Second, and perhaps more importantly, they need to make a symbolic rhetorical break with the despised donor class. The left generally likes Elizabeth Warren because she ferociously criticizes Wall Street and corporate abuse. Adopting a harsh anti-economic elite line will reassure young Sanders Democrats that anti-establishment policies aren't just window dressing. Meanwhile, steps like refusing to take PAC money and running mostly on small donors will signal independence from the donor class (and as Sanders discovered, might actually lead to a gusher of campaign cash).
But if they just want to have a retread of the 2015-16 primary, the center could just try to win dirty. The left, they might say (working hand-in-glove with sympathetic columnists), just doesn't like minority or female candidates because they are racist and sexist.
I would bet quite a lot of money the centrist Democratic establishment will opt for the latter strategy. Indeed, some are already doing so ā like Neera Tanden, head of the Center for American Progress, elite Democrats' in-house think tank.
I think the author (who happens to be a white guy) is arguing in terrible faith and is discounting serious racism out of a sense of Berniebro tribalism. I also donāt think heās allowed to āownā leftism like he goes on to argue. I donāt think of myself as a centrist, Iām a leftist, I hate Wall Street and want to dismantle capitalism too, but I also want to GET THINGS DONE IN THE PRESENT and to do that, we have to move the Overton window gradually. Iām perfectly fine voting for someone who sleeps on Wall Streetās couch as opposed to sleeping in their bed.
The authorās also practically yellingĀ āIDPOLā at people like Neera Tanden (who happens to not be white, hmm). And that also pisses me off, because aside from any moral argument for selecting a Black candidate like Harris, Booker, or Patrick, thereās a major pragmatic reason: Black candidates with at least a decent connection to the African-American community will increase African-American turnout, and African-Americans are the bedrock of the Democratic party. You can call that identity politics if you want, but itās the same identity politics that gets white candidates elected by white people.
(Democratic Black candidates also send Republicans into conniption fits, and when theyāre enraged they tend to make more mistakes, which is good for us).
Iād support either Booker or Harris, but Iām not sure Patrick has the necessary charisma to fire people up. Iām not making any premature decisions though. Race isnāt the number one factor for me in selecting a candidate, but itās pretty high up there, not because of racial identity in itself but because of what it can symbolize in terms of building coalitions.