FDR's Labor Secretary Frances Perkins Meets with striking workers |
Bernie Sanders is the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination. I’ve made no secret of my support for him or my belief that he is by far the best candidate to beat the incumbent president. So let’s assume he wins the nomination and the presidency, which is not far-fetched. Then what?
Many have observed, myself
included, that it would take a new Congress and a sea change to pass many of
the bold initiatives that Bernie champions:
Medicare for All, free public higher education, free childcare, bold
climate action, massive increase in affordable housing, etc. Even when Bernie wins in 2020, a progressive
majority Congress may not materialize until 2022 or sometime in the
future. What then can a progressive
leader like Bernie accomplish in the White House without the support of
Congress?
Well, one of the reasons many
of us were so disappointed and frustrated with the Obama administration is that
the answer is, quite a bit (as long as the inhabitant of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
is willing to take bold action and be criticized). I don’t think that any of us
think Bernie would be shy about taking bold action and facing flak. Bernie has proven himself to be flak proof
time and again. Opposing the invasion of
Iraq after 911 is proof enough of that.
The most obvious point is
that Bernie can appoint progressive cabinet members, federal judges, etc. Yes, getting them approved by Congress will
be tricky, but I’m confident that he will be able to get himself surrounded by
the most diverse, non corporate, progressive administration possible. These folks will invite voices, perspectives,
ideas and experience into the White House that have perhaps never been
heard.
At a minimum, he can reverse
the unraveling of all important regulations that protect the public starting
with environmental, civil rights and liberties, immigration and oversight of
the financial industry. He can restore the
rule of law.
I can hear you pointing out
that most Democrats elected President will do all that. My answer is maybe. Don’t forget that many of them, especially
the "B stands for Business Boys:" Buttigieg, Biden or Bloomberg, might well appoint corporate industry
types like Tim Geithner to top positions.
Most of them will appoint health industry folks to regulate the health
industry. Bernie Sanders as president
has the power and authority to demand out of the gate that the pharmaceutical
industry give us the low prices it gives every single other country in the
world. That’s not something any other
president has had the cojones to pull off.
More importantly, perhaps, is
the protection and encouragement that a Sanders administration can provide to
working people, people of color and environmental advocates who are coming
together to advocate for their own rights. In Franklin Delano Roosevelt's first term, there was an unprecedented number of mass strikes by
workers happened. Any
other administration previously would have cracked down on, Roosevelt largely (not exclusively) encouraged and protected workers. This allowed entire
industries to be organized for workers from the ground up.
Remember the Dakota pipeline
was proposed during the Obama administration.
Imagine an administration that encouraged and emboldened those protests
instead of trying to shut them down?
Kennedy with Civil Rights Leaders |
Likewise with Civil Rights
protests. It wasn’t Presidents Kennedy
or Johnson that started the civil rights protests in the south, but instead of
cracking down on them, they lent their support, their resources, the protection
of the law and the National Guard.
Especially
if Mitch McConnell retains control of the Senate, we need a President who is
willing to restore the rule of law in this country and use every legal means to
protect and expand human dignity. I
think President Sanders, as his record in Congress and in Burlington, Vermont
attests, is just the person to do that.
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