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And here we get back to the problem: multiracial, rooted in the working class. Not too easy to bring those two groups together - BUT, in a bad economy it could be possible (see Obama '08).Super is also right about the Project 2025 aspect.
The left has to stop thinking winning the narrative is the same as winning power. It is not. You don’t beat the right simply with viral posts. This is why the “we need a Joe Rogan on the left” thing is so stupid. We already have those people, it’s just that the Democratic Party doesn’t recognize and bring in independent media in the same way Republicans have.
You need people who are trained, organized, and ready to govern.
Trump and the right get this. Project 2025 was their plan to take over every agency with loyalists who will enforce their agenda. It is dangerous and effective. The left should be learning from it.
We need our own version of Project 2025. One that is democratic, multiracial, and rooted in the working class. A left bench that knows how to write policy, staff government, and fight for real change. Not just candidates, but staffers, lawyers, communicators.
The Democratic establishment will not build this without being forced to. If we want to win and use power, we need to start now.
The biggest failing of Obama's first term, and I'm pretty sure he would say the thing, was moving too slowly in the first year. I mean, we didn't because the filibuster, but there could have been a lot more progress if Obama didn't fuck around trying to get Collins and Olympia Snowe on board with the stimulus and then he listened to the GOP nonsense on health care and then they gave the finance piece to Max Baucus.
Or, another way of looking at it, they should have blown up the filibuster as soon as it was obvious that the GOP had no intention for bipartisanship. If we had gotten the Obamacare we wanted, and then tackle other issues as well, we might not have lost so much in 10 and especially 14.
It's easy to forget that Obama didn't really run as a radical. He ran as a "let's bring both sides together and be reasonable together" candidate, which is what he did at the time. I think liberals still have Obama hangover, in the sense that we continue to laud bipartisanship as some sort of virtue (in a filibuster age, it is not). We see voters saying "we want bipartisanship" but I don't think that's really what they want. Or, put it differently, they want that until you put a shiny object in front of them that they like more. Like get rid of all the immigrants and solve all the country's problems in one month.
We have plenty of fucking staffers, policy wonks, lawyers, etc. There, we're covered. In fact, we have too many of them and they argue with each other too much. What we need is a Federalist Society -- i.e. an organization where we gather and trade ideas without the public seeing it and getting scared. The FedSoc always says, "we're open to everyone" and that's sort of true, but the problem is that few people want to attend their conferences because they were full of lunatic ideas like "competitive federalism" (this is where states, not bound meaningfully by the 14th, "compete" to attract residents. Usually this entails some combination of displacing minorities and installing official religion). I knew a guy who clerked for Clarence whose view was that the First Amendment only restricts Congress, and the states remain free to establish official religions -- he wanted Virginia and North Carolina to become officially Baptist. How can you carry on a conversation about that? You don't, so you don't go to the conference and you don't realize that 20 other fools who sort of teach quasi-law are jumping on the bandwagon.
We have organizations like that, but they are mostly leftie and they have scary names like Jacobin or other references to left-wing ideas. Who could argue with the idea of a Federalist Society? People who don't much about it probably don't realize how nefarious it is. This is not a major issue, but it came to mind recently as I realized how much of the Federalist Society bullshit the Supreme Court has swallowed. It's not only the legal theories -- it's that Federalist Society framing governs everything -- which is how we got Justices believing that Jack Smith was the threat to rule of law and not the insurrectionist.