Pages

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Editorial: Get Ready for 2024

 Democrats did much better than expected during the midterm elections, gaining a real majority in the Senate and only losing the House by a handful of seats despite aggressive Republican gerrymandering, but they hardly get a pause before the 2024 campaign season starts.

Georgia Republicans tried to suppress the votes of working voters, making it more difficult to use mail-in ballots and cutting the early vote in the runoff to one week, but Sen. Raphael Warnock prevailed with 51.4% of the vote, 2.8 points ahead of Herschel Walker. 

The midterms showed that the 2020 election that put Joe Biden in the White House and Democratic majorities in Congress was not a fluke. With Warnock’s victory, voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania elected Democratic senators. Voters in Wisconsin re-elected Gov. Tony Evers (D) and stopped Republicans from achieving a veto-proof majority in the heavily-gerrymandered state Assembly, as the Republicans fell two seats short of a two-thirds majority in the House. Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly (D) was re-elected with 49.6% of the vote but Republicans maintained a two-thirds majority in the Legislature. And Massachusetts and Maryland replaced outgoing Republican governors with Democrats.

The red wave that swept through Iowa carried Sen. Chuck Grassley (R) to his eighth term in the Senate. After 42 years in the Senate, Grassley, 89, took a race that polled tight three weeks before the election and he finished 12 points ahead of Democrat Mike Franken. Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) easily won re-election, the Legislature remains firmly in GOP control and US Rep. Cindy Axne lost to Zach Nunn by 0.8% of the vote, giving Republicans a sweep of Iowa’s four congressional districts for the first time since 1994.

The red wave in Iowa may have washed out the last argument for keeping the Hawkeye State’s position as the first-in-the-nation caucuses to kick off the 2024 presidential campaign.

The Democratic National Committee, at the urging of President Biden, is moving to displace Iowa’s leadoff caucuses with South Carolina’s primary in the first spot on the presidential primary calendar, to give Black voters a greater role in the process. The DNC’s Rules and Bylaws Committee Dec. 1 approved the proposal, which will take several months before it comes before the full DNC. Under the plan, New Hampshire and Nevada would be second in line, casting their ballots the same day. Georgia and Michigan would follow.

Biden is beholden to Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.), who jump-started Biden’s campaign in 2020 after he finished among the also-rans in Iowa and New Hampshire and placed second behind Bernie Sanders in Nevada. Clyburn’s glowing endorsement got Biden a big win in South Carolina and propelled him in following states.

But, for the record, Biden didn’t carry Iowa or South Carolina in the general election. He did carry New Hampshire and Nevada. 

Iowa was valuable as a leadoff contest for 50 years when it was a swing state, where a candidate could campaign on a face-to-face level with an educated population that was interested in dialog with presidential wannabes. And sure, voters had to put up with the caucus process, which can take a couple hours to play out — but what else is an Iowan going to do on a frostbit Tuesday night in February?

Anyway, if the DNC is going to move the leadoff primary—and insist that it be an election, not a caucus—the leadoff should be a swing state where a candidate can campaign on a budget and have a chance to build a following. Nevada would be a good place to start, since candidates would spend most of their time in Las Vegas and Reno, sweet-talking Culinary Workers Union members. New Hampshire could bat second. Then South Carolina, Michigan and Georgia.

Maybe Iowa Democrats can work their way back into the lineup.

Railway Workers Deserve Paid Sick Leave

In the spirit of fair play and ensuring a safe workplace, President Joe Biden should issue an executive order to require freight railroads to grant paid sick leave to workers. Biden urged Congress to prevent a national railway strike by imposing a contract negotiated with the railroads and the unions by the White House, after the membership of four unions, representing a majority of freight rail workers, rejected the contract, mainly because it failed to provide paid sick leave. Eight other unions accepted the contract.

Democrats in Congress tried to add seven paid sick days to the deal, and that resolution passed the House but was filibustered in the Senate and 42 Republicans and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) upheld the filibuster. Without the paid sick leave provision, the resolution was passed.

More than 70 Democrats in Congress Dec. 9 sjgned a letter whose main author was Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) calling on President Biden to take executive action to ensure railroad workers are afforded the paid sick leave.

“While this agreement was much better than the disastrous proposals put forward by the rail industry, it still does not guarantee a single paid sick day to rail workers who work dangerous and difficult jobs, have risked their lives during the pandemic to keep our economy moving, and have not received a pay raise in over three years,” the letter states.

The Association of American Railroads said it believes the question of sick days should be addressed in negotiations with the unions, but when those negotiations came to an impasse, the railroads turned to the federal government to impose the deal on workers. If the federal government takes away the workers’ right to strike, it owes the workers consideration for their role in keeping the economy moving.

The railroads insist that the workers can use personal or vacation days if they are too sick to report to work, but union representatives say deep staff cuts in recent years (which have greatly increased railroad company profits) have left the railroad crews so lean that workers can’t get approval to take time off if they’re not feeling well. If they take unauthorized time off, they risk losing pay and being disciplined.

The letter noted that the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) authorizes the US Secretary of Labor to set mandatory safety and health standards for businesses that affect interstate commerce.

In 2015, then-President Barack Obama signed an executive order requiring companies with federal contracts to grant a minimum of seven days of paid sick leave to workers—but excluded rail workers from the protections.

“We can think of few things that threaten the safety and health of workers more than being required to come into work sick and exhausted,” the Democrats wrote, “and we can think of few industries more quintessential to interstate commerce than freight rail.”

Greg Hynes, national legislative director for the transportation department of the Sheet Metal, Air, Rail Transportation Union, the largest rail union representing about 28,000 conductors, told CNN the Biden administration has been helpful. “Of course, they want to do this. Whether they can do it, we’re going to find out.” 

Make it so, Joe — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, January 1-15, 2023


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist


Selections from the January 1-15, 2023 issue

 COVER/Robert Kuttner 

It’s time to try progressive bipartisanship

EDITORIAL 
Get ready for 2024; Protect railway workers


FRANK LINGO 
Manatees need protection to survive

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Christianity’s durability being tested

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Don’t let them divide us

DISPATCHES 
Record turnout in Georgia? There was a record collapse.
Reports of ‘breakthrough’ in fusion power fuels hopes of major clean energy progress.
Keystone Pipeline spills 600,000 gallons of tar sands oil in Kansas.
Biggest election of 2023 is battle for control of Wisconsin Supreme Court.
McCarthy doesn’t understand what the debt ceiling is. Dems can’t let him anywhere near it.
GOP fight spills over to committee assignments...


ART CULLEN 
Ro Khanna on a lonely campaign on the back roads

ALAN GUEBERT
You’re a neoliberal, I’m a neoliberal, we’re all neoliberals — for now


NANCY J. ALTMAN 
Good news for the 65 million Americans who rely on Social Security

JOHN YOUNG 
Thoughts and prayers and vicious slurs

ROBERT KUTTNER
The added benefits of Warnock’s win

DICK POLMAN 
Final midterm celebration: Georgia voters defeat the dolt and solidify Senate Democratic power


PAUL SONN 
The midterms mean cities and states are where workers must fight to improve their jobs

SARAH IZABEL
Congress: Help struggling famlies before it’s too late

TOM CONWAY 
Union solidarity is driving better health care

JOSEPH B. ATKINS
Democrats have lost blue-collar voters

DICK POLMAN 
Beaten and battered yet again, Republicans can’t seem to fathom why it happened


PERLA TREVIZO and  
JEREMY SCHWARTZ, ProPublica
DOJ tried to hide report warning that private border wall in Texas could collapse


THOM HARTMANN  
Is ‘creative expression’ the new strategy for ‘Christian’ fundamendalists and SCOTUS to heart bigots?

DR. CINTLI 
Healing from spiritual violence and historical trauma?

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Children: A modern take on Dickens

SAM URETSKY
What will it take to bring rural areas back to the Democratic party?

SETH SANDRONSKY 
UC union strikers hold the line

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Medicare is dying: Where are the Democrats? 

SAM PIZZIGATI 
Elon Musk may not be so brilliant after all

LINDSAY KOSHGARIAN 
We need a smaller Pentagon


JOEL D. JOSEPH 
Immunity for Mohammed Bin Salman is a grave mistake

JASON SIBERT 
Laws can’t stop a nuclear attack


BARRY FRIEDMAN
Guess who’s staying for dinner

MELINDA BURRELL 
What’s in a speech? Rebuilding a welcoming political culture


SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
God’s great gaffe

BRIAN SEXTON 
Red Flag laws work, but they have to be used

ROB PATTERSON 
Sherlock Holmes’ younger sister

MARK ANDERSON 
Republicans are coming after your Social Security

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
The goldin girls


GENE NICHOL 
Pelosi’s farewell

From The Progressive Populist, January 1-15, 2023


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Friday, November 25, 2022

Editorial: Testing Democracy

Democracy survived the midterm elections, just barely, and we have two years to test whether the US will cast aside Trumpist authoritarianism. 

Despite predictions of a red wave that would wipe out Democrats in Congress, young voters, particularly young women motivated by the threat to their bodily autonomy, heavily favored Democrats. Despite Republican hopes that women had forgotten about the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, young voters of both genders surveyed in Edison exit polls found 80% favored legal abortions, and 49% named abortion as the issue that sealed their vote. Sixty-two percent of women under 45 listed abortion as their top issue, and exit polls showed 72% of women ages 18-29 voted for Democrats in House races, while 54% of young men voted Democratic. 

In the pivotal Pennsylvania Senate race, 77% of young women voted for Democrat John Fetterman, helping to secure his victory. 

Republicans hoped to unseat 60 Democrats in the House, but they gained just six seats, winning a bare majority of 219 with four races still being counted two weeks after the election. David Daley, writing in The Nation, noted that partisan gerrymandering pushed Republicans into the narrow majority. “An aggressive—and likely unconstitutional—partisan and racial gerrymander demanded by Gov. Ron DeSantis helped provide Republicans with four of those seats from Florida alone,” Daley wrote, adding that maps that likely violated Voting Rights Act (VRA) protections against racial gerrymanders were allowed to proceed in Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana. Texas enacted a congressional map that reduced the political power of Latinos even as they drove 95% of the state’s population growth over the last decade. Republican-dominated legislatures in Wisconsin and Ohio managed to keep maps that produced disproportionate representation for Republicans.

Democrats kept control of the Senate, winning at least 50 seats and possibly a 51st seat if Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Georgia) holds onto his seat in a Dec. 6 runoff with former football player and aspiring werewolf Herschel Walker, who was anointed by Donald Trump.

Down the ballot, Democrats flipped three governorships, replacing Republicans in Arizona, Maryland and Massachusetts, but losing in Nevada. Democrats did even better in state legislatures, flipping at least five chambers, with Democrats gaining control of state government in Michigan, Minnesota and Vermont (where the legislature can override the Republican governor’s veto). The Alaska House and Senate and New Hampshire House were still unresolved. Democrats prevented Republicans from gaining full control of North Carolina and Wisconsin. And Democrats defeated six of the seven Republican secretary of state candidates who claimed the 2020 election was stolen by Democrats. 

Republicans didn’t flip a single legislative chamber from blue to red, the first midterm election since 1934 that the president’s party hasn’t lost a state-legislative chamber, according to Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee President Jessica Post. 

Democrats’ most significant win was probably Michigan, Nathaniel Rakich wrote at FiveThirtyEight. Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was reelected, and Democrats took control of the state House for the first time since 2011, and the state Senate for the first time since 1984. Democrats had won the popular vote for the Michigan state House in 2012, 2014, 2018 and 2020 but fell short of a majority each time because of state-legislative maps that favored Republicans, Rakich noted. 

“This year, though, Michigan’s new independent redistricting commission drew legislative maps that were pretty fair. In the state Senate, Democrats won the popular vote 50% to 49% and a 20-18 majority; in the state House, they won the popular vote 51% to 49% and a 56-54 majority.”

The new Democratic trifecta could lead to many new progressive policies in Michigan. Rakich added. “Democrats say they want to repeal the state law banning union membership as a condition of employment, strengthen laws against LGBT discrimination and repeal the retirement tax.”

Democrats also gained the majority in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for the first time since 2011, flipping 12 seats. Republicans still hold the state Senate majority.

Democrats’ success can also be measured by the Republican policies that will not become law due to the 2022 elections, Rakich noted. For example, although Republicans secured a supermajority in the North Carolina state Senate, they came one seat short in the state House. That means the party won’t be able to override Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s vetoes. If they had gotten that supermajority, Republicans might have restricted abortions and how race is taught in public schools. 

Wisconsin has a similar situation, as Republicans snagged a supermajority in the state Senate but not in the state Assembly, allowing reelected Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ vetoes to stand. This will probably prevent Republicans from abolishing the Wisconsin Elections Commission or restructuring it in a partisan way.

Trump took a big hit from the election results, but the credibility of the nation’s political pundits also fared poorly after they used suspicious polls and historic patterns to predict the Republican tsunami, even though Democrats in mid-August had pulled even on the “generic ballot” of which party voters preferred for Congress, and the contests remained close as the election neared. 

“So what happened? Political journalists were suckered by a wave of Republican junk polls in the closing weeks of the campaign,” Dana Milbank wrote the day after the election. “They were also swayed by some reputable polling organizations that, burned by past failures to capture MAGA voters, overweighted their polls to account for that in ways that simply didn’t make sense. And reporters fell for Republican feints and misdirection, as Republican operatives successfully created an artificial sense of momentum by talking about how they were spending money in reliably blue areas.”

On Nov. 17, the day after networks confirmed that Republicans had won 218 seats to clinch the House majority, senior House Republicans called a press conference to announce that their top priority next year would be to investigate Hunter Biden. The incoming chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, incoming chairman of the Oversight Committee, James Comer, R-Ky., and other members of the brand-new majority showed up to make reckless allegations about the presidents only surviving son.

When reporters tried to ask questions about other topics, Comer cut them off. “If we could keep it about Hunter Biden, that would be great,” he said, explaining that “this is kind of a big deal, we think.”

Hunter Biden apparently is a bigger deal than inflation, high gas prices, supply chain problems, the economy and crime. But anyone who thought Republicans were interested in those issues they ran ads about before the election was bound to be disappointed.

With Kevin McCarthy wheeling and dealing to line up the 218 votes to become speaker of the House in January, after 31 extremist Republicans voted against nominating him for speaker at their organizational meeting, there is no telling what other priorities Republicans will be pursuing. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., wants to investigate Nancy Pelosi and the Department of Justice over treatment of Jan. 6 defendants. Get ready for showtime. — JMC


                        From The Progressive Populist, December 15, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the December 15, 2022 issue

 COVER/Robert Kuttner 

The rural turnaround

EDITORIAL
Testing democracy


FRANK LINGO
COP27: Get real on climate chaos

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

MEL GURTOV
Post-election caution

DON ROLLINS
Poverty and the holidays

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Would you like chips with that? 

DISPATCHES
Special counsel named to lead Trump criinal probes, Trump says he won’t “partake.”
It took House GOP just one day to show why Dems need to bomb-proof everything while they can.
Austin labor council urges end to Medicare privatization.
GOP civil war in House and Senate escalates as factions splinter.
Ballot initiatives targeting inequality won big on election day ...


ART CULLEN 
Iowa goes its own direction

ALAN GUEBERT
And the numbers prove it


SARAH ANDERSON
This year, voters made an end un around out of touch politicians

JOHN YOUNG
‘Real freedom won tonight’

DICK POLMAN
Swing state voters fumigated the MAGA pests who were gnawing the Democratic woodwork


MITCHELL ZIMMERMAN
GOP won’t dump Trumpism anytime soon

TOM CONWAY
Watching workers’ backs on trade

SHAILLY GUPTA BARNES  
How low-income voters shaped the midterm elections

GENE NICHOL
An answered call


DEAN BAKER
The crushing health care cost burden that never came

THOM HARTMANN
Have Zoomers ushered in the fourth turning?


SONALI KOLHATKAR
Democrats didn’t win — they simply held the line


DR. CINTLI 
The face of the two Americas

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
The saga of the revolving door, the steep staircase, the narrow doorway ...

SAM URETSKY
Fountain pens: To put a fine point on shrinking checks

JOHN L. MICEK
Pennsylvania voters rejected MAGA extremism

WAYNE O’LEARY
The economics of immigration


N. GUNASEKARAN
The assertion of global south in geopolitics


BARRY FRIEDMAN
My father and Sarah Palin 

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
The lost elan of Elon Musk


REBECCA LAWTON
It’s never too late to save a river

ROB PATTERSON
Picking and grinning at 2022’s end

SETH SANDRONSKY
California academic workers strike University of California Campuses

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
Piece de Resistance: New opera opposes white supremacy

From The Progressive Populist, December 15, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Editorial: Beat the Big Lie

 An editorial is due on the effects of the midterm election, challenged by the timing that this newspaper goes to press hours before the polls close on election day. So here goes:

There is a lot of anxiety about what will happen if the MAGA cultists carry the day. Even if they fall short in votes counted, at least 291 candidates for the US House, Senate and key state offices are election deniers who refused to accept that Donald Trump was legitimately defeated in 2020, and many of them are likely to refuse to accept the decision of the midterm electorate.

Steve Bannon’s closing message to his MAGA acolytes on his podcast, was all about sowing distrust in election outcomes, particularly if Democrats—who he repeatedly called “professional thieves”—win any races at all in the midterms, Dave Neiwert reported Nov. 7. Bannon said in an interview that Democrats are “going to pull every trick in the book” in order to “steal” the elections, adding: “They will not lose graciously. This is going to be very nasty and it’s going to be very tough and we’re going to be gentlemen and gentlewomen about it but steely resolve. There’s no chance they’re going to steal any of this.”

“Misinformation is going to be central to this midterm election and central to the 2024 election,” Bhaskar Chakravorti of Tufts University told the Associated Press. “The single galvanizing narrative is that the 2020 election was stolen.”

The AP reports that baseless rumors about noncitizens voting, along with claims about the security of mail-in ballots, have been circulating in the past two weeks with greater intensity. There also have been claims about dead people casting ballots, ballot drop boxes being moved, or more fantastic claims about voting machines, Neiwert noted at DailyKos.com.

Whichever way the election goes, Joe Biden will still be president for at least two more years and Merrick Garland will remain as attorney general. If Republicans gain the majority in the House of Representatives, they will move to impeach Biden on Trumped up charges yet to be determined, but any impeachments should be easily rejected on party-line votes. The Big Lie Party might knock off a few Democratic senators, but there’s no way they’ll reach a two-thirds majority needed to remove officials.

In the meantime, Garland should proceed with the indictment of Trump on real felony charges of theft and mishandling of classified documents that were found at Mar-a-Lago, and obstruction of justice after a lawyer for Trump falsely certified that all sensitive documents had been returned to the National Archives.

Trump has all-but-declared he will run for president again in 2024, in his effort to evade prosecution for mishandling of documents, and his attempts to overturn the 2020 election and organizing the violence of Jan. 6, 2021, in his attempt to obstruct the certification of Biden’s victory. When the true bills come back from the federal grand juries looking into Trump’s actions, Garland shouldn’t hesitate to order Trump taken into custody to face the first of many charges that are piling up against the Big Liar.

If the Democrats keep control of the House and add a couple Democrats to their Senate majority, they should enact the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, to restore and revitalize the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA) and the For the People Act to roll back voter suppression bills “red” states have passed in the past two years. The Lewis bill would once again require states with histories of voter discrimination to receive approval from the Department of Justice or a federal court before enacting voting changes. The voting rights bill passed the House in August 2021 but a Republican filibuster blocked it in the Senate, as at least two Democrats, Krysten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin of West Virginia, refused to alter the filibuster rule to allow the voting rights bill to proceed.

If Republicans gain control of the House, they have announced plans to cut Social Security and Medicare benefits. They have floated the idea of raising the age to gain full Social Security retirement benefits from the current 67 to 70, raise the Medicare eligibility age from the current 65 to 67, and increase the cost of obtaining medical care through the Medicare program, while imposing “means-testing” to determine who will receive Medicare and Social Security benefits at all. And they would refuse to increase the debt ceiling until President Biden lets Republicans pass the Social Security and Medicare cuts, in effect holding the country’s creditworthiness (and the economy itself) hostage to forced cuts in these programs.

The GQP’s media handlers have played down the threat to the retirement programs, but Rep. Jason Smith (R-Mo.), currently the ranking Republican member on the House Budget Committee, has indicated he would use debt limit talks to extract concessions from Biden on entitlements and spending. He has said Congress must use every tool at its disposal “to right size the federal government” and that “[t]he debt ceiling absolutely is one of those tools.”

And the GQP leadership has bought in. As reported by Jack Fitzpatrick for Bloomberg, the Republican Study Committee, the largest group of House Republicans, released a budget plan in June that called on lawmakers to gradually raise the Medicare age of eligibility to 67 and the Social Security eligibility to 70 before indexing both to life expectancy. It backed withholding payments to those who retired early and had earnings over a certain limit. And it endorsed the consideration of options to reduce payroll taxes that fund Social Security and redirect them to private alternatives. It also urged lawmakers to “phase-in an increase in means testing” for Medicare.

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) has proposed amending the Social Security Act to require it be reapproved every five years. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) wants to require Social Security to be subject to annual reapproval.

Biden has declared he would not accept cuts to Social Security or Medicare, insisting that Republicans were “fiscally reckless’ in pushing more tax cuts for the wealthy, and that’s the right approach. Republicans are economic terrorists and Democrats must make sure the GQP gets full credit for pushing the debt ceiling to the brink, betting that the guys who bankroll Republicans’ campaigns will draw the line at causing the first-ever default on the national debt, which would be catastrophic for small businesses and could plunge the nation into a severe recession. And all this should convince previously skeptical seniors that those damned Republicans really were serious about cutting their Social Security and Medicare.

As Paul Krugman wrote in the New York Times, “A more interesting question is why Republicans think they can get away with touching the traditional third rails of fiscal policy. Social Security remains as popular as ever; Republicans themselves campaigned against Obamacare by claiming, misleadingly, that it would cut Medicare. Why imagine that proposals to deny benefits to many Americans by raising the eligibility age won’t provoke a backlash?”

So much for folks thinking Republicans were better at handling the economy. The debt ceiling hostage-taking scam should get Biden re-elected and a Democratic sweep of Congress in 2024. Whatever happens, keep hope alive. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the December 1, 2022 issue

 COVER/Jeremy Schwartz and 

Jessica Priest, ProPublica
Churches are breaking the law by endorsing in elections, while the IRS looks the other way

EDITORIAL 
Beat the Big Lie


FRANK LINGO 
To reduce climate chaos, eat less meat

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Jerry Lee Lewis: A complicated legacy?

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Nutrition and diet starts on the farm

DISPATCHES 
Congress reports corporations use inflation to ‘raise prices excessively.’
House Dems propose end to Wall Street rent-gouging.
Job growth remains strong as wage growth settles, but Fed goes ahead with interest hike.
Senate report details latest privatized Medicare scandal.
So much for inflation and gas prices. House GOP agenda is revenge ...

ART CULLEN
Sundays with Ernie

ALAN GUEBERT
Don’t bet against the latest supermarket super merger


SULMA ARIAS 
Keep democracy on the ballot

JOHN YOUNG
Attack on democracy barely camouflaged

TOM CONWAY 
The infrastructure program’s chain reaction


EILEEN SEPULVEDA 
Back to school blues linger without the Child Tax Credit


SONALI KOLHATKAR  
Musk plans to profit from Twitter, not create a town square for global democracy


THOM HARTMANN  
Is most of America’s inflation due to monopolies, price-gouging & oil barons fleecing us?


DR. CINTLI 
The latest declaration of war against ethnic studies

DICK POLMAN
Republicans have demonized Nancy Pelosi for 16 years. No wonder a nut tried to take action. 

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Stalling the surge in insulin prices: A Thanksgiving tale

SAM URETSKY 
Refugees keep coming

JASON SIBERT
Will the end of Putin bring the end of the world? 

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Monetizing Congress

SETH SANDRONSKY 
California refiners’ profits spur scrutiny from special legislative session


JOHN L. MICEK 
A roadmap to Republican grievance in 2022


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
We forgive the talented 

BETSY MARSTON 
Hats off to a determined woman


SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
To begin again

REED D. BENSON 
New Mexico court upholds public access

ROB PATTERSON 
Give ‘The Killer’ his due


FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
Commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Hollywood Blacklist


GENE NICHOL 
When the Supreme Court claimed to be originalist, it lied

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Editorial: GOP’s Big Lie Closers

 Republicans have a special skill for staying on their message, no matter what the facts are, and the broadcast media is unwilling or unable to hold them accountable for their distortions.

Republicans have been blaming Joe Biden and the Democrats for inflation, crime and immigrant invaders smuggling fentanyl into the US, with the Greedy Oligarch Party relying on the infotainment media to relay the distortions without context. That has resulted in tightened polls heading into the midterm elections.

For example, polls show Americans trust Republicans more than Democrats on economic issues. even though the past three Democratic presidents have had to bail us out of recessions left by their Republican predecessors. 

Biden took over an economy that Donald Trump left in shambles, with the loss of 2.9 million jobs and a 6.3% unemployment rate. Under Biden, the Democratic Congress passed an American Recovery Act that not only provided free distribution of COVID-19 vaccines to enable the country to open up from the pandemic lockdown, but also provided assistance to help Americans pay their rent and mortgages, as well as a Child Tax Credit and extended unemployment benefits that kept 25 million of the working poor out of poverty. 

Inflation has risen 8.2% in the past year, the highest rate in four decades, but lower than other industrialied nations, while 10 million people have returned to work under Biden, cutting the unemployment rate to 3.5%, the lowest rate in five decades. And even though much of the inflation is due to profiteering by fuel and food distributors taking advantage of global supply-chain problems to generate record profits, the Federal Reserve has turned to its main inflation-fighting tool — tightening the money supply, which is likely to lead to a recession that will cause layoffs in an effort to force prices down. 

Republicans have not said how they would reduce inflation. However, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) and other Republicans have called for making the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent, as well as to extend or expand several other corporate tax breaks. So higher wages for workers is bad for the economy, but more dividends for the rich is great for Republicans’ sponsors. 

Republicans also plan to seize the opportunity to force cuts in Social Security and Medicare if they regain a House majority. McCarthy and the four Republicans vying to serve as House Budget Committee chairman have plans to hold the debt ceiling hostage next year unless Democrats agree to entitlement cuts and work requirements on safety-net programs. Rep. Jason T. Smith (Mo.), ranking Republican on the House Budget Committee, told Bloomberg Government (Oct. 11): “The debt limit is clearly one of those tools that Republicans — that a Republican-controlled Congress — will use to make sure that we do everything we can to make this economy strong.”

President Biden Oct. 21 said holding up the debt limit to extract spending cuts would “crash the economy,” and Republicans should forget about it. “Let me be really clear: I will not yield,” Biden said. “I will not cut Social Security. I will not cut Medicare, no matter how hard they work at it.”

Republicans also are hauling out the crime scare, spreading paranoia about violent crime committed by dark-skinned people. 

Across the country, Dana Milbank has noted, Republicans and allied groups have spent tens of millions of dollars running tens of thousands of crime-related ads over the past two months — often with racist undertones. The Congressional Leadership Fund, the main super PAC affiliated with House GOP leadership, has emphasized crime more than any other topic but the economy in its ads.

“Murder, shooting, stabbings, rapes, carjackings are skyrocketing. Bloodthirsty criminals are laying waste to Democrat-run cities,” Trump said at a rally in September. “Crime is rampant like never before.”

In fact, Milbank noted, crime did soar in 2020 during the pandemic, which also happened to be Trump’s final year in office. But in 2021, the FBI found in its annual report on crime released in October, violent crime actually declined slightly, by 1%, from 2020, largely because of a 9% drop in robbery. Homicides increased slightly, by 4%. And while Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), a former football coach, declared at a Trump rally in Nevada in October that descendants of enslaved people “do the crime,” a report last year from the Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics, using 2018 data, found that White people were offenders in 52% of nonfatal violent crimes overall (and 56% of rapes or sexual assaults) in which the victim identified the race of the offender. Black people were offenders in 29% of nonfatal violent crimes (22% of rapes or sexual assaults). Latinos were offenders in 14% of nonfatal violent crimes. 

And crime isn’t just a problem in Democrat-run cities. The centrist Democratic group Third Way found that in 2020 homicide rates were on average 40% higher in states won by Trump. Eight of the 10 states with the highest homicide rates have been reliably red states for the past two decades. Republican-led cities weren’t any safer than Democratic-led cities.

Among the 10 states with the highest per capita homicide rates — Mississippi, Louisiana, Kentucky, Alabama, Missouri, South Carolina, New Mexico, Georgia, Arkansas, Tennessee — most were in the South and relatively rural. The findings were broadly consistent with other rankings of states (and counties) by violent crime. Milbank noted.

Finally, despite Republican complaints that Joe Biden is running an open border with Mexico, the US Border Patrol apparently didn’t get the memo, as it arrested 2.4 million migrants at the Southwestern border during fiscal year 2022 — the highest number ever recorded. Migrant arrests, or encounters, for the year were 37% higher than 2021, and more than two times the number recorded in 2019, the Texas Tribune reported.

It’s unclear how many of the 2.4 million encounters represent individuals crossing the border because the count includes people who make repeated attempts during the same fiscal year. Last fiscal year, Customs and Border Protection reported a recidivism rate of 27%.

Republicans also claim Biden’s “open-border” policy has allowed dangerous drugs like fentanyl to flood into the country, imperiling our children. The amount of fentanyl seized by Customs and Border Protection has increased in the past few years, but just under three-quarters of all fentanyl seized by CBP is taken at US-Mexico border crossings, Philip Bump noted in the Washington Post Oct. 4. Only about 11% of fentanyl is seized by the Border Patrol between checkpoints. CBP doesn’t have data on the percentage of seizures from US citizens. But a perusal of the organization’s website turns up a large number of news releases in which fentanyl seizures involve Americans, Bump noted. “[T]he idea of smuggling fentanyl into the country is to get the drugs in quickly without detection. Paying a citizen to drive them in makes more sense in that regard than having a noncitizen lug them across the Rio Grande,” he wrote.

And after smuggling fentanyl into the country, the narcotraffickers aren’t about to give it away to Halloween trick or treaters. So get out and vote like your democracy depends on you. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, November 15, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the November 15, 2022 issue

 COVER/Hal Crowther 

Without shame or restraint: Republicans sink to new depths

EDITORIAL
The GOP’s Big Lie closers


FRANK LINGO 
Alarming losses of animal life

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
Raising steady kids in unsteady times

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Inflation Reduction Act contains much for rural areas to celebrate

DISPATCHES
To keep water in the rivers, Biden’s plan is capitalism.
Mar-A-Lago documents held secrets about Iranian missiles and intel operations in China.
Biden goes Dark Brandon on MAGA Republican hypocrisy around student debt.
Abbott blames Beto for bail bond gone bad.
Judge who ruled against Consumer Financial Protection Bureau took Wall Street cash.
Judge’s ruling takes Trump one step closer to indictment on conspiracy charge ...


ART CULLEN
No place you would want to be is safer than Iowa

ALAN GUEBERT
Ag policy was about cultural stability, not endless market growth


SHAILLY GUPTA BARNES
War on immigrants is war on all poor and low-income Americans

JOHN YOUNG
The Big Lie by the numbers

DICK POLMAN
Damaged beyond a reasonable doubt: “I don’t want people to know that we lost.”

ROBERT KUTTNER
Industrial policy: Now comes the hard part

TOM CONWAY
Bringing workers’ sensibility to local government

JOHN GEYMAN
Whoever said Republicans fight inflation better than Democrats?

PETER CERTO 
Republican ‘solutions’ will make inflation worse


SONALI KOLHATKAR
What Social Security should really be paying to survive in this economy


DR. CINTLI
The H word: Violence against the spirit

SARAH BARON
Raise corporate taxes, not interest rates

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
To entitle or not to entitle: A Hamlet moment for Medicaid

SAM URETSKY 
Would-be elites could use a break

JAKE JOHNSON 
Millions set to lose Medicaid, food benefits once public health emergency ends

WAYNE O’LEARY 
The bifurcated economy


MARK ANDERSON 
International bankers operate on a level of their own


JOEL D. JOSEPH 
The Supreme Court has gone off the rails


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
At the end of the show in the Bahamas

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
DART 2.0


DAVE MARSTON 
When no home is affordable, where do you live? 

ROB PATTERSON
Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward transformed

SETH SANDRONSKY
Don’t push ‘Lou’

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
‘Voodoo Macbeth’: When an all-Black Shakespeare cast made stage history with Orson Welles

PAUL ARMENTANO 
Biden’s marijuana pardons are a seismic shift

From The Progressive Populist, November 15, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Editor: Profits of Perfidy

 Saudi Arabia has effectively sided with Russia in its war upon Ukraine and it has sided with the Republican Party in its war against democracy in the US. 

President Joe Biden was mocked for meeting in July with the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, when Biden tried to persuade the prince to increase oil production. Instead, Salman opted for the windfall profits that will come with the decision of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Plus to cut crude oil production by two million barrels per day.

MBS, as the Saudi prince is known, has shown himself to be an untrustworthy ally with a penchant for betrayal. He got along just fine with Donald Trump and gave Trump’s son-in-law a $2 billion going-away gift in bankrolling the private equity fund Jared Kushner started after he left the White House. 

Biden should respond to MBS’s contempt by withdrawing military support for the corrupt Saudi monarchy. The US has provided access to military jets and pilot training for the Saudi-led war against Houthi rebels in Yemen. During seven years of war, Saudi-led airstrikes have killed nearly 9,000 civilians in Yemen and human rights groups have documented more than 300 airstrikes that are likely war crimes or violations of the laws of war, JustSecurity.org reported. UN monitoring bodies have found US weapons used in many of these attacks. 

Biden should cut off those armaments for Saudis and instead work to restore relations with the Iranian Republic. That should get MBS’s attention.

The Biden administration could lift economic sanctions that block Venezuela and Iran from exporting oil, if they’re willing to buck the OPEC+ production limits.

There may be resistance in the US to dealing with Venezuela and particularly with Iran, which is facing riots over the brutality of its morality police in enforcing decency standards, but Iran’s human rights problems arguably are no worse than the Saudi monarchy’s. 

Iran deserves some consideration after it agreedin 2015 to limit the enrichment of nuclear fuels in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action with the US, the UK, Russia, France, China, Germany and the European Union. After Donald Trump took over in 2017, he reneged on the deal and re-imposed crippling economic sanctions on Iran. Tehran abandoned the limitations on nuclear enrichment and has refused to meet directly with US negotiators ever since, but Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi told the UN General Assembly Sept. 21 his country is serious about reviving the deal.

In his own speech at the UN, Biden said “We will not allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon,” but the US is ready to rejoin the accord if Iran steps up its commitments.

A renewed surge in fuel prices also challenges central bankers in their efforts to get a handle on controlling global inflation. As Thom Hartmann notes in this issue, both the World Bank and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) are warning the Federal Reserve and other central banks against raising interest rates too high in an effort to fight inflation, which the World Bank and UNCTAD officials fear could lead to a prolonged global recession.

The rising interest rates are designed to cool off the economy, which has recovered 10 million jobs since Biden’s inauguration, regaining the jobs lost under Trump during the COVID lockdown, and dropping the unemployment rate to 3.5% in September as employers added 263,000 jobs. Wages had been growing at a 4.8% annual rate,.but wage growth slowed to 0.3% in September, consistent with the Fed’s 2% inflation target, showing that the much-feared wage-price spiral was not occurring. 

Biden can fight inflation by enforcing antitrust authority against US oil companies that take advantage of the OPEC+ action as an excuse to raise gasoline prices in the US. The Department of Justice, Federal Trade Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission should take actions against businesses that have taken advantage of economic disruptions to gouge American consumers.

Congress should pass the Big Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (HR 7061), which would impose an excise tax on windfall profits of large oil companies, with tax revenues to be rebated to consumers. The bill has not advanced from the House Ways and Means Committee, and oil companies expect it to die in the Senate if it gets out of the House, but Congress members ought to vote on it.

The bill was filed by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) in March, after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent oil prices soaring and US oil companies posted record profits, but the bill stalled when gas prices came down in the summer. With a month to go before the midterm elections on Nov. 8, prices began to creep up again after OPEC+ announced the production cuts, raising suspicions Big Oil was working in tandem with OPEC+ and Russia to help Republicans regain control of Congress. The nationwide average was $3.91 per gallon of gasoline Oct. 9, AAA reported.

Congress also should reverse the 2015 change in law that allowed US oil companies to export crude oil overseas. The US exports around four million barrels a day.

Democrats should proceed with the NOPEC bill (S. 977) — No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels — which would allow the Justice Department to sue nations that restrain trade in oil, natural gas or any petroleum product.

The NOPEC bill easily cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee on a bipartisan basis in May, but it hasn’t come to the floor.

Politico noted, “It’s unclear if Republicans … will be eager to help Democrats address their OPEC problem at a moment when the GOP is accusing Biden’s policies of causing high fuel prices by limiting oil and gas leasing on federal lands.”

In fact, the Biden administration has noted that the oil and gas industry has more than 9,000 permits to drill on federal and Indian lands that are not being used. And oil companies claim refineries have been running at reduced capacity as older plants have been forced to shut down for maintenance. But during Biden’s first year in office, PolitiFact noted, the US produced an average of about 11 million barrels of crude oil per day compared to Trump’s 9 million barrels per day in his first year. The US Energy Information Administration in January forecasted that US oil production will average 12.4 million barrels per day in 2023, surpassing the record high for domestic crude oil production set in 2019. And Biden’s denial of a key permit for the Keystone XL pipeline on his first day in office in 2021 had negligible impact on American fuel prices, since the pipeline would carry 830,000 barrels of tar sands oil per day from Alberta, Canada, to the Texas Gulf Coast, where the tar sands would be processed for export overseas, not to gasoline pumps in the US. And the US already exports four million barrels of crude oil per day.

That won’t stop Republicans from lying about it, of course. But if gas prices go up, it’s more the GOP’s fault than Democrats’. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, November 1, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the November 1, 2022 issue

 COVER/Tony Schick 

The racism, and resilience, behind today’s salmon crisis

EDITORIAL 
Profits of perfidy


FRANK LINGO 
Put Trump the bleep in jail

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
The doctrine of Thomasism

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Rural hospitals’ profits are thin, patients are victims

DISPATCHES 
House GOP promises vengeance on Dems for doing good stuff.
Biden gives youths another reason to vote in November: steps toward decriminalizing marijuana.
Republicans go full racist to turn out their voters heading into midterm election.
Rail strike looms as union rejects White House-brokered contract proposal.
Ex-partner of Ukrainian ‘heiress’ who infiltrated Mar-a-Lago shot outside Canada resort.
‘Socialists’ pop up in the strangest places ...


ART CULLEN 
Well-fed farmers find biting hand that feeds them tastes so good

ALAN GUEBERT 
When free markets hit the frying pan, consumers often get burned


FARRAH HASSEN 
Safe tap water should be a human right

JOHN YOUNG 
Putin-smooching and so many beautiful lies

DICK POLMAN
Same con, different day: The Craven Cult cowards still dare not denounce their Don

THOM HARTMANN 
Will Powell, MBS, and Putin throw the entire world into a depression?

TOM CONWAY 
Voting to continue America’s progress


DR. CINTLI 
The pandemic of police violence & killings remains hidden

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Enter the pseudo-docs: When judges, legislators, citizens don scrubs

SAM URETSKY 
Hearing aid rules are for Socialists

SETH SANDRONSKY
Newsom sides with law enforcement on solitary confinement veto

WAYNE O’LEARY
The immigration mess

JASON SIBERT 
Russian aggression, divisions and inequalities after 3 years of COVID test UN


JOEL D. JOSEPH 
Lies Chrysler tells us


BARRY FRIEDMAN
A Rabbi and a bike

MITCHELL ZIMMERMAN
Democrats and Republicans agree on one thing: Democracy is in crisis


ROB PATTERSON 
Getting back to the island

MAUREEN BOWLING 
Revive the Child Tax Credit. Our children deserve nothing less


SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
First draft picks


GENE NICHOL 
North Carolina moves to eliminate judges


From The Progressive Populist, November 1, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Saturday, October 1, 2022

Editorial: Vote for Democracy

 For months, pundits have been predicting Republicans would win control of Congress in the midterms because that’s what usually happens. But these are not usual times.

Republicans hoped they could build outrage about inflation, particularly the rapid increase of gasoline and grocery prices as the COVID lockdown eased, and unease with cultural changes to engage White voters in the midterm elections.

House Republicans on Sept. 23 unveiled a “Commitment to America,” with an inspirational video full of scenes presented images of an imagined America that were actually taken from stock footage from Russia and Ukraine. The Commitment has four goals: “An Economy that’s Strong,” ‘A Nation That’s Safe,” “A Future that’s Built on Freedom” and “A Government that’s Accountable.” Which Joan McCarter of DailyKos read as: tax cuts for the rich, immigrant-bashing, privatizing Social Security and Medicare, and endless hours of “oversight” hearings about Hunter Biden and (probably) Hillary’s emails.

One of Biden’s first actions after taking office was to sign an executive order directing the use of taxpayer dollars to US manufacturing, increasing domestic competitiveness and rebalancing US trade. Democrats in March 2021 passed the American Recovery Plan, which extended unemployment benefits, provided a $1,400 direct economic stimulus payment to individuals and increased the Child Tax Credit to $3,600 per child under 6, which lifted 2.9 million children out of poverty and caused child poverty to fall from 9.7% in 2020 to 5.2% in 2021. ARP also provided housing assistance as well as aid to small businesses, schools and state and local governments. In November 2021, Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), which invested $1.2 trillion into rebuilding our nation’s infrastructure.

The economy boomed, adding 10 million jobs and reducing the unemployment rate to 3.5% in July, but a majority of Americans were persuaded by Republicans and their media allies that Biden’s policies hurt the economy and fueled inflation.

Then gas prices started falling, inflation eased and Democrats in August passed the $750 billion Inflation Reduction Act, a comprehensive bill that provides rebates and tax credits for renewable energy improvements targeted to reduce carbon emissions 40% by 2030, and cut health care costs for families and and prescription drug costs for seniors. It also put a 15% minimum tax on corporations that earn more than $1 billion a year and 1% tax on stock buybacks, and expanded IRS resources for tax assistance and enforcement against wealthy tax cheaters.

At the same time, although much of the inflation was due to problems in supply lines as the nation came out of the COVID lockdown and oil companies pushing fuel prices to record highs to reap record profits, the Federal Reserve was working to drive down inflation by raising interest rates, which is meant to drive down wages. That punishes workers who had gained leverage to demand higher wages when the unemployment rate was 3.5% in July. They might lose that leverage if the unemployment rate rises. 

Democrats face long but not impossible odds to keep control of the 435-seat House. Democrats now have 221, Republicans have 212 and two seats are vacant. A majority is 218 seats. Democrats were leading in the FiveThirtyEight average on generic congressional preferences by 1.9 percentage points Sept. 22, up from a 0.4-point advantage on Aug. 22. Cook Political Report finds that Democrats hold 162 solid seats, 13 seats are likely to remain Democratic and 17 seats lean Democratic, while Republicans have 188 solid seats, 13 likely Republican and 11 leaning Republican. That leaves 31 seats rated as tossups, including 22 now held by Democrats and nine now held by Republicans. If the loss of abortion rights has energized women, as recent special elections indicate, along with concerns about climate change and Republican threats to privatize Social Security and Medicare, a blue wave might well overcome Republican gerrymandering and keep Democrats in the majority.

In the Senate, 14 seats held by Democrats are up in the midterms and nine are considered solidly Democratic. Republicans are targeting five seats. Three seats, held by Mark Kelly in Arizona, Michael Bennett in Colorado and Maggie Hassan in New Hampshire, are rated as leaning Democratic. 

Two races involving Democratic incumbents, Raphael Warnock in Georgia and Catherine Cortez Masto in Nevada, are rated as tossups. Warnock faces a challenge from former football star Herschel Walker, while Cortez Masto faces former state attorney general Adam Laxalt and both races are way closer than they ought to be.

Among 21 seats now held by Republicans, Democrats hope to pick up three open seats in Pennsylvania, where Lt. Gov. John Fetterman is running a progressive populist campaign against celebrity TV doctor Mehmet Oz of New Jersey; North Carolina, where Democratic former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Cheri Beasley is running against Rep. Ted Budd, a self-described “conservative warrior”; and Ohio, where US Rep. Tim Ryan, an economic populist who has worked to bring manufacturing jobs back to the state and advance tax cuts for the middle class, faces J.D. Vance, who wrote a bestselling book about his hillbilly roots but made a fortune as a venture capitalist on Wall Street and was endorsed by Trump.

Democrats also hope to unseat Sen. Ron Johnson in Wisconsin, where Democratic Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes has led in some polls. Among Johnson’s proposals is to put Social Security and Medicare up to annual votes on whether to fund senior benefits. Democrats also hope Democratic US Rep. Val Demings can pull off an upset of Sen. Marco Rubio in Florida.

Democrats should make it clear that in a new congressional session they’ll impose windfall profits taxes on companies that abuse their ability to extort high prices from consumers. With a net gain of two senators, Democrats can get working control of the Senate and, if necessary, do away with the filibuster to pass needed legislation that Republicans have been blocking with the complicity of a couple conservative Democrats.

Republicans have offered no serious proposals to whip inflation, combat crime or reform immigration procedures. Instead, they complain that Biden helped families get back on their feet in 2021. They claim Customs and Border Patrol reporting a record 2.5 million border enforcement actions for fiscal year 2022 is somehow proof that the border is open. And their main proposal to fight crime appears to be making sure everybody is carrying a firearm, and never mind the danger of crossfire and the occasional classroom massacre. 

A month before the election, polls look good, but they’re meaningless if Democrats don’t get out the vote to keep democracy going. And vote Democratic all the way down the ballot, or Big Lie Republicans will put people in charge to steal the 2024 presidential election. 

Vote early if you can, to avoid long lines on Nov. 8. Minnesota, South Dakota, Virginia, Wyoming, Illinois and Michigan started casting ballots in September. Most states allow early voting in October. Alabama, Connecticut, Mississippi and New Hampshire don’t allow in-person early voting. There are no excuses for not voting. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, October 15, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the October 15, 2022 issue

 COVER/Cezary Podkul

What’s a pig butchering scam? Here’s how to avoid falling victim to one. 

EDITORIAL
Vote for democracy


FRANK LINGO 
New York and California lead on clean cars

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
Barbara Ehrenreich: Socialist feminist

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Who benefits from immigrant harassment?

DISPATCHES 
Republicans just can’t help but talk about cutting Social Security and Medicare. 
Republicans celebrate fascist comeback in Italy.
EPA’s new environmental justice office has its work cut out for it.
Federal government should fully fund Puerto Rico’s rapid shift to solar power.
Pandemic safety net programs prvented a rise in poverty in every state.
Supreme Court approval plummets to record low, as court expansion gains majority support.
Judge strikes down Arizona ban on bystanders recording police actions ...


ART CULLEN 
If you want a climate-smart dance, you have to pay the band

ALAN GUEBERT 
Drought, war, inflation and consumer disconnect


REBECCA KARPEN
Opportunity shouldn’t be about luck

JOHN YOUNG 
Newcomers will show us the American way

BOB BURNETT
2022 MidTerms: 10 observations


TOM CONWAY
The path forward for communities like Lost Creek

ANDREA BERNSTEIN  
For Donald Trump, information has always been power


SONALI KOLHATKAR
How Barbara Ehrenreich exposed the ‘positive thinking’ industry


THOM HARTMANN
What will the collapse of Neoliberalism bring to America & Russia? 


DR. CINTLI 
Brown Peoples: Inside the cave of Quetzalcoatl


HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
A new misery index: Meeting the people we are making miserable

SAM URETSKY 
US needs immigrants (because they get things done)

SETH SANDRONSKY 
My family and Kaiser permanente

WAYNE O’LEARY
In the good old summers time

CLAUDIA ZEQUEIRA 
The immigration game in Florida

DICK POLMAN 
America’s response to the Holocaust: We can’t whitewash our tragically imperfect past.


N. GUNASEKARAN 
War games in Asia


BARRY FRIEDMAN p. 18
November dreaming

ANTHONY COOK 
Close the Medicaid coverage gap


GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
Aiding temps and all workers

ROB PATTERSON 
History rhymes with ‘US and the Holocaust’

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
Fly me to the moon

MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
Abigail Disney rats out Mickey Mouse


GENE NICHOL 
Seditionist in hiding

From The Progressive Populist, October 15, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist

Saturday, September 17, 2022

Who Pays for Higher Ed? / Stand Up for Ukraine

 Republicans continued their 40-year war on education with their criticism of Joe Biden’s decision to wipe out as much as $20,000 in student loan debt for low-income former college students and $10,000 for middle-class ex-students. 

The Republican National Committee called the debt relief a “bailout for the wealthy. As hardworking Americans struggle with soaring costs and a recession, Biden is giving a handout to the rich.”

In fact, the $10,000 relief is limited to people who earn less than $125,000 annually (which isn’t as rich as it used to be), and the $20,000 relief is for those who had qualified for Pell grants because of their low family income.

As Thom Hartmann notes in his article on page 9, US Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted that student loan forgiveness was “completely unfair.” She’s the same Republican congresswoman who had $183,504 in Paycheck Protection Program loans forgiven, and happily banked the money without complaint or regret.

Responding to a GOP tweet whining that “If you take out a loan, you pay it back, ” the Center for American Progress listed several Republican members of Congress who had criticized the student loan relief, along with the amount of PPP loans forgiven.

Texas universities used to have among the cheapest tuition rates in the US, charging $100 a year at the University of Texas and Texas A&M in the 1970s. Today, it costs $11,448. With housing, books and other living expenses, the average expense for a Texas resident is $28,928 a year, or $115,712 for students graduating in four years, CollegeCalc,org reports. That would require a monthly payment of $1,156 for 10 years to pay off a Stafford federal loan, which has a 3.73% interest rate. (Some debtors report they are struggling with loans carrying 10% interest rates.)

A $1,156 monthly loan payment might be a heavy lift for a new Texas teacher, whose average starting salary is $40,977, or $3,414 a month. (The average rent in Texas was $685 for a one-bedroom apartment, according to RentData.org, but it’s more like $1,014 in the Houston metro area, $1,150 in Dallas MSA and $1,236 in Austin MSA.)

Teachers may qualify for the federal Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program, which forgives $17,500 of loans after five years of full-time teaching. But that still leaves a Texas teacher paying off nearly $100,000 in debt. Public service employees may qualify for loan forgiveness after they have made 120 months of qualifying payments.

Republicans in 2017 gave an actual handout to the rich, when on a party-line vote they approved a $2 trillion tax break for billionaires and corporations. Democrats should reduce college costs at the state level and increase grants in aid at the state and federal level to cover education costs (as well as vocational training) so anybody who can make the grade can attend a state university or community college.

Stand Up for Ukraine

Peace activists in the US call for a diplomatic solution to the nearly seven-month war in Ukraine, but we will have to excuse Ukrainians if they have little confidence in promises made by Russians.

“The White House and Congress are fueling this war with a steady stream of weapons instead of pushing for talks to end the conflict,” Medea Benjamin, co-founder of the peace group CodePink, said in a statement Sept. 8. “That’s why we, the people, have to rise up with a demand of negotiations, not escalation …

“Rather than push for a protracted war, the White House and Congress should support a diplomatic solution along the lines of the MINSK II Peace Accord, signed by both Ukraine and Russia in 2015, to declare Ukraine a neutral non-NATO country and hold elections in the eastern region of Ukraine,” CodePink said.

“Instead the US government has budgeted $40 billion to escalate the war with weapons, military equipment, troop training, and intelligence, with zero accountability or oversight for taxpayer dollars,” the group added. “The same amount of money could have paid for 350,000 nurses or 400,000 elementary school teachers.”

We have a great deal of respect for Medea Benjamin and CodePink, but the United States can afford to pay for nurses and schoolteachers and also help Ukraine defend its independence from Russia. We owe Ukraine for its role in reducing nuclear proliferation in Europe.

After the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the former Soviet Republic of Ukraine gained independence, but US officials were concerned that Ukraine inherited the third-largest nuclear arsenal in the world, with 1,900 strategic nuclear weapons designed to strike the US. 

In negotiations in Budapest with Russian and US officials in December 1994, Ukraine agreed to eliminate the missiles, silos and bombers on its territory, signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and transferred the nuclear warheads to Russia for disassembly.

In return, the US, Russia and Britain provided security assurances to Ukraine. The Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances committed Washington, Moscow and London, among other things, to “respect the independence and sovereignty and existing borders of Ukraine” and to “refrain from the threat or use of force” against that country.

Russian President Boris Yeltsin agreed to respect Ukraine’s independence, but since Vladimir Putin has taken over in the Kremlin, he has broken virtually all those commitments. In a 2005 Kremlin speech, Putin characterized the collapse of the Soviet Union as the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the Twentieth Century” and he appears to be intent on putting the empire back together.

Putin complained that NATO has added former Warsaw Pact nations, including former Soviet Republics Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, since the breakup, but Putin’s erratic actions have validated his neighbors’ concerns. In his 23 years in power as prime minister or president, he launched a war in Chechnya in 1999, sent Russian forces into Georgia in 2008, seized Crimea in 2014, and provided arms to separatists in eastern Ukraine, fueling a war that claimed some 14,000 lives by February 2022.

As Russia mobilized 190,000 troops on Ukraine’s border, Putin reneged on Yeltsin’s recognition of Ukraine’s right to statehood and insisted Ukraine was still part of Russia in a Feb. 21 speech. He also recognized the breakaway Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic in eastern Ukraine.

Two days later, Putin announced a “special military operation” was needed to “demilitarize and denazify” Ukraine. Russian armored forces rolled into Ukraine on Feb. 24, expecting to take Kyiv in three days. But with arms and intelligence support from the United States and other NATO members, Ukraine put up a much tougher resistance than Russian generals expected. The “three-day war” has lasted more than six months, and Ukraine forces are engaged in a counteroffensive in the east and hope not only push Russia out of the Donbas region, but also to reclaim Crimea.

Meanwhile, Putin’s military ambition has persuaded Finland and Sweden to join NATO.

The Budapest Memorandum is not a treaty, but there is a moral commitment for its signatories to protect Ukraine’s sovereignty. If that can be done by providing Ukraine with armaments to defend its territories against Russian invaders, Ukraine will carry on the fight, without US troops getting in the line of fire.

As much as you may distrust the US military-industrial complex, Joe Biden and Congress should give Ukraine what it needs, and hope Russian generals convince Putin to withdraw from Ukraine. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, October 1, 2022


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Copyright © 2022 The Progressive Populist