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Monthly Archives: January 2020
Universities must open their archives and share their oppressive pasts – The Conversation CA
Posted: January 18, 2020 at 11:12 am
For the first time, a Canadian university the University of Guelph is reconciling with its history of teaching eugenics. Few universities in Canada have looked closely at their historical involvement in oppressive research, teaching and practice. Fewer still have made their archives accessible.
Through the first half of the 1900s, the eugenics movement had close ties to post-secondary institutions. For example, leaders at the University of Alberta also engaged in the eugenics movement and at the Alberta Eugenics Board. Two of the three founding colleges of the University of Guelph the Macdonald Institute and the Ontario Agricultural College officially taught eugenics between 1914 and 1948.
Once, eugenics spread the deeply damaging idea that it is possible, and even desirable, to improve the human race through selective breeding. It ultimately spawned policies aimed at eradicating those deemed unfit through institutional confinement, restrictive marriage, immigration laws and sterilization. Eugenics was considered a science from the early 1900s until the 1930s, when its scientific reputation began to decline and shift.
Canadian universities have restricted access to those archives that implicate their institutions in profiting from oppressive ideas and practices. Kathryn Harvey, the schools head archivist, made the University of Guelph archive available to us.
Using the archives, we developed a co-created, multimedia and multi-sensory exhibition at the Guelph Civic Museum called Into the Light: Eugenics and Education in Southern Ontario, which began in September 2019 and runs until March 2020. It is the first of its kind to bring to light the difficult history of Canadian university involvement in teaching eugenics.
Into the Light is co-created by Mona Stonefish (our project Elder), Peter Park, Dolleen Tisawiiashii Manning, Evadne Kelly, Seika Boye and Sky Stonefish, with key supports from Carla Rice (ReVision Centre), Dawn Owen (Guelph Civic Museum) and Sue Hutton (Respecting Rights, a project at ARCH Disability Law Centre). It brings together Indigenous and disabled people who carry personal histories of forced confinement and sterilization.
The exhibition embraces disability and decolonizing curatorial practices that disrupt and unsettle. By presenting artistic, sensory and material expressions of memory through different formats, it speaks the hard truths of colonialism as Ho-Chunk scholar Amy Lonetree writes. By showing more than 30 years of eugenics course documents (1914-48) from the Macdonald Institute and Ontario Agricultural College, it is thus a rare opportunity to consider how eugenics was taught and practised in Ontario.
In Into the Light, the eugenics course documents are accompanied by multiple perspectives. Take, for example, one of the course slides, entitled Eugenical Classification of the Human Stock that was initially displayed at the Second International Eugenics Congress in 1921.
The chart shows the connection between eugenics and British colonialism. In it, Cecil Rhodes is classified as a superior person of genius. In 1921, Rhodes was celebrated for his forceful British colonial and white supremacist agenda. Today, Rhodes is recognized as an early architect of apartheid, a policy that involved the systematic dehumanization of South Africas Black population from 1948 to 1994.
Also shown on the chart are the eugenic traits of those whom eugenicists deemed to be unfit, including people classified as feeble-minded, poor, criminal and epileptic. In the process of claiming the land and its peoples, Canadian colonial administrators, officers, physicians, educators and scientists framed First Peoples as impaired and mentally unfit in order to justify their actions. As decolonizing scholar Karen Stote writes in An Act of Genocide, this was a precursor to unethical sterilization and forced institutionalization.
The effects of colonialism and eugenics are seen in two large stacks of food sacks. The sacks reveal the forced domestic and agricultural labour imposed on those who were placed, sometimes violently, in Ontario residential institutions.
The sacks are accompanied by the smell of rotting potato to evoke the feeling of being denied comfort and nutrition.
The eugenics course suppressed independent thinking and experiential knowledges. But Into The Light centres once-marginalized survivor experiences and encourages viewers to think critically.
The exhibition has had a jarring impact on university students, especially those in psychology, sociology, human development, political science and social work who are aiming for careers in the same professions that once supported eugenics.
One psychology graduate student, for example, spoke about how his relationship towards the University of Guelph transformed after visiting the exhibition. When he learned about the universitys role in teaching eugenics, his pride quickly turned to feelings of discomfort and disorientation. But he became open and eager to change when he realized that the university chose to expose and address its history instead of trying to cover it up.
For survivors and aggrieved groups, the display of archival documents has had an impact also. One survivor of the Mohawk Institute and the Training School for Girls said she felt relieved and validated after decades of being silenced, denied and disbelieved all of which compounded the crimes she experienced due to eugenics.
Dalhousie University and Ryerson University are two schools with close ties to 19th century figures who profited from oppression, enslavement and colonization Lord Dalhousie and Egerton Ryerson, respectively. Both schools are coming to terms with these histories. They are establishing scholarly panels and a consultation processes with aggrieved groups, that can address colonial, racist and ableist attitudes, policies and practices.
University archivists, librarians, researchers and administrators across the country should work with communities to find meaningful ways of making their archives accessible to those targeted by destructive ideas and practices. Uncovering hidden stories of the past calls into question our ways of doing things in the present; for aggrieved and justice-seeking groups, an open past opens up more just possibilities for the future.
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Democratic lawmaker dismisses GOP lawsuit threat: ‘Take your letter and shove it’ | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 11:11 am
Rep. Ted LieuTed W. LieuDemocratic lawmaker dismisses GOP lawsuit threat: 'Take your letter and shove it' Democratic lawmaker says Nunes threatened to sue him over criticism Paralysis of nations is empowering cities MORE (D-Calif.) on Friday dismissed what he said was the threat of a lawsuit from fellow Rep. Devin NunesDevin Gerald NunesDemocratic lawmaker dismisses GOP lawsuit threat: 'Take your letter and shove it' House Democrats release second batch of Parnas materials Democratic lawmaker says Nunes threatened to sue him over criticism MORE (R-Calif.), telling a lawyer for Nunes to shove it.
The Democrat shared on Twitter the first page of a letter sent by Nuness counsel and dated Dec. 31 in which the lawyer cited the right to maintainan "unimpaired reputation." The letter was mentioned by Lieuon Twitter earlier this week.
Lieu hinted in his response that the threat centered on his comments tyingNunes to Lev Parnas, a Soviet-born businessman and former associate of President TrumpDonald John TrumpNational Archives says it altered Trump signs, other messages in Women's March photo Dems plan marathon prep for Senate trial, wary of Trump trying to 'game' the process Democratic lawmaker dismisses GOP lawsuit threat: 'Take your letter and shove it' MORE's personal attorney RudyGiulianiwho is at the heart of the impeachment proceedings.
I received your letter dated December 31, 2019 in which you state your client Congressman Devin Nunes will sue me if I dont, among other actions, issue a public apology to Devin Nunes,Lieu wrote in his own letter dated Thursday. It is true that I stated Congressman Nunes worked with Lev Parnas and conspired to undermine our own government.
I welcome any lawsuit from your client and look forward to taking discovery of Congressman Nunes. Or, you can take your letter and shove it.
Attached is the first page of a five page letter in which the lawyer for @DevinNunes threatens that Rep Nunes will sue me.
Attached is my response. pic.twitter.com/bWAqdRhq97
Lieupointed torecent evidence released by the House in its impeachment investigation and Parnas's MSNBC interview earlier this week, noting Parnas and Nunes communicated amid efforts by Trump allies to convince Ukraine to investigate his political rivals.
Neither Lieu nor Nunes immediately responded to requests for comment from The Hill on Friday evening.
Nunes has emerged as one of Trumps top alliesin the House from his perchas the top Republican on the Intelligence Committee, maintaining that the president acted appropriately in his dealings with Ukraine despite testimony from several current and former officials that they were alarmed bythe president's efforts topush Kyiv to conduct investigationsdesired by Trump.
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Woke doesnt win and other big surprises of Democrats 2020 race so far – New York Post
Posted: at 11:11 am
Voting tells politicians, and the press if theyre capable of getting the message, what citizens will tolerate and what they wont. The Democrats havent voted yet, but the candidates have been campaigning for more than a year and just had their last debate before the Iowa caucuses.
Thats time enough to learn some useful things. The first is that voters Democratic voters have a limited appetite for free stuff. Many candidates have been promising free college and free health care and offering free Ben & Jerrys ice cream.
Sounds good at first, as when Sen. Elizabeth Warren backed Sen. Bernie Sanders Medicare for All proposal. But the refusal of the I-have-a-plan-for-that candidate to say how shed pay for it didnt fly. And when she did answer that question, that flopped, too, and she fell back on saying it would be delayed till her second two years or second term.
The second thing weve learned is related: As blogger Glenn Reynolds puts it, Go woke, go broke.
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, former Rep. Beto ORourke, Sen. Kamala Harris, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Julian Castro and Sen. Cory Booker all candidates who have taken some moderate stands chose to emphasize how hip they were. They embraced positions like free medical care for illegal immigrants, reparations for descendants of slaves, abortions for men who have transitioned to be women.
These things sound reasonable to fans of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. To Democratic primary voters, not so much. All five are now ex-candidates.
Third, identity politics has proved to be a loser, too. Harris and Booker got only single-digit percentages from black voters. Castro made zero progress with Hispanics. Things were quite different in 1988, when Jesse Jackson carried blacks, Michael Dukakis white ethnics, Al Gore Southern whites and Dick Gephardt union members.
Identity politics is big on campus, where you get denounced for wearing a serape on Halloween if you dont have Mexican ancestors. But voters dont care so much.
Harris and Booker failed to duplicate the frisson inspired by Barack Obama in 2008, probably because you can only elect the first black president once.
Fourth, the white college graduates gentry liberals who are, for the first time in history, one of the Democratic Partys largest constituencies, are a fickle bunch.
Black and elderly Democrats have consistently given former Vice President Joe Biden large pluralities, and Hispanic and low-income non-college Democrats have shown some affinity for Sanders. That largely accounts for the buoyancy of support for these 77- and 78-year-old candidates.
But gentry liberals have been bouncing around. They were briefly smitten with Harris after she bopped Biden on school busing. They swooned longer for Warren when she kept repeating, I have a plan for that, and then they were charmed by Mayor Pete Buttigiegs crisp and self-assured articulateness.
The gentry liberals fling with Harris didnt last long, and current polling suggests their crushes on Warren and Buttigieg are over. But theres still plenty of room for these voters to swing decisively in Februarys first two contests, for they are numerous among those who bother to attend the Iowa caucuses and demographically a large share of the population of New Hampshire.
Thats what happened in 2008, when high-education Iowans swung to Obama, which convinced black voters that he, unlike Jesse Jackson, could win whites votes and the nomination. But gentry liberals are hard to gauge because what theyre after is not government aid but morally satisfying reassurances.
Finally, Democrats or their many friends in the press and social media have an obsessive yearning for diversity, which turns out to mean racial quotas and preferences. There is moaning about not having any people of color on the latest debate stage, as if the party had a responsibility to somehow field a group of candidates who are demographically identical to the population.
Actually, the six candidates at the last debate come from a wide range of American backgrounds, reasonably appropriate for a party that, in its 188-year history, has always been a coalition of out-groups.
Whats important is not what the field of candidates looks like but who will be the partys nominee, who will inevitably be of one gender and a limited number of ancestries. That is something Democratic voters have not taught us yet.
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Woke doesnt win and other big surprises of Democrats 2020 race so far - New York Post
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Democrats Should Be Worried About the Latino Vote – The Atlantic
Posted: at 11:11 am
But some of the Latino political organizers I spoke with described the primary season so far as a master class in political malpracticeas one person phrased itwith candidates struggling to engage Latino voters, address issues beyond immigration reform, and treat Latinos as the influential voting bloc they are. Others reported a lack of candidate interest in working with their organizations, including missed meetings and radio silence on questionnaires. (On top of all that, the only Latino candidate in the race, Julin Castro, dropped out earlier this month, leaving an all-white stage for tonights debate.) Theres a real risk that if Democrats dont sort out these issues soon, they could struggle to attract and mobilize what could be the largest minority voting bloc in 2020.
It feels like every four years theres this clutching of the pearls and head-scratching about why the hell Latinos dont vote, Marisa Franco, a co-founder of the Latino activist network Mijente, told me. I dont think its an absence of interest. Its a hunger for options.
Read: The next populist revolution will be Latino
The only candidate still in the race to receive virtually universal praise from the organizers was Senator Bernie Sanders. Organizers from California to Texas highlighted the Sanders campaigns grassroots engagement, something that seems to be reflected in Latinos consistently strong support for the senator: In poll after poll, Latinos, especially young Latinos, rank Sanders as their top pick among the primary contenders. Chuck Rocha, a top Sanders adviser, told me that the polls reflect the senators priority of expanding the electorate, including young Latinos who have not voted before. Of the record 32 million Latinos eligible to cast a ballot in 2020, 4 million of them turned 18 after the 2016 election, Mara Teresa Kumar, the CEO of the political-advocacy group Voto Latino, told me.
Rocha and Sanderss national political director, Analilia Mejia, said the campaign has aired Spanish-language ads for the past eight months and hired more than 150 Latino staffers around the country. In vote-rich California specifically, the campaign opened most of its 14 field offices in heavily Latino communities, including East Los Angeles, Oxnard, San Jose, and the Central Valley region. On our campaign, were very clear about the rising Latino iceberg of voters, how for years to come there will be a need to deeply motivate and mobilize Latino voters, Mejia said. When you have people who belong to that community [and] you empower those folks, of course youre going to do better within that communityif you have folks who know how to navigate it, folks who come from it, folks who respect it.
Sanders aside, the organizers I spoke with said the first signs of trouble in the 2020 campaign were clear during the two nights of the first Democratic debate, in June.
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Democrats Should Be Worried About the Latino Vote - The Atlantic
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Oregon Democrats, Republican bristle over possibility of another GOP shutdown – OregonLive
Posted: at 11:11 am
SALEM Tensions simmered over Oregon Democrats priority climate change bill on Friday, as leaders from both parties met with reporters in the Capitol to discuss their priorities for the upcoming 35-day legislative session.
The main undercurrent dividing the parties: Will Republicans walk out, stalling all business in the affected chamber? And who would pay the political price if they did?
With just two weeks to go until lawmakers return to Salem, top Democrats spoke scornfully of the idea that Republicans in either chamber might reprise the Senate GOPs 2019 walkout to block similar carbon legislation.
Its their job to be here, Senate Majority Leader Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, said. Theyre being paid by the taxpayers to be here I would not want to show my face (to constituents) if I did not show up for work.
House Republican Leader Rep. Christine Drazan of Canby, the only GOP member at the press briefing, addressed the idea that Republicans would be shirking their duties if they boycott the Capitol.
We are advocates for our communities, and we are equal advocates for our communities, Drazan said. I dont work for (House Speaker Tina Kotek, a Democrat) and nobody works for me. These folks are independently elected in their communities.
Senate Republican Leader Herman Baertschiger Jr. of Grants Pass, who led the Oregon GOPs headline-grabbing walkouts last year, said in a press conference earlier this week that he was not ruling out a similar boycott this February.
Baertschiger also called for Democrats to allow their climate change plan to be referred to voters, an idea Democratic legislative leaders and Gov. Kate Brown rejected on Friday. He skipped the Friday press briefing, reportedly because of the bad road conditions and deep snow in his district.
The legislative preview briefing was organized by the Associated Press. Senate President Peter Courtney, a Salem Democrat, was also absent on Friday. He was hospitalized recently after injuring his hip during a cycling workout, but is expected to return to the Capitol for the short session.
On Friday, Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, initially spoke reservedly when asked about working with Republicans.
I think they need to show up and be in the building and work to improve that concept, Brown said. And if that doesnt work, obviously, (they can) vote against it. I dont think walking out is a productive method.
Brown issued an appeal for Republicans to stick out the session in order to pass bipartisan priorities, such as earthquake and wildfire preparedness projects that she said could help rural areas. When asked by an Associated Press reporter if its an impediment that Baertschiger has stated he does not believe humans caused climate change, Brown said no.
Certainly, he has to spout a particular philosophy, Brown said. I may disagree with that particular philosophy. But lets figure out how we can set aside our differences and get as much as we can done for Oregonians.
Our kids are telling us we cant wait, Brown said. We have to move forward on a bill that caps carbon emissions and tackles climate change.
The governor said it was too early for Democrats to consider asking voters to lower the two-thirds quorum requirement in the state Constitution, which allowed minority Republicans to shut down the Senate twice last year. Senate Democrats have drafted a proposal to do so, Burdick said.
Lets get through this session, Brown said.
Hillary Borrud | hborrud@oregonian.com | 503-294-4034 | @hborrud
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Oregon Democrats, Republican bristle over possibility of another GOP shutdown - OregonLive
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DCCC: Democrats tout fundraising advantage in 2020 congressional elections – CBS News
Posted: at 11:11 am
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the group that works to elect Democrats to Congress, is touting a fundraising advantage and expanding its battleground map after learning it outraised its GOP counterparts by $40 million in 2019.
The DCCC announced this week it raised $125 million last year, roughly $20 more than it raised in 2017, the last off year between elections. The fundraising was fueled by $59.6 million in grassroots contributions. At the same time, the 42 Democratic "frontline" members in competitive races raked in more than $91 million in 2019.
"We know that this gives them a huge tactical advantage in their districts because they can buy TV time at a significantly lower rate than the committee, than outside groups, than anyone else," said DCCC political director Kory Kozloski in a call with reporters. "They're going to have the resources to tell their stories in a significant way, in a way that incumbents have never had before, in a way that Democratic candidates in many cases have never had before."
Earlier this week, the National Republican Congressional Committee chair Tom Emmer revealed his committee raised $85 million in 2019, $40 million less than the DCCC. Emmer raised alarm bells to Republicans as they seek to take back the House in 2020.
"One red flag that we're going to start hitting in the next two weeks if you read about it, our members need to get their act together and raise more money," Emmer said. "The individual campaigns need to raise more money. They cannot expect somebody else is gonna do it for them."
During his 20-minute remarks, he blasted Democrats as the party of socialists and big government and argued control would be determined by what the parties had to offer referencing the economy and trade as an advantage.
As Democrats seek to defend their House majority and hold onto 30 districts President Trump won in 2016, the DCCC announced on Thursday that it is targeting five more Republican-held districts and one currently vacant seat.
Democrats are now eyeing Don Young of Alaska, Steve Watkins of eastern Kansas, Richard Hudson of central North Carolina, Dan Crenshaw of northern Houston suburbs, and newly-turned Republican Jeff Van Drew of southern New Jersey.
Democrats are also focused on keeping California's 25th district seat, vacated by Democrat Katie Hill, who resigned in October. Hill had flipped the seat in the 2018 midterm elections.
Those six additions are on top of the 39 Republican-held districts where the DCCC announced in November that it would be targeting.
"The bottom line is, House Democrats are on the offensive across the country, prepared to protect and expand the House Majority that fights for the priorities of the American people," said DCCC chair Cheri Bustos in a statement. "Our record fundraising gives us the ability to push deeper into Republican territory and hold Republicans accountable for their attacks on working families' health care."
However, among those six districts, Cook Political Report still rates Hudson's district as solidly Republican. Among the ones Cook Political Report deems competitive, it also rates Van Drew, Watkins, and Young's seats are likely Republican.
"We're going to take a hard look at every single one of these," said Kozloski when asked what resources from the DCCC might look like in the newly added more competitive districts.
Despite record fundraising by the DCCC, the Democratic National Committee trails behind the Republican National Committee in overall fundraising. The DNC announced this week it raised $95 million in 2019, including funds raised through its Democratic Grassroots Victory Fund. According to a spokesperson, it was the DNC's best off-year online fundraising in a decade, and the total raised was $30 more than what the DNC raised in 2015 while Democrats held the White House. But the RNC raised $241 million in 2019.
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Kimberley Strassel: Why is the 2020 Democratic primary field littered with the failed bids of woke candidates? – Fox News
Posted: at 11:11 am
To paraphrase Santayana, Democrats who refuse to acknowledge Hillary Clintons failures in the 2016 election were always doomed to repeat them. Why is their primary field littered with the failed bids of woke candidates? Why is #WarrenIsASnake trending on Twitter? Because identity politics remains a political loser.
Thats the takeaway from the rapidly narrowing Democratic field, and smart liberals warned of it after 2016. Mark Lilla, writing in theNew York Times,faulted Mrs. Clinton for molding her campaign around the rhetoric of diversity, calling out explicitly to African-American, Latino, LGBT and women voters at every stop. Successful politics, he noted, is always rooted in visions of shared destiny.
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Progressives heaped scorn on Mr. Lillaone compared him to David Dukeand doubled down on identity politics. Nearly every flashpoint in this Democratic race has centered on racism, sexism or classism. Nearly every practitioner of that factionalist strategy has exited the race. Mr. Lilla is surely open to apologies.
Kamala Harris created the first big viral moment when she tore into Joe Biden, absolving him of being a racist even as she accused him of working with segregationists to oppose school busing. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand didnt hold the race card but ran a campaign about womens equality, attacking any Democrat who didnt measure to her standards on abortion, child care and violence against women.
CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING KIMBERLEY STRASSEL'S COLUMN IN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
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Democrats should put an end to caucuses – Boston Herald
Posted: at 11:11 am
It is quite astonishing to see with what deadpan and neutral a tone our press and television report the open corruption and the flagrantly anti-democratic character of the Iowa caucuses.
I quote the late Christopher Hitchens because I couldnt put it better.
In a primary, eligible voters can show up anytime while polls are open, cast anonymous ballots and go home. In the caucuses, they must show up on a winter night and spend several hours jostling with neighbors and strangers as they show support for one candidate or another.
This setup favors activists who are not deterred by snow, cold and the dark.They tend to be educated and have the luxury of free evening hours. Theyre also aggressive and skilled in working the intricacies of the caucus process.
The caucuses disfavor working people who must juggle two children and three jobs. Add to that anyone who works nights at McDonalds or drives an Uber after hours. Or who depends on a public transportation system that slows down in the evening.
The obvious winners in this unfair setup are candidates with passionate followers. Bernie Sanders has notably been a beneficiary. In 2016, he did better in the caucuses, where his activists could exert control, than in the primaries, where a wider electorate cast simple ballots without pressure.
Caucuses routinely suppress voter participation, according to the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. In 2016, turnout at the Iowa caucuses was under 16%, whereas the New Hampshire primary attracted 52% of eligible voters.
Washington state, which held both a caucus and a primary in 2016, offered a real-world contrast of the two. In March that year, Sanders swept Washingtons Democratic caucus, walking off with 74 delegates to Hillary Clintons 27. When Washington held a primary two months later, Clinton won by 6%.
Only about 26,000 people voted in the Democratic caucuses, while more than 660,000 voted in the primary. The state Democratic Party is switching to a meaningful primary in 2020.
Were caucuses how a conservative state runs a general election, liberals would rightly accuse election officials of practicing voter suppression. The Supreme Court might even strike down its election laws as unconstitutional. But this is a party matter, and it is up to the Democratic National Committee to fix the problem.
In assessing a candidates ability to prevail in a general election, some members of the punditry put great importance on the level of voter enthusiasm. Should that matter? It shouldnt, not in a democracy. Votes are supposed to be equal. A vote cast with mild affection or indifference even with nose held counts every bit as much as a vote made with thumping heart.
Some friends, particularly younger ones, worship the ground Bernie walks on. I back Joe Biden but dont adore him. (I could be happy with another moderate, say, Amy Klobuchar or Pete Buttigieg.) To me, Biden is a solid progressive and, more importantly, the Democrat whom President Trump most fears.
What excites me, though in a bad way, is the belief that a Sanders nomination or his trashing of the actual Democratic nominee, as he did in 2016 would deliver another four years to Trump.
Whatever the results in the Iowa caucuses, one can be confident that they will leave an exaggerated impression of the level of Sanders support. They will reveal the preference of a tiny slice of a tiny slice of the electorate and, in the Democrats case, of an electorate more heavily weighted toward the white liberal gentry than the party at large.
Only the Democratic Party can end this undemocratic means of choosing its nominees. And it should.
Froma Harrop is a syndicated columnist.
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Democrats Take a Walk on the Mild Side – POLITICO
Posted: at 11:11 am
It was not that the CNN/Des Moines Register debate on the campus of Drake University was necessarily bad. But most of the dynamics on display were familiar as in, very familiar in ways that evidently suited the candidates interests in staying safe but also seemed to challenge the basic theory of the officially sanctioned Democratic National Committee debate schedule.
This was the seventh debate since last summer, and the last before the Feb. 3 Iowa caucuses. At least as I understood the hypothesis, the gradually rising thresholds to qualify for the debate stage six candidates this time compared with 20 over two nights at the first encounter last June would replace the historic role of early-state voting in winnowing the field and clarifying the race.
It is true that the field has been winnowed, but its hardly clear that electrifying debate moments along the way have played that big a role. The people bunched at the top of the race are mostly the same, led by former Vice President Joe Biden, probably the weakest debater in the top tier. Some briefly viral moments from the summer and fall passed quickly, delivered by candidates no longer in the race. With voting finally just around the corner, one might assume this latest encounter would represent a debate crescendo. In musical terms, however, it was more of a fermata the term for holding a note rather than beginning the next one with some modest variations in emphasis but no fundamentally new arguments.
By evenings end, it seemed possible that the candidates time, and for that matter the journalists, would have been more valuably devoted to individual encounters with audiences of actual early-state voters. The next big change in trajectory of the race is more likely to hinge on what they think rather than on some zinger that a candidate lets loose in a debate.
As it happened, there were only one or two of those in any event. There was an arresting moment when Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders volleyed over whether he had once told her in a private conversation as she and her campaign assert that he didnt believe a woman could be elected president. He strenuously denied saying that. She more strenuously noted of the four men on the stage that collectively, they have lost 10 elections, while she and the other woman on the stage, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, have won every single race.
So true, Klobuchar said, so true.
There was another possibly arresting exchange not shared with the rest of the class, as Warren and Sanders appeared to have a sharp moment she did not respond to his outstretched hand as they exited their lecterns at debates end.
Otherwise, it was an evening of things you know, unless you are one of the cohort of people that didnt care enough to follow the 2020 race even passingly in 2019, but with the turn of the calendar is ready to start acquainting yourself with the candidates and the choices they are offering.
You know that former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg is very articulate, and that he, Biden and Klobuchar all think the mandatory Medicare for All proposals backed by Sanders are too expensive and politically and practically unworkable. You know that Buttigieg seems to get on the other candidates nerves a bit, especially Klobuchars, as they think he is trying to cut in line on the strength of smooth talk but scant experience getting things done or proving real electability against Donald Trump.
You know that smooth talk isnt Bidens selling point, and words can elicit reactions that vary from Well, that was fairly crisp and emphatic to Whoa, that sentence is wandering nowhere even within a single answer. His Des Moines performance seemed to land around the median maybe a shade higher? of previous outings.
There were elements of what seemed like fairly obvious calculation, delivered for fairly obvious reasons. Buttigieg, who has negligible support among African Americans, kept invoking support from individuals in that community and how his policies would help Democrats largest voting bloc, which in polls so far has been loyal to Biden. The black voters who know me best are supporting me, he said, invoking support from South Bend.
Warren, meanwhile, seemed to be emphasizing a pragmatic, can-do approach, evidently a rejoinder to those who might believe she is enamored with the conceptual purity of her plans but would not be effective in Washington. She emphasized executive actions to lower drug prices that she would have legal authority to carry out as soon as she becomes president, without waiting for legislation.
None of this, however, lived up to too-optimistic projections from a POLITICO headline early Tuesday that promised the debate could be a doozy. That prediction failed due to extra o more doze than doozy.
As I write this, I hear the admonitory voice of Broder, who died in 2011, as well as those of more belligerent contemporary media critics: Why is that the test of a good debate, how colorful the exchanges or vigorous the conflict?
Some previous debates in this cycle have shown the candidates highlighting relevant differences on policy or electability without resorting to personal insults or triviality. But Im happy to plead no contest on charges of trying to cover democracy like a sporting contest to any prosecutor who truly watched the entire debate and did not even once have to scold themselves to pay attention.
During the first debates in 2019, the sheer number of candidates gave moderators a challenge of controlling the proceedings and cutting off politicians lest they attempt to filibuster. Oddly, though, Tuesdays moderators often acted like they had a herculean task to rein in candidates for going a little over time even when they did not seem to be speechifying or rudely ignoring rules.
Thank you, senator, Thank you, mayor, Thank you, Thank you dozens of times in ways that interrupted relevant answers and were often distracting.
The evening ended with questions to all candidates to address their perceived vulnerability. In Sanders case, it was polls say two-thirds of voters are unenthusiastic about voting for a socialist. CNNs Abby Phillip asked, Doesnt that put your chances of beating Donald Trump at risk?
A fair point, Sanders replied, one he had not previously considered. Actually, no, that was my own fantasy dialogue as I watched the clock and pondered what I might soon be writing. Sanders actual answer was, Nope, because people would understand that his brand of socialism is about things people will like such as universal health care and fighting climate change while he would also make the case that Trump is a pathological liar and a fraud, who actually practices socialism for polluters and wealthy self-dealers.
Similarly, Biden denied that he is not tough enough to take on Trump and his penchant for insults; Buttigieg denied that he cant expand his coalition; Klobuchar denied that her pragmatic approach is bland and uninspiring; Warren denied that she is too divisive; and billionaire Tom Steyer denied that he is just a rich guy with no other claim on peoples support.
So a debate can be helpful in getting certain things on the record. But there have been some 30 hours of Democratic debates over more than six months. At some point, proceedings must come to a close and the election really does belong to voters.
So, thank you candidates, thank you cable networks, thank you print and online partners, thank you, DNC. Just to repeat, thank you, your time is up, we will return to you when we can. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
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Hillary Clinton on whom she thinks 2020 Democratic voters should nominate – ABC News
Posted: at 11:11 am
By
LYNN ELBER AP Television Writer
January 17, 2020, 6:46 PM
3 min read
PASADENA, Calif. -- Hillary Rodham Clinton has advice for Democratic voters faced with an unsettled field of presidential contenders: pick a winner.
This is an election that will have such profound impact, so take your vote seriously, Clinton said. And for Democratic voters, try to vote for the person you think is most likely to win. Because at the end of the day, that is what will matter and not just in the popular vote, but the electoral college.
Voters must act thoughtfully because Lord knows what will happen if we dont retire the current incumbent and his henchmen, as (House Speaker) Nancy Pelosi so well described them, the former first lady said.
Clinton, who won a majority of votes in the 2016 election but lost to GOP candidate Donald Trump in the electoral tally, made her comments Friday during a Q&A session with TV critics about a new Hulu documentary on her life and career, Hillary. The session largely focused on the documentary directed and produced by Nanette Burstein and ended before any questions about President Trumps impeachment trial were asked.
Former President Bill Clinton was impeached in 1998 in connection with his relationship with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. He was not convicted in the Senate trial.
Hillary, which includes whats described as previously unseen footage from the 2016 campaign as part of an intimate portrait of Clinton, debuts March 6 on the Hulu streaming service.
What started out as a campaign documentary became something more expansive, said the former secretary of state for President Barack Obama.
Clinton recalled Burstein telling her it was a bigger story that needed to be told, one that was part of the arc of "womens history and advancement, choices that are made. Im not running for anything, Im not in office, so I said, Sure, why dont we give it a try. And off we went.
The filmmaker said a main goal was to help people see "this is a historical figure who is incredibly polarizing and why. When you actually get to know her and really understand the intimate moments of her life ... you realize how misguided we can be in the way we understand history and media.
Clinton was asked what she took away from the films depiction of her journey.
One was the recognition that I have been often, in my view, mischaracterized or misperceived, and I have to bear a lot of the responsibility for that. Whatever the combination of reasons might be, I certainly didnt do a good enough job to break through the perceptions that were out there, she said.
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Hillary Clinton on whom she thinks 2020 Democratic voters should nominate - ABC News
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