Saturday, November 14, 2020

Editorial: Take the Win, but Keep Fighting

 

Is America a failing nation? If so, we hope Joe Biden can stop the bleeding and stabilize our democracy. 

No sooner had the Associated Press declared Joe Biden had enough votes in Pennsylvania to put him over the 270 electoral count needed to make Donald Trump a one-termer, than detractors began to belittle the accomplishment.

Democrats didn’t get the “Blue Wave” blowout in the presidential race that pre-election polls suggested was coming. House Democrats lost several seats, which will reduce their majority in the next Congress, and Democrats’ hopes of regaining control of the Senate faded. It appears likely that Sen. Mitch McConnell will remain as majority leader, with an effective veto over Biden’s cabinet appointees and any federal judicial nominees. 

It took four days after Election Day for Democratic mail-in ballots to make clear the former vice president would flip Pennsylvania, along with Michigan and Wisconsin in the Upper Midwest, to rebuild the “Blue Wall.” Mail-in ballots also turned the Trump tide in Arizona, Georgia and Nevada.

Trump still refuses to concede and intends to appeal to the Supreme Court to set aside the election, even though his lawyers have turned over no evidence of fraudulent voting by Democrats. As comedian John Fugelsang said, “It’s not over until the last lawsuit is laughed out of the last courtroom.”

Don’t minimize the accomplishment that Biden got more than 78 million votes, the largest total of any presidential candidate. He needed them as Trump drew more than 72.7 million votes. That placed Trump second on the all-time list, which we attribute to 40 years of Republicans undermining public education. Also, since the Reagan administration did away with the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, Republicans have seized control of commercial talk radio, particularly in rural areas, so you can drive up I-35 from Dallas to Minneapolis and never hear a good word about Democrats on talk radio. It shows in election results in states along the way.

We still find it hard to believe 72 million Americans decided, “Yeah, I want for more years of Trump running America like one of his businesses,” but the important thing is that Donald Trump ended up as the big loser. And after watching Trump lie about the mail-in ballots being “illegal” and “fraudulent,” anybody who is still proud of voting for that bloated con man and chronic liar should examine their consciences as well as their gullibility.

Democrats picked up two Senate seats, as former astronaut Mark Kelly beat interim Sen. Martha McSally in Arizona and former Gov. John Hickenlooper beat Sen. Cory Gardner in Colorado, but in Alabama Sen. Doug Jones (D) was swept away in the Trump tide by former Auburn football coach and political newcomer Tommy Tuberville.

Other Senate pickup opportunities faded as polls showed Maine House Speaker Sara Gideon (D) ahead of Sen. Susan Collins heading into the election, but Collins finished 7.7 points ahead of Gideon. Polls showed former North Carolina state Sen. Cal Cunningham (D) leading US Sen. Thom Tillis in the weeks leading up to the election but Tillis was leading Cunningham by 1.7 points a week after the election with ballots still being counted.

Cunningham conceded to Tillis Tuesday night, and Sen. Dan Sullivan (R) had 57.5% of the vote, with mail-in votes still being counted a week after the election, against Dr. Al Gross, an orthopedic surgeon and former commercial fisherman, so Republicans will have 50 seats in the Senate. 

That leads the leadership up to Georgia. which will have two runoffs Jan. 5. Sen. David Perdue (R) got 49.7%, 1.8 points ahead of Jon Ossoff (D) but Perdue needed 50% of the vote. In the second race, Rev. Raphael Warnock (D) finished first in a 20-person field with 32.9%, ahead of interim Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R), who got 25.9%, and US Rep. Doug Collins (R), who got 20%.

There was infighting among House Democrats over why they lost at least eight incumbents, with centrists blaming progressives for pushing far-left views while progressives blamed centrist party leaders for resisting policies that would appeal to workers, such as expanding Medicare to cover everybody and passing a Green New Deal to create jobs and save the climate. 

We think Democrats were lucky to gain 40 seats in the 2018 surge, unseating many Republicans in suburban districts. This year, Trump said Biden and Dems were pushing “Venezuela-style socialism,” would “defund” the police and would let suburbs be overrun with BLM and antifascist protesters. It’s nonsense, but it may have spurred Republican turnout. However, it shouldn’t be a surprise that the GOP would regain many of the House seats they lost in 2018. A week after the election, Democrats had 218 seats, a bare majority, with 16 contests remaining to be decided.

Biden has not embraced his “mandate” to promote a socialist agenda. Instead, he is determined to work on a bipartisan basis with Congress. His work will be cut out for him with McConnell, who has styled himself as the “Grim Reaper” of progressive legislation. If Mitch declines to cooperate, Biden can use executive orders to undo damage done by Trump and he can make temporary appointments.

Biden’s top priority is to confront the COVID-19 pandemic, restore the integrity of the Centers for Disease Control and return the US to the World Health Organization. He’ll rejoin the Paris climate accords, which Trump quit because he believes climate change is a hoax. Biden can reinstate executive orders protecting DREAMers. And he can reinstate environmental regulations that Trump’s lobbyist-run agencies gutted to accommodate polluting industries.

Biden also needs an attorney general who will investigate criminal wrongdoing in the Trump administration, including establishing who was responsible for delaying the US mail, which is a crime, even if it isn’t involved in sabotaging an election. 

On Nov. 10, the Supreme Court heard a case brought by Republican state officials and the Trump administration to finally destroy the Affordable Care Act. At stake is affordable health insurance for millions of Americans and coverage for pre-existing conditions for millions more during a pandemic.

If the court trashes the ACA, 20 million Americans could lose their insurance, increasing the ranks of the uninsured by 70% and wreaking havoc on the health care system. Senate Republicans will finally have to come up with a health insurance alternative. 

Meanwhile, if McConnell blocks passage of a major stimulus bill to help people who have lost their jobs during the pandemic and keep the economy going, Democrats should make sure the public blames the Republicans for the failure in 2022 — as they failed to do in this election. 

In his victory speech Nov. 7 in Wilmington, Del., Biden renewed his commitment to unifying and serving all Americans at a time the nation is deeply divided along partisan lines. “The Bible tells us that to everything there is a season — a time to build, a time to reap, a time to sow. And a time to heal,” he said. Left unsaid is that, if Republicans reject healing, 2022 will be the time to clobber. 

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2020


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Selections from the December 1, 2020 issue

 COVER/Jake Johnson

With McConnell-led GOP holding Senate, progressives fear ‘disastrous’ obstruction as Covid spreads and planet burns

EDITORIAL
Take the win, but keep up the fight


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS
When the Constitution’s the problem, not the answer

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen  
The election is over. Now move forward

DISPATCHES
McConnell backs Trump refusal to concede. 
Atty. Gen. Barr resurfaces to pursue ‘voting irregularities.’ 
Trump fires defense secretary who opposed US troops on American streeets. 
Biden & Harris start transition, but get no cooperation from Trump. 
Progressive Caucus aims to show clout. 
Progressive Dems say left proposals are winners. 
Trump lets Georgia jettison Obamacare.
Trump retained majority of white women voters.
World media responds to Trump's election sabotage ...


ART CULLEN 
It’s been a strange trip. Four years ago, who would’ve thought Biden might win Iowa?

ROBERT MORRISON
Trump sold out workers like me

JILL RICHARDSON 
The great irony of Trump’s taxes

JOHN YOUNG 
Paying the bill for all that is Trump

ALLAN NAIRN 
Trump’s GOP worked harder to stop people from voting than they did to stop COVID-19 from spreading

ROBERTO Dr. CINTLI RODRIGUEZ
Beyond congrats, a brown line is needed for Biden-Harris


GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
Election Day diary: Dark mood for a dark moment

THOM HARTMANN 
This election proves the need for right to vote


JASON SIBERT
Return to a foreign policy that seeks peace


KATHERINE WILKINSON  
Putting out wildfires, now and tomorrow


BOB BURNETT 
America’s Hitler

SETH SANDRONSKY
Rideshare company rules: California’s Proposition 22 wins

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
At last: Something states can do, easily, to improve health

SAM URETSKY 
Don’t blame Great Barrington

ELAINE SHELLY 
If only the election had been about health care

WAYNE O’LEARY 
High court hijinks

JOHN BUELL 
Lessons from bank bailout: Remember the borrowers


JESSICA CORBETT 
As US officially quits Paris Accord amid election uncertainty, progressives say ‘make this disastrous decision temporary’

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
Proud Boys

BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel  
Sometimes you can choose your family

ROB PATTERSON 
Documentary shows Johnny Cash straying from the line


MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
Viewers of the world, unite!

FRANK LINGO 
Rescue and recovery

and more ...