An
excellent and deeply important article. We need to be informed and
know what we are supporting. I also feel sad about these facts
illuminated here and wish it weren’t true. But it is.
I
also need to acknowledge that many years ago when I first heard
Elizabeth Warren interviewed by Bill Moyers, I was so impressed and
drawn to her. Then, in recent years and as I learned more, my heart
fell. And when she endorsed Clinton over Sanders four years ago, it
felt like a stab to my heart.
I’m
aware today that I cannot trust Warren, something I continue to feel
very sad about. I yearn for the day when a woman will run for the
presidency who has the integrity, courage, vision, authenticity, and
commitment to truth, justice, and the highest good that Bernie
Sanders embodies. I truly do.
Until
then, the imperative is that we embrace a profound commitment to
true, inform ourselves and follow the money, and —
again
and again and again —
place
principles over personalities. Everything we love and cherish is at
stake. — Molly
Warren loves to antagonize the super-rich – but her campaign seems suspiciously designed to stave off revolution
From
the beginning, there were good
reasons for
progressive leftists not to trust that Elizabeth Warren was on their
side. For one thing, she had spent much of her career as a
Republican, and only recently become a champion of progressive
causes. Warren worked at Harvard Law School training generations of
elite corporate lawyers; did legal
work for
big corporations accused of wrongdoing; collected donations
from billionaires;
held secret meetings with investment
bankers and
major
Democratic party
donors;
and stood
up and applauded when
Donald Trump vowed that America would “never become a socialist
country”. Even
at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,
her most prominent initiative on behalf of ordinary borrowers, Warren
brought in former Wall Street bankers, tasking financial foxes with
guarding the henhouse.
Yet
Warren’s campaign debuted with a populist note. She chose
to
make her kick-off speech in Lawrence, Massachusetts, site of the
famous
1912 Bread
and Roses textile
industry strike, and
she explicitly invoked the spirit of organized labor in her campaign
announcement. Warren unveiled a series of ambitious social policy
plans designed to please leftists, and some of us praised
her
promises to levy new taxes on wealth, expand childcare and give
workers new power within their companies. In debates, the more
centrist candidates accused both Warren and Sanders of being too
radical. Warren memorably snapped back at those who ran for president
to tell the country that change was impossible.
It’s
been difficult for progressives to know what to make of Warren. She’s
been antagonizing the super-rich, but some of them also
seem fond of her,
perhaps because they
recognize that
her regulatory proposals are actually a modest and pragmatic way of
staving off a populist revolution. She has long been attacked for
supporting Medicare for All, but she has also been troublingly vague
about the details in ways that left single-payer proponents unsure
whether she was with them or against them. (Harry Reid, having been
Warren’s colleague in the Senate, said
she
would probably ditch single-payer when she was actually in office, in
favor of something more “pragmatic”.)
But
lately, Warren has finally begun to make her true feelings clear, and
progressives no longer need to wonder whether she’s with us or not.
She’s not. Warren released a Medicare for All plan that called it a
“long-term” plan, which leftwing political analyst Ben
Studebaker pointed
out is
“code to rich people for ‘this is all pretend’”.
A
few weeks later, Warren confirmed
that
while in theory she supported single-payer healthcare, it would not
be one of her primary initiatives, and she would initially push for a
more moderate proposal similar to those advocated by Joe Biden and
Pete Buttigieg. Political analysts quickly saw Warren’s statement
for what it was: an admission
that she did not really intend to pass single-payer at all.
Doug Henwood noted
that
Barclays bank put out an analysis assuring Wall Street that Warren’s
plan to put off Medicare for All until late in the first term
“decreases the likelihood that this plan comes to fruition”. So
much for big
structural change.
Please
continue this article here:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/nov/24/elizabeth-warren-not-progressive?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other&fbclid=IwAR1eTI1X2YPqPL7Qxl0iDJ0h9AKP_769Z7T_OIItE-_g_TMqGhRq79xIUCg
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