Late last night I was feeling defeated, shame on me. I surfed over to the Intercept and read Ryan Grimm's report on the Rev. Jackson's endorsement of Bernie...and I was lifted up ! BTW, you can sign up for all of Ryan's reports, they are as the following all superlative.
~ From The Intercept:
Rainbow Coalition Comes Full Circle As Jesse Jackson Endorses Bernie Sanders
by, Ryan Grim
"Michigan holds a special place in the memory of Jesse Jackson and the supporters of his insurgent 1988 presidential campaign. It was Jackson’s Nevada, the moment that the party establishment realized this campaign it had long written off might just seize the nomination.
At a rally in Michigan on Sunday, Jackson will endorse Sanders ahead of a do-or-die primary for the Vermont senator.
Jackson’s Michigan contest in 1988 fell on March 27. After more than three dozen primaries and caucuses, a crowded presidential field had been winnowed down to three serious contenders: Michael Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor and presumed frontrunner; Missouri Rep. Dick Gephardt; and Jackson, a former close aide to Martin Luther King Jr. and the public bearer of the civil rights movement’s torch.
Joe Biden, then a senator from Delaware, had dropped out of the race following a plagiarism scandal and dismal polling numbers.
Given Gephardt’s hard-hat, working-class brand, he badly needed a win in Michigan. He threw everything he had left into the state. Dukakis, too, wanted Michigan — to show that his appeal extended beyond the liberal confines of Harvard Square, and that he could win back those Reagan Democrats whose defection had cost Jimmy Carter reelection.
Jackson spent that election day touring Detroit, hitting black churches and five different housing projects. The New York Times’ legendary political reporter, R.W. Apple, was on hand for the last minute push. Jackson, Apple observed in his election night dispatch, “had drawn surprisingly large crowds of both blacks and whites in the last few days,” adding that despite the black establishment’s support of Michael Dukakis — Detroit Mayor Coleman Young was backing Dukakis — Jackson won some Detroit neighborhoods by 15 or 20 to one. “But the surprise was the Chicago clergyman’s powerful showing in predominantly white cities like Lansing, Flint, Kalamazoo and Battle Creek, several of which he carried.”
Indeed, Jackson did more than get out the black vote. Progressive white voters in the state also rallied hard to his cause. (Dean Baker, now a prominent progressive economist, was district director for Jackson in Ann Arbor.)
The energy of the moment comes through in the Times dispatch. “So dramatically did [Jackson] seize the public imagination that he was able to counter successfully the notion that Mr. Dukakis was the Democrat with the best chance of nomination,” the Times wrote.
Jackson, after 37 primaries and caucuses, was now effectively tied with Dukakis in the delegate count — a stunning moment in American politics that has gone down the memory hole.
The victory generated two polar opposite responses in Washington, D.C., and Burlington, Vermont, both of which would have profound implications for the future of the party.
In Burlington,
the city’s independent mayor, an outspoken supporter of Jackson, had to
decide if he would engage directly with the Democratic Party in order
to help Jackson win. After the Michigan victory, Bernie Sanders went all
in, calling a local press conference and announcing that he would be participating in the April Democratic caucus to back Jackson. “I
am the only non-Democrat, non-Republican, independent progressive mayor
in the United States of America. OK, it is awkward, I freely admit, it
is awkward for me to walk into a Democratic Party caucus, believe me, it
is awkward. I am not a Democrat. Period,” he said.
But he said the stakes were too high, and the opportunity too great, to stand aside on principle. Jackson, he argued, could remake the Democratic Party in an image of social justice. “So while in fact, he may end up losing some conservative white votes, some racist white votes, I think there is a real chance that he could do what [Walter] Mondale couldn’t do in a million years. That is to bring millions and millions of poor people and working people into the political arena who in the past never participated.”
But he said the stakes were too high, and the opportunity too great, to stand aside on principle. Jackson, he argued, could remake the Democratic Party in an image of social justice. “So while in fact, he may end up losing some conservative white votes, some racist white votes, I think there is a real chance that he could do what [Walter] Mondale couldn’t do in a million years. That is to bring millions and millions of poor people and working people into the political arena who in the past never participated.”
'Pick up your sling shot, pick up your rock, declare our time has come, a new day has begun!’ — Rev. Jesse Jackson's iconic ‘David and Goliath’ speech from 1984 is just as relevant today pic.twitter.com/uCbW2W5UFy— NowThis (@nowthisnews) February 6, 2020
In
Washington, though, the reaction was pandemonium. Just as party leaders
melted down publicly after Sanders’s win in the Nevada caucuses, they
did so after Jackson’s triumph in Michigan. Talk
in the top echelons of the Democratic Party turned to panic, with David
Espo of the Associated Press reporting that the establishment feared a
general election blowout if Jackson was the nominee. Plans were being
drawn up, he reported, to draft New York Gov. Mario Cuomo to challenge
Jackson at the convention if Dukakis couldn’t stop the reverend.
E.J. Dionne, then reporting for the New York Times, captured the sense of dread.
Jackson’s opponents had argued that his proximity to the nomination would paradoxically push some white Democrats away from him. It’s all fine and good to vote for the charismatic black guy with the unifying message in 1988 — indeed, it was an anti-racist badge of honor — just not if he actually might win. The party establishment pulled the fire alarm. I asked Jackson, in an interview for my recent book, “We’ve Got People,” what kind of pressure he felt after his Michigan win. “The pressure was not on me,” he said. “It was the so-called Reagan Democrats who began sewing discord and spreading lies.”
At the April Democratic caucus in Vermont, Sanders spoke on Jackson’s behalf. The interloper’s speech did not go over well with every Democrat. As he headed back to his seat, a woman in the audience slapped him across the face, he later recounted in his 1997 book, “Outsider in the House.”
“Bernie represents direction not complexion. He stood up for me in ’88, and we won Vermont — the whitest state in the country,” Jackson recently recalled to Jeremy Scahill. On the back of the progressive coalition Sanders had organized in Vermont, Jackson won the Vermont caucuses 46 to 45 percent.
Outside of Vermont, it didn’t go as well. Jackson had been polling ahead in the next state on the calendar, Wisconsin, but the party consolidation behind Dukakis, fueled by the panic, flipped the momentum, and Dukakis took the state.
Over the next month, Dukakis would win Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, and Indiana, and while Jackson continued picking off a state here and some delegates there, the nomination contest was effectively over. As is often the case, political wisdom failed the party elite, and Dukakis was crushed by the unpopular George H.W. Bush.
Jackson’s endorsement comes in the wake of Elizabeth Warren’s departure from the race. “I will not go against Bernie, but I’ve not made a decision to endorse anybody,” Jackson said in a February episode of Intercepted. “And when we talk, I share with him observations. Same with Warren, share observations. I’m not endorsing either one at this point.”
But Jackson was clear on who he would not be supporting. “I think the idea that somehow Biden has largely inherited the black vote in South Carolina is not sound judgment,” he said. “We were saying no to Clarence Thomas; he said yes to Clarence Thomas. We were saying no to the crime bill. He said yes to the crime bill. No to the Iraq War. He said yes to the Iraq War. He’s on a different side of history. It’s his right to be there, but he might as well own up to his side of history.”
Jackson said that Biden had taken on the aura of Obama, though that misunderstood the role Biden had played on the Obama’s ticket. “Joe Biden is seen as connected to Barack. He was put on the ticket to balance the ticket not to enhance it. Barack was against the Iraq War. He was for the Iraq War. Barack was against the crime bill. He was for the crime bill. Barack was supporting Anita Hill, and Biden let Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court as a monument to his leadership in that committee. So his proximity to Barack gives the impression he is active in civil rights is clearer than it is,” Jackson said. “Biden was Barack’s right wing. With Barack out, there’s nothing left but the right wing.”
Biden isn’t offering a vision that meets the moment, Jackson said. “His message does not address the pain of our people. I’m not sure what moderate means if people don’t have affordable health care. I’m not sure what moderate, ‘I’m a moderate’ means to us. In fact, it means very little to us,” he said.
Just as Biden isn’t moderate, Jackson argued, Sanders isn’t on the left. “What Sanders represents is not the left wing,” he said. “It’s the moral center. Health care for everybody is moral. Education even for the poor without student loan debt is the moral center. Middle East policy where you recognize Israel and Palestine is the moral center.”
Ryan Grim is the author of the book “We’ve Got People: From Jesse Jackson to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the End of Big Money and the Rise of a Movement.”
~~~~~
Here is the Rev. Jackson's full statement - and BTW, just noticed Ryan Grim is covering yet another important endorsement of Bernie, "The Working Families Party'"
E.J. Dionne, then reporting for the New York Times, captured the sense of dread.
White Democratic leaders who do not support Mr. Jackson admitted they were in a quandary, wondering how to confront the growing movement toward Mr. Jackson without appearing to be racist and without alienating the large core of activists, including many white liberals, that he has attracted….Jackson, the Democratic political class argued, was simply unelectable, so the party should go with a winner like Dukakis. Rep. Barney Frank’s sister, Ann Lewis, was working for the Jackson campaign, but Frank was backing his home state governor. He explained to Dionne that there were two reasons Jackson couldn’t win. “One, there is unfortunately still racism in the country. … That doesn’t mean the whole country’s prejudiced. It means that if there’s an irreducible 15 or 20 percent prejudice against a particular group, you’re giving away an awful lot,” Frank said. “Two, he’s still to the left of the country, especially on foreign policy.”
Around Washington, the words used by leading white Democrats to describe their party’s situation included crisis, disarray, disaster, consternation, mess, and wacky.
“You’ve never heard a sense of panic sweep the party as it has in the last few days,” said David Garth, an adviser to Senator Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee.
Mr. Garth predicted that ‘”the anti-Jackson constituency, when the reality of his becoming President seeps in, may be a much bigger constituency than there is out there right now.”
Jackson’s opponents had argued that his proximity to the nomination would paradoxically push some white Democrats away from him. It’s all fine and good to vote for the charismatic black guy with the unifying message in 1988 — indeed, it was an anti-racist badge of honor — just not if he actually might win. The party establishment pulled the fire alarm. I asked Jackson, in an interview for my recent book, “We’ve Got People,” what kind of pressure he felt after his Michigan win. “The pressure was not on me,” he said. “It was the so-called Reagan Democrats who began sewing discord and spreading lies.”
At the April Democratic caucus in Vermont, Sanders spoke on Jackson’s behalf. The interloper’s speech did not go over well with every Democrat. As he headed back to his seat, a woman in the audience slapped him across the face, he later recounted in his 1997 book, “Outsider in the House.”
“Bernie represents direction not complexion. He stood up for me in ’88, and we won Vermont — the whitest state in the country,” Jackson recently recalled to Jeremy Scahill. On the back of the progressive coalition Sanders had organized in Vermont, Jackson won the Vermont caucuses 46 to 45 percent.
Outside of Vermont, it didn’t go as well. Jackson had been polling ahead in the next state on the calendar, Wisconsin, but the party consolidation behind Dukakis, fueled by the panic, flipped the momentum, and Dukakis took the state.
Over the next month, Dukakis would win Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, and Indiana, and while Jackson continued picking off a state here and some delegates there, the nomination contest was effectively over. As is often the case, political wisdom failed the party elite, and Dukakis was crushed by the unpopular George H.W. Bush.
Jackson’s endorsement comes in the wake of Elizabeth Warren’s departure from the race. “I will not go against Bernie, but I’ve not made a decision to endorse anybody,” Jackson said in a February episode of Intercepted. “And when we talk, I share with him observations. Same with Warren, share observations. I’m not endorsing either one at this point.”
But Jackson was clear on who he would not be supporting. “I think the idea that somehow Biden has largely inherited the black vote in South Carolina is not sound judgment,” he said. “We were saying no to Clarence Thomas; he said yes to Clarence Thomas. We were saying no to the crime bill. He said yes to the crime bill. No to the Iraq War. He said yes to the Iraq War. He’s on a different side of history. It’s his right to be there, but he might as well own up to his side of history.”
Jackson said that Biden had taken on the aura of Obama, though that misunderstood the role Biden had played on the Obama’s ticket. “Joe Biden is seen as connected to Barack. He was put on the ticket to balance the ticket not to enhance it. Barack was against the Iraq War. He was for the Iraq War. Barack was against the crime bill. He was for the crime bill. Barack was supporting Anita Hill, and Biden let Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court as a monument to his leadership in that committee. So his proximity to Barack gives the impression he is active in civil rights is clearer than it is,” Jackson said. “Biden was Barack’s right wing. With Barack out, there’s nothing left but the right wing.”
Biden isn’t offering a vision that meets the moment, Jackson said. “His message does not address the pain of our people. I’m not sure what moderate means if people don’t have affordable health care. I’m not sure what moderate, ‘I’m a moderate’ means to us. In fact, it means very little to us,” he said.
Just as Biden isn’t moderate, Jackson argued, Sanders isn’t on the left. “What Sanders represents is not the left wing,” he said. “It’s the moral center. Health care for everybody is moral. Education even for the poor without student loan debt is the moral center. Middle East policy where you recognize Israel and Palestine is the moral center.”
Ryan Grim is the author of the book “We’ve Got People: From Jesse Jackson to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the End of Big Money and the Rise of a Movement.”
~~~~~
Here is the Rev. Jackson's full statement - and BTW, just noticed Ryan Grim is covering yet another important endorsement of Bernie, "The Working Families Party'"
~~~~~
At some point I will be back with the local drug war events
Meanwhile...you know, I was saving this for Elizabeth Warren...well, if she ever comes around (???) we can put it up again...and I adore Jesse Jackson, always have thank you Rev !~!!
~~~~~~~
One last thing...you might be interested in signing this petition !
Marjorie -
I know that
we have a number of important primaries tomorrow, but I want to take a
moment to write about the growing threat of COVID-19, otherwise known as
the coronavirus — something I will be discussing at a roundtable in
Michigan at 3:15pm Eastern today. I hope you will tune in online to
watch.
Then, at
the end of the email I am going to ask you to take action to make it
clear that once a coronavirus vaccine is developed, it will be made
available for FREE — something Trump’s Health and Human Services
Secretary could not agree to. And, any testing, treatment, or quarantine
should be free too.
If you’re
ready to sign that petition, you can do so here. And then I’ll talk more
about this crisis and the steps we must take as a country going
forward.
Right now
in the United States, reports suggest over 500 confirmed cases across
many different states and Washington, D.C., and at least 22 deaths. But
the truth is, we cannot be sure about these numbers because the Trump
administration has completely mismanaged making coronavirus testing
available, and local clinics and hospitals are still woefully unprepared
to diagnose potential cases.
And,
unfortunately, the more we know about this developing crisis, the more
it is becoming clear that not only is the Trump administration
incompetent, but that our current dysfunctional health care system is
vastly underprepared for this pandemic.
To start,
we should not be having someone like Vice President Pence leading the
task — somebody who, to be charitable, is not a great advocate for
science in general.
Sadly, I
have very little confidence in the Trump administration to do anything
that is right or decent, or certainly based on science.
I know that we have a brilliant
president who has clearly studied this issue very intently, but this is
the guy, Donald Trump, who thinks climate change is a hoax, and just
last month was telling us that this crisis would somehow magically end
in April.
This is the
guy, Donald Trump, who said he didn’t “necessarily agree with proactive
testing,” and that we’d find out where people were infected “by
waiting.”
This is the
guy, our president, who said that we have “hundreds of thousands of
people that get better, just by, you know sitting around and even going
to work.”
And this is
the guy who, at the Centers for Disease Control, said, “maybe I have a
natural ability” to understand the deadly illness.
So no. I am not very confident in the president’s ability to manage this crisis.
The truth
is, we need real scientists and health care professionals in charge of
the coronavirus response and communicating updates to the public.
But we also
need to acknowledge what the Trump administration has not been able to
ignore: under our current, dysfunctional for-profit health care system,
people don’t go to the doctor if they cannot afford it. And during an
infectious health crisis like this one, that means that potential
carriers of the virus may not get checked out if they’re showing
symptoms.
And the
truth is, even the Trump administration has figured out that maybe it’s
not a great idea to have people who might have the virus walking around
the streets and going to work if they can’t afford health care and to
get a checkup from a doctor.
I think
even they have figured out that it’s a good idea to make sure that
people who feel sick or may have some of the symptoms actually go into a
doctor’s office.
They’ve even proposed using federal funds to pay for medical treatment of people who lack insurance.
Sounds a little bit like Medicare for All.
Imagine that.
But I’m
glad at least that they recognize it’s totally insane and dangerous to
our society that if you’re walking around and infecting other people and
you’re not going to the doctor when you should because you don’t have
insurance that is counterproductive for the whole society.
I’m glad they at least recognize that.
Small steps...
So yes,
this crisis is another clear example of why we must guarantee health
care as a right for every single man, woman and child in this country.
While some won’t get the treatment they need because they can’t afford
it, others will be hit by massive medical bills simply for doing the
right things. People will face bills in the hundreds of thousands for
hospitalization, treatment and quarantine if they need it. That must
end.
This crisis
is another example of why we need universal paid family leave in this
country, so people who are sick can stay home, recover, and prevent the
virus from spreading.
This crisis
is another example of why we must take on the greed of the
pharmaceutical industry. It is outrageous that during his Congressional
testimony, Trump’s HHS Secretary would not guarantee that a coronavirus
vaccine would be affordable to all.
The vaccine, once developed, should be free. And testing, treatment, and quarantine should be free too.
Health experts agree that the spread of the coronavirus will likely get worse before it gets better.
Donald
Trump must stop spreading lies and fear, and leave the science to
scientists and health professionals, not politicians. We must make
certain that we are prepared for a pandemic, just as we do with FEMA and
natural disasters.
Thank you for reading.
In solidarity,
Bernie Sanders
~~~~~~~
For the Working Class Families !
For the Working Class Families !
Hey Elizabeth, I have one with Bono and Springsteen...interested ???
~~~~~
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