Saturday, June 11, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Should Biden Run in 2024? Democratic Whispers of 'No' Start to Rise.

 

 

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11 June 22

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Joe Biden. (photo: Frank Franklin II/AP)
FOCUS: Should Biden Run in 2024? Democratic Whispers of 'No' Start to Rise.
Reid J. Epstein and Jennifer Medina, The New York Times
Excerpt: "Midway through the 2022 primary season, many Democratic lawmakers and party officials are venting their frustrations with President Biden's struggle to advance the bulk of his agenda, doubting his ability to rescue the party from a predicted midterm trouncing and increasingly viewing him as an anchor that should be cut loose in 2024."


In interviews, dozens of frustrated Democratic officials, members of Congress and voters expressed doubts about the president’s ability to rescue his reeling party and take the fight to Republicans.

Midway through the 2022 primary season, many Democratic lawmakers and party officials are venting their frustrations with President Biden’s struggle to advance the bulk of his agenda, doubting his ability to rescue the party from a predicted midterm trouncing and increasingly viewing him as an anchor that should be cut loose in 2024.

As the challenges facing the nation mount and fatigued base voters show low enthusiasm, Democrats in union meetings, the back rooms of Capitol Hill and party gatherings from coast to coast are quietly worrying about Mr. Biden’s leadership, his age and his capability to take the fight to former President Donald J. Trump a second time.

Interviews with nearly 50 Democratic officials, from county leaders to members of Congress, as well as with disappointed voters who backed Mr. Biden in 2020, reveal a party alarmed about Republicans’ rising strength and extraordinarily pessimistic about an immediate path forward.

“To say our country was on the right track would flagrantly depart from reality,” said Steve Simeonidis, a Democratic National Committee member from Miami. Mr. Biden, he said, “should announce his intent not to seek re-election in ’24 right after the midterms.”

Democrats’ concerns come as the opening hearing of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol made clear the stakes of a 2024 presidential election in which Mr. Trump, whose lies fueled a riot that disrupted the peaceful transfer of power, may well seek to return to the White House.

For Mr. Biden and his party, the hearings’ vivid reminder of the Trump-inspired mob violence represents perhaps the last, best chance before the midterms to break through with persuadable swing voters who have been more focused on inflation and gas prices. If the party cannot, it may miss its final opportunity to hold Mr. Trump accountable as Mr. Biden faces a tumultuous two years of a Republican-led House obstructing and investigating him.

Most top elected Democrats were reluctant to speak on the record about Mr. Biden’s future, and no one interviewed expressed any ill will toward Mr. Biden, to whom they are universally grateful for ousting Mr. Trump from office.

But the repeated failures of his administration to pass big-ticket legislation on signature Democratic issues, as well as his halting efforts to use the bully pulpit of the White House to move public opinion, have left the president with sagging approval ratings and a party that, as much as anything, seems to feel sorry for him.

That has left Democratic leaders struggling to explain away a series of calamities for the party that all seem beyond Mr. Biden’s control: inflation rates unseen in four decadessurging gas prices, a lingering pandemic, a spate of mass shootings, a Supreme Court poised to end the federal right to an abortion, and key congressional Democrats’ refusal to muscle through the president’s Build Back Better agenda or an expansion of voting rights.

Worries about age, and a successor

To nearly all the Democrats interviewed, the president’s age — 79 now, 82 by the time the winner of the 2024 election is inaugurated — is a deep concern about his political viability. They have watched as a commander in chief who built a reputation for gaffes has repeatedly rattled global diplomacy with unexpected remarks that were later walked back by his White House staff, and as he has sat for fewer interviews than any of his recent predecessors.

“The presidency is a monstrously taxing job and the stark reality is the president would be closer to 90 than 80 at the end of a second term, and that would be a major issue,” said David Axelrod, the chief strategist for Barack Obama’s two winning presidential campaigns.

“Biden doesn’t get the credit he deserves for steering the country through the worst of the pandemic, passing historic legislation, pulling the NATO alliance together against Russian aggression and restoring decency and decorum to the White House,” Mr. Axelrod added. “And part of the reason he doesn’t is performative. He looks his age and isn’t as agile in front of a camera as he once was, and this has fed a narrative about competence that isn’t rooted in reality.”

Few Democrats interviewed expect that high-profile leaders with White House ambitions would defer to Vice President Kamala Harris, who has had a series of political hiccups of her own in office.

These Democrats mentioned a host of other figures who lost to Mr. Biden in the 2020 primary: Senators Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Cory Booker of New Jersey; Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg; and Beto O’Rourke, the former congressman who is now running for Texas governor, among others.

Mr. Biden’s supporters insist he has the country on the right track, despite the obstacles.

“Only one person steered a transition past Trump’s lies and court challenges and insurrection to take office on Jan. 20: Joe Biden,” said Anita Dunn, a senior adviser to the president, citing strong jobs numbers and efforts to combat the pandemic.

Other Biden allies dismissed suggestions that any other Democrat would do better than him in 2024.

“This is the same hand-wringing that we heard about Barack Obama in 2010 and 2011,” said Ben LaBolt, who worked on Mr. Obama’s campaigns.

Cristóbal Alex, who was a senior adviser for the Biden campaign and was the deputy cabinet secretary in the White House until last month, said Mr. Biden was the only Democrat who could win a national election.

Mr. Alex said it was the responsibility of congressional Democrats to highlight Mr. Biden’s successes and pass legislation he, and most of them, campaigned on.

“I am worried that leaders in the party aren’t more aggressively touting the success of the administration,” he said. “The narrative needs to shift, and that can only happen with a powerful echo chamber combined with action in Congress on remaining priorities. The American people feel unsettled.”

Nikki Fried, the Florida agriculture commissioner who is running for governor, said she would welcome Mr. Biden to campaign with her in Florida, but stopped short of endorsing him for a second term. “There is a lot of time between now and 2024,” she said.

Still, public polling shows that Mr. Biden is at a low point in his popularity among Democratic voters. A survey last month from The Associated Press found Mr. Biden’s approval among his fellow party members at 73 percent — the lowest point in his presidency, and nine points lower than at any point in 2021. There is little recent public polling asking if Democrats want Mr. Biden to seek a second term, but in January just 48 percent of Democrats wanted him to run again, according to The A.P.’s polling.

‘We’re lacking in the excitement’

Elected Democrats are cautious about openly discussing Mr. Biden’s future.

“I’m not allowed to have feelings right now,” said Jasmine Crockett, a Texas state representative who last month won a primary runoff for a heavily Democratic House seat based in Dallas. “When you’re an incoming freshman, you just don’t get to.”

Still, Ms. Crockett lamented a stark enthusiasm gap between Republicans, who in Texas have passed legislation to restrict voting rights and abortion rights while expanding gun rights, and Democrats, who have not used their narrow control of the federal government to advance a progressive agenda.

“Democrats are like, ‘What the hell is going on?’” Ms. Crockett said. “Our country is completely falling apart. And so I think we’re lacking in the excitement.”

Many Democratic leaders and voters want Mr. Biden to fight harder against Republicans, while others want him to seek more compromise. Many of them are eyeing 2024 hoping for some sort of idealized nominee — somebody who isn’t Mr. Biden or Ms. Harris.

Hurting Mr. Biden the most, said Faiz Shakir, who was campaign manager for Mr. Sanders in 2020, is a perception of weakness.

Mr. Shakir circulated a memo in April stating that Mr. Sanders “has not ruled out” running in 2024 if Mr. Biden does not. In an interview, Mr. Shakir said he believed that Mr. Biden could beat Mr. Trump a second time — but that if Republicans nominate a newer face, like Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, Mr. Biden may not be the best choice.

“If it’s DeSantis or somebody, I think that would be a different kind of a challenge,” Mr. Shakir said.

Howard Dean, the 73-year-old former Vermont governor and Democratic National Committee chairman who ran for president in 2004, has long called for a younger generation of leaders in their 30s and 40s to rise in the party. He said he had voted for Pete Buttigieg, 40, in the 2020 primary after trying to talk Senator Chris Murphy, 48, of Connecticut into running.

“The generation after me is just a complete trash heap,” Mr. Dean said.

Mr. Biden and other older Democratic leaders in Washington, Mr. Dean said, have spent far too much time articulating goals that they have not reached.

“We need to have specific examples of how we’re dealing with things; it can’t just be pie-in-the-sky and kumbaya,” he said.

Many Democratic voters feel similarly. Lamenting “a great national loss of hope,” Alex Wyshyvanuk, 33, a data analyst from Annapolis, Md., said he wasn’t sold on another Biden presidential campaign in 2024.

“I need an equivalent of Ron DeSantis, a Democrat, but not a 70- or 80-year-old — a younger person,” he said. “Someone who knows what worked for you in 1980 is not going to work for you in 2022 or 2024.”

Regret and anxiety

And then there are the questions about Mr. Biden’s inability to persuade centrist Democratic senators to back his agenda. With the prospect looming of a Republican majority in at least one chamber of Congress next year, Democrats who have been in a similar position of holding fleeting control of government are nervous that past mistakes will be repeated.

Elizabeth Guzmán, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates, said Democrats in her caucus regret not passing a sweeping abortion rights law last year before they lost control of the state House and governor’s mansion to Republicans.

“We wanted to codify Roe vs. Wade, and look what happened,” she said.

Judy Vidal, 58, a retail worker from Cape Coral, Fla., echoed that sentiment.

“I just wish that since we have the majority now they would have behaved the way Republicans did and push things through,” she said.

The anxiety about Mr. Biden extends to the core of his political base. Adrianne Shropshire, the executive director of BlackPAC, an African American political organizing group, said her chief concern was that Black voters, having watched Mr. Biden and Democrats fail to deliver on core promises, don’t come back to vote in November.

“Does this frustration and the malaise and the worry and the fear, does that translate into an ongoing enthusiasm gap, and does that cause people to feel like their participation doesn’t make significant change?” she said. “That’s the real question.”

Even some of the earliest supporters of Mr. Biden’s 2020 campaign are now questioning whether he can lead the party through another daunting election cycle against Mr. Trump.

Ann Hart, a Democratic Party co-chairwoman in Iowa’s Allamakee County, endorsed Mr. Biden ahead of the state’s 2020 caucuses and introduced him at a campaign stop in a neighboring county. Ms. Hart, a retired school principal, said she could not imagine how Mr. Biden manages the presidency at 79 years old.

“I get asked to run for things — are you kidding? I’m 64,” she said. “We need youth. So I kind of admire him wanting to take this on and I hope he’ll pass the torch.”

Shelia Huggins, a lawyer from Durham, N.C., who is a member of the Democratic National Committee, put it more bluntly.

“Democrats need fresh, bold leadership for the 2024 presidential race,” she said. “That can’t be Biden.”



THE ARMCHAIR PUNDITS SPEW THEIR UNINFORMED OPINIONS! 

PRETTY DISAPPOINTING!

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REV REPORT: Tons of Major News!

 


Insider News from the Political Revolution!


HEADLINES: Bust Big Tech! | Bar J6 Criminals from the Ballot | Bernie’s Warning for Dems | Big Election Wins in CA - Iowa - TX! | Vote Amy Vilela on Tuesday! | Phonebank for Progressives | & MORE!

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We’re battling corporate authoritarianism at every turn: taking on Big Tech, challenging Insurrectionists, and electing allies to replace corporate Dems in the 2022 primaries. Become a RECURRING DONOR to Our Revolution right now to help shift power to the people!

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TAKING ACTION AGAINST J6 INSURRECTIONISTS!

Thursday kicked off the January 6th Committee hearings - but the truth is - while Congress has the power to investigate and expose, it has no power to prosecute.

That’s why Our Revolution members are hitting the streets to demand that Secretaries of State enforce the Constitution and bar criminal insurrectionists from the ballot.

Fox 43 reported on our demonstration in Harrisburg on Wednesday, calling on PA Secretary of State Leigh Chapman to bar US Rep. Scott Perry and GOP gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano from the November ballot.

On Thursday, we rallied outside Andy Biggs office in Mesa, AZ, calling AZ Sec. of State Katie Hobbs to bar him and his fellow Rep. Paul Gosar - as well as Trump - from the ballot.

Lima Ohio News reported on our action outside the office of Sec. of State Franklin LaRose, demanding US Rep. Jim Jordan’s disqualification.



In Grand Junction, CO on Friday, we called on Secretary of State Jena Griswold to act on the constitutional mandate that US Rep. Lauren Boebert, too, is ineligible for re-election.

This week, Our Revolution leaders also started sending official letters to 51 state election officials requesting meetings with our legal team with Free Speech for People to discuss how they can enforce the law of the land and protect democracy, Truthout reported.



It’s no secret that Trump is plotting his return to power, so there’s no time to waste. If you want to volunteer for our campaign and hold January 6th criminals accountable, please email us!

Be sure to add your name as a citizen advocate that our laws be enforced and insurrectionist criminals be kept out of government.

SIGN THE PETITION

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BUST BIG TECH

MAJOR BILLS TO TAKE ON TECH’S MONOPOLY POWER!

A small number of companies have way too much power, and it’s crippling our democracy.

Join Our Revolution and our allies in a strategic national campaign to bust up the power of the big tech monopolies acting as gatekeepers to the public square.

The Open Apps Markets Act and the American Innovation and Choice Act have a REAL SHOT TO PASS and would enable fair competition on Big Tech platforms and app markets. This will create fairness for small businesses and empower users with more choice on the platforms.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has pledged a floor vote this month — and we’re going to hold him to it!

You can take a quick and simple action to kick off this fight! CALL YOUR SENATORS NOW and tell them you want these two important bills passed!

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On Monday we were joined by US Rep. David Cicilline (RI-1), who has led the fight to Bust Big Tech as chair of the House Antitrust Subcommittee.

“There’s a lot of momentum behind these bills,” Bloomberg reported him saying on our live broadcast. “They have significant bipartisan support, and they will pass when they come to the chambers in the coming weeks.”

“Concentrated economic power comes with concentrated political power,” Rep. Cicilline told us. “By spending millions on ads and lobbying to try to defeat these bills, Big Tech is making our point of how dangerous monopoly power is to our democracy and economy.”

Apple, Amazon, Google and Meta spent $16.7 million lobbying in the first three months of this year, identifying the antitrust bills as their top priority. Tech-backed trade groups spent another $25M in ads.

“If you look at the history of our country, it's been the battle between democracy and concentrated economic power,” Rep. Cicilline said. “This is the most recent form of it, and we can win this fight.”

CALL YOUR SENATORS

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Barry Lynn, executive director of the Open Markets Institute, who pioneered understanding of how 21st Century monopolies, talked about his decades of work on our live broadcast Monday.

“For every ill we face today, monopolists are part of the cause — driving down our wages, driving up inflation and rent, causing shortages like baby formula, taking away our healthcare, undermining national security, fueling the climate crisis,” Barry said.


“We must use our most powerful political tool - our anti-monopoly laws. That’s how we build Liberty, Democracy, Community, Peace, Prosperity,” he stated.

CALL YOUR SENATORS

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Fight for our Future Director Evan Greer revved up the folks on our national organizing call, emphasizing the huge opportunity we have to pass real antitrust legislation.

“Big Tech lobbyists are throwing everything they have because they’re panicking,” Evan said. “They see the writing on the wall — no member of Congress wants to go on the record as a shill for Big Tech, and they know when these bills hit the floor, they’re going to pass overwhelmingly.”

“We can strike at the heart of these companies’ harm - which is their scale and power that gives them outsized influence over our economy and what the future of our society looks like,” Evan said. “I wake up every day with cynicism, critical of our political systems, but then we have to be stoked and seize these opportunities to make something happen.”

We’re asking everyone to make a quick call to your senators right now and ask them to support two major antitrust bills to curb the monopoly power of Big Tech.

When you follow this link, you’ll put in info and instantly get an automatic call connecting you with your senators offices. Most times, you’ll just leave a brief message - so it’s not no work at all!

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DEMS SERIOUSLY MUST DELIVER

Learning nothing, Corporate Dems have spent the Biden administration giving excuse after excuse about why they haven’t kept their promises or delivered for working people.

Bernie, as usual, put it best: “You really can’t win an election with a bumper sticker that says: ‘Well, we can’t do much, but the other side is worse.’”


Young, Hispanic, Asian-American and Black voters are all drifting away from Democrats, Politico said, noting Bernie’s warning: “Unless we turn around, the voter turnout is going to be very, very low on the Democratic base.”

With the Republican Party openly embracing fascism, we can’t afford another second of this pathetic weakness.

That’s why Our Revolution is working every day to defeat corporate Dems in primaries and elect progressives who will actually fight to make our democracy function and deliver for the lives of working people.

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While the mainstream media claims voters are rejecting criminal justice reform in big cities, they’re missing the real story unfolding in front of their eyes.

In major population centers like Alameda County, CA, progressive civil rights attorney Pamela Price is poised to win the District Attorney’s race! And in Contra Costa County, CA, progressive DA Diane Becton won her re-election bid!

Progressives fared well in other CA races, too - Alex Lee ran a corporate-free campaign that overcame attacks from real estate developers to win his primary for re-election to the CA Assembly D-25. And, Fatima Iqbal-Zubair - backed by Bernie! - will also move on to the General Election in November for Assembly District 65.

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Congratulations to Our Revolution Iowa victorious candidates in the June 7th primary!

Deidre DeJear made history on Tuesday by becoming the state’s first Black nominee for Governor from a major party. And, Kimberly Graham heads to November as the likely next Polk County Attorney, another progressive prosecutor winning on issues like wage theft and sentencing disparities – not prosecuting low-level marijuana offenses.

State Rep. Liz Bennett is on track to be the first out-LGBTQ woman in the State Senate! Molly Donahue also won her Senate primary on a message of restoring collective bargaining rights to public-sector unions!


Dr. Megan Srinivas led her primary for State House as a powerful voice for public health throughout the pandemic. She pledges to repeal Medicaid privatization and fight for a living wage.

Our Revolution also snagged two progressive County Supervisor seats with Jon Green, who wants to bring Bernie’s vision to Johnson County, home to Iowa City, and Tavis Hall who won on a message of economic and criminal justice in Black Hawk County.

Our fight is far from finished! This month, we have working-class fighters on the ballot in Illinois, Nevada, New York, and around the country. Chip-in now to keep chipping away at the corporate establishment.

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ELECTION DAY FOR AMY IN NEVADA

Amy Vilela heads to Election Day on Tuesday in Nevada’s 1st District backed by Bernie Sanders and Our Revolution. Sending Amy to Congress would be HUGE for our movement!!


One of our most passionate champions for Medicare for All, Amy served as Nevada Co-Chair for Bernie Sanders’ 2020 campaign, and now she’s taking on a corporate-backed Democratic incumbent for this pivotal Vegas seat.

“I am running to represent the working class,” Amy told us on a National Organizing Call. “This is the right race at the right time, and stakeholders on the frontlines want a seat at the table.”

Let’s get out the vote in NV-1 — find a Vote Center HERE!

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EARLY VOTING STARTS IN D.C.

Early voting is also underway in Washington, D.C., where Our Revolution is backing Erin Palmer and Zachary Parker to make the DC Council more progressive!

Erin is running for DC Council Chairwoman against a corporate-funded incumbent backed by gambling bosses and big developers. Like Erin, Zach is fighting for housing and economic justice and will always put DC residents and locally-owned businesses first.


Join our Phonebank Force to help power these allies into office!

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It’s not just a “squad” anymore, we’re building a powerful progressive voting bloc in Congress to take on the corporate establishment.

We’ve already clinched important wins for Congress with Greg Casar (TX-35), Summer Lee (PA-12), Jasmine Crockett (TX-30), Jamie McLeod Skinner (OR-5), Michelle Vallejo (TX-15) Andrea Salinas (OR-06), and others!

Even as corporate Dems sabotage their own prospects for the midterms, we are growing progressive power at every level of government. Let’s build on this momentum!

Pitch-in here to help us take down the worst corporate puppets before they forfeit what’s left of our democracy to Republicans in November!

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It’s official! Our Revolution-endorsed Jamie McLeod Skinner defeated Kurt Shrader – known as the Joe Manchin of the House! Her progressive campaign overcame huge spending by Big Pharma and Biden’s endorsement of Shrader, who worked so hard on behalf of Big Pharma last year to derail Build Back Better and drug price cuts.

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Our Revolution-endorsed Michelle Vallejo has declared victory in a close race for Congress in Texas’ 15th District!

“I want us to build stronger and healthier neighborhoods and I have a plan to make this happen,” she said. “We all deserve to work and live with dignity, and I am ready to fight for that every single day.”

Also in Texas, Jessica Cisneros has called for a recount in TX-28, where she has battled Henry Cuellar - Trump’s favorite Democrat - into a dead heat. Despite Cuellar being opposition to abortion rights and gun legislation, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Whip Jim Clyburn both campaigned for him and helped him eke out his paltry 136 vote lead.

This is why it matters that we muster all of our collective strength to battle the Democratic establishment in these critical races. Becoming a recurring donor today to help progressives fight back against big money.

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Our Revolution New York Progressive Action Network joined with NY Working Families Party to support Jumaane Williams ahead of Tuesday’s NY Gubernatorial Debate!

Jumaane is the progressive choice for NY Governor against the status quo Democrats, who seem more interested in giveaways to billionaires than in serving the vast majority of New Yorkers!


While Jumaane is taking on Kathy Hochul, his running mate, Ana Maria Archila is calling out the crypto-billionaire dumping $1M to back her opponent.

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This primary season, Our Revolution Phonebank Force has made 443,876 calls to voters across the country! We’re recruiting as many folks as possible to make calls to get us to that half-million mark and beyond!

Right now, we have shifts for incredible candidates for Congress like Amy Vilella (NV-1) who is on the ballot THIS TUESDAY, Brittany Ramos-DeBarros (NY-11), Andy Levin (MI-11), David Segal (RI-2) and many others!

One of our lead phone bankers, Amanda Walker, told us how fun and easy it is to make calls. “Our crew is there to help every step of the way, and it’s amazing to see our collective impact on these races,” Amanda said. “This is how we turn the tide against big money in these critical primary races.”

Sign up for a shift today to mount a unified front against big money targeting our movement and our candidates!

JOIN OUR PHONEBANK FORCE

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ORNJ RACKS UP 90 LOCAL PARTY WINS

Our Revolution New Jersey racked up more than 90 wins in local races on Tuesday, Insider NJ reports.


“Since 2016, our members have been doing the work of transforming the party,” said Our Revolution National Organizing Coordinator Anna-Marta Visky. “I’m excited to grow the base of county committee members who will work to build the party, engage voters and create transparency and good government in their districts.”

Our Revolution Trenton Mercer Chair Joe Marchica and his running mate Denise Soto, defeated two long-time incumbents and resources from the local party to win county committee seats.

Our Revolution NJ is also celebrating Karol Ruiz and Sandra Wittner winning seats in Dover – a further testament that a grassroots movement can confront the machine, beat back relentless attacks from well-funded incumbents and win.

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DEFEND DEMOCRACY PETITION

The January 6th hearings are underway, but Congress only has the power to investigate - not prosecute. That’s why Our Revolution is calling on secretaries of state to do their job, enforce the Constitution, and bar insurrectionists from the ballot!

The American people cannot stomach any more political theater. Let’s put the findings from the hearings into action and make sure Trump and his minions are disqualified from seeking re-election!

SIGN OUR PETITION

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BUST BIG TECH - CALLING ALL SENATORS

We’re asking everyone (this means you!) to make a quick call to your senators right now and ask them to support two major antitrust bills to curb the monopoly power of Big Tech.

When you follow this link, you’ll put in info and instantly get an automatic call connecting you with your senators offices.
Most times, you’ll just leave a brief message -
so it’s not no work at all!

Just tell them to support the Open Apps Markets Act (S.2710) and the American Innovation and Choice Act (S.2992), which would end Big Tech’s self-dealing, creating fair competition for small businesses, and empower citizens with more choice on the platforms.

It’s a really simple way to make a HUGE IMPACT to wrest control of our democratic and economic power from corporate behemoths.

CALL YOUR SENATORS

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 As our movement is showing with primary victories, we can overcome the force of big money with our direct voter outreach.

We have a shot to elect more allies and replace more #ManchinDems in these pivotal elections — IF we do the work! It feels great to change a voter’s mind in real time and know that you helped get an amazing candidate into power.

Help us make calls for Our Revolution partners on the ballot in coming weeks like Alexi Giannoulias for IL Secretary of State, congressional candidates Andy Levin (MI-11), Brittany Ramos DeBarros (NY-11), David Segal (RI-2), Amy Vilela (NV-1), and DC Council candidates Erin Palmer and Zack Parker.

SIGN UP TO MAKE CALLS

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BECOME A MEMBER

Are you a member of Our Revolution? For $5 a month, you’ll be part of choosing our candidate endorsements and crafting our platform and strategy. Plus, we’ll send you our new 2022 Membership Card.

To show our gratitude to members joining at higher donation levels, we’re sweetening the deal! For $10 a month, get a sticker 6-pack, and at $15, get the stickers and a poster. For $27, get both and a tote bag, or join at the $50 level to get it all and a T-shirt.

BECOME A MOVEMENT BUILDER

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The January 6 committee hearings deserve our attention

 


POGO Weekly Spotlight


June 11, 2022

Editor’s Note: There will be no Weekly Spotlight next week. We will see you on June 25!

On Thursday night, the bipartisan January 6 committee held its first public hearing, sharing some of the evidence they had gathered from their 10-month investigation into the unprecedented attack on the Capitol. The hearing — aired at prime time on almost every major network — set the stage for what is to come in the weeks to follow. Chairperson Bennie Thompson (D-MS) and Vice Chair Liz Cheney (R-WY) presented previously unmade connections and revelations, including new evidence that many of former President Donald Trump’s advisors were telling him that his theory of a stolen election was a lie, and that some members of Congress sought presidential pardons, suggesting that they knew they were complicit in the attack.

The committee faces the challenge of recapturing the public’s attention on the attempted coup: The initial momentum and unifying potential of the attack on the Capitol was lost when key Republican voices dishearteningly changed their tune after January 6, not only refusing to convict in President Trump’s second impeachment trial, but also opposing the committee’s investigation and skewing the facts of the attack. But with methodical arguments and incontestable evidence, the committee is attempting to show that claims of a stolen election were pretense, and that those who would downplay the attack are wrong.

Fitting for prime time was a compilation of never-before-seen surveillance from security cameras, police bodycams, and footage recorded by documentarian Nick Quested, who followed and filmed the Proud Boys in the months before and on the day of the attack. The footage is horrific, a jolting, necessary reminder of the deadly violence and undeniable gravity of what the seditionists attempted that day. Capitol Police officer Caroline Edwards testified about being knocked unconscious on the Capitol steps by one of the first groups of rioters to enter the building, and being teargassed or pepper sprayed alongside her colleague Brian Sicknick, who died as a result of the attack.

The January 6 committee hearings deserve our attention. Though it has been more than a year and a half since the attack, months during which many have pushed the politicized argument that it’s “time to move on,” a proper accounting of what happened that day is critical to our democracy. It’s crucial that the facts are documented: This was not just a protest that devolved into chaos but a deliberate, violent attempt to disrupt the certification of election results and the peaceful transition of power. The events of January 6 were meticulously plotted (and allegedly led by) collaborating extremist groups and encouraged ceaselessly by untrue claims of voter fraud by Trump and his allies. For our democracy to thrive, we need to apply the rule of law to the highest levels of government — including the presidency.

Despite the bravery of officers like Caroline Edwards, we should not overlook the ways Capitol Police leadership mishandled intelligence leading up to the attack. POGO recently obtained exclusive reports detailing the intelligence breakdown that led to the failed defense of the Capitol that day. We’ve co-published our findings with Rolling Stone, and we’re interested to see if the committee’s questions yield any new insights into these failures. As our investigators Nick Schwellenbach and Adam Zagorin write, “Real questions remain about what went wrong on Jan. 6, whether the problems have been fixed, and whether the right people are being held accountable, if at all.”

Throughout the month of June, the committee is expected to hold as many as eight hearings, covering topics including Trump’s efforts to spread false information about voter fraud, plots to pressure and influence legislators and election officials including then-Vice President Mike Pence, and the coordinated efforts of the white nationalist, anti-government extremist groups that allegedly led the attack on the Capitol. We will be following along — we urge you to, as well.

WEEKEND BINGE

All five episodes of POGO's The Continuous Action are out now. Give them a listen, rate, and review wherever you get your podcasts.

INVESIGATION

Inside the Capitol Cops’ Jan. 6 Blame Game

Exclusive documents and whistleblower claims describe critical intelligence failures ahead of the insurrection.

Read More

ANALYSIS

Air Force Leaders Threatened by Relevant, Factual A-10 Information

A leaked email reveals Air Force leader’s concerns that their A-10 retirement plans may be ruined if Congress and the public receive accurate and timely information about the program.

Read More

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“We need DOJ to explain what circumstances it thinks distinguishes these cases. Because guessing from the outside ultimately only gets you so far.”

David Janovsky, Analyst at The Constitution Project at POGO, in the Hill

OVERHEARD

Tweet from @daniellebrian: I’m torn by competing emotions: horror at what these seditionists attempted and pride at what quality congressional oversight looks like. #accountability #CapitolAssaultHearings

ONE LINERS

“This is why it is so critical for both Congress and the Justice Department to take meaningful action to strengthen and enhance enforcement of [the Foreign Agents Registration Act]. If they don’t, undue foreign influence over U.S. policy making will persist and people violating FARA will continue to get away with it.”

Dylan Hedtler-Gaudette, Government Affairs Manager, in Politico

 

“We need a level playing field when it comes to government policies and decisions, not cozy relationships.”

Scott Amey, General Counsel and Executive Editorial Director, in the Financial Post

 

“We want to know, at a project level, precisely where the [infrastructure law] dollars are being spent, how the dollars are being spent and what phase the project is in.”

Sean Moulton, Senior Policy Analyst, in Spectrum News

 

“This bill will dramatically improve oversight at the VA by eliminating a longstanding loophole that allows VA employees to escape independent oversight by simply resigning from their post. This is not a reform in search of a problem, but a well thought through solution to an obvious problem.”

Liz Hempowicz, Director of Public Policy, in Government Executive

 

“Because training is expensive, with fuel costs, maintenance costs, if the budget flow is disrupted, then you have to alter training as the money goes. You end up cutting back. In the case of the aviation world, they are going to cut back on flying hours.”

Dan Grazier, Senior Defense Policy Fellow, in Defense One

 

“They weren’t checking, there was no real verification as to whether or not these companies were real companies ... there was basically a lot of corporate identity fraud going on, where someone would apply for money on behalf of a company that they didn’t represent. And those seem to be very simple things that almost every program should have in place.”

Sean Moulton, Senior Policy Analyst, in Federal News Network

 

“[The Pentagon is] largely at the same place ... in some cases, there’s been an effort to double down on some of the problems.”

Dan Grazier, Senior Defense Policy Fellow, in Responsible Statecraft


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The Project On Government Oversight (POGO) is a nonpartisan independent watchdog that investigates and exposes waste, corruption, abuse of power, and when the government fails to serve the public or silences those who report wrongdoing. We champion reforms to achieve a more effective, ethical, and accountable federal government that safeguards constitutional principles. 

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