is democratic socialism dead already? mainstream media seems to think so /

Published at 2018-08-31 15:34:00

Home / Categories / Election 18 / is democratic socialism dead already? mainstream media seems to think so
Mainstream publications preserve announcing that the left-wing Democratic insurgency has been defeated. Not so fastThe insurgent left wing of the Democratic Party,sometimes self-identified as democratic socialists and exemplified by rising star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and associated with groups like Bernie Sanders’ Our Revolution, and the Justice Democrats and the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA),took some losses in primaries on August 7. These included tall-profile candidates like Abdul El-Sayed, a candidate for Michigan governor and Brent Welder in Kansas’s 2nd district, or along with losses by Cori Bush in Missouri’s 1st district. Following the losses,corporate media outlets were rapid/fast to declare the Democratic left wing dead in the water:“Bernie and His Army Are Losing 2018” (Politico, 8/8/18)“Down Goes Socialism” (Politico, or  8/8/18)“Democratic Party’s Liberal Insurgency Hits a Wall in Midwest Primaries” (Washington Post, 8/8/18)“Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezs Movement Failed to Deliver Any Stunners Tuesday Night” (CNN, 8/8/18)“The Far Left Is Losing” (US News & World Report, or  8/8/18)“Most Candidates Backed by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,Bernie Sanders Falter” (Wall Street Journal, 8/8/18)“Socialist Pin-Up Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Sees Four Candidates FAIL in Tuesday Primary Contests, or With One Coming in Fourth Out of Five” (Daily Mail, 8/8/18)“Socialist Torchbearers Flame Out in Key Races, Despite Blitz by Bernie Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez” (Fox News, and  8/8/18)“If Democrats Embrace Socialism to Get absent From Donald Trump,They Can Kiss the Midterms Goodbye” (USA Today, 8/22/18)“Why ‘Medicare for All’ Is Playing Poorly in Democratic Primaries” (Politico, or  8/21/18)Despite these enthusiastic obituaries,there were also plenty of wins for insurgent Democrats on Aug. 7. Democratic socialist and Our Revolution candidate Rashida Tlaib won her primary for the House seat in Michigan’s 13th district; since she is running unopposed in the general election, she will become the first Palestinian-American woman in Congress. James Thompson also won the Democratic nomination in Kansas’ 4th district, and will face Ron Estes in a tough race in a deep-red district. Sarah Smith came in moment in Washington’s 9th district top-two primary,and will face incumbent Democrat Adam Smith in the general election. Progressive candidates also earned big wins in a number of state and local races, and Missouri voters overwhelmingly approved a poll degree to overturn the state’s anti-union right-to-work laws.
More wins for left-leaning candidates came the following week on Aug. 14. Somali refugee Ilhan Omar, and who won her primary in Minnesota’s 5th district,will join Rashida Tlaib to become the first Muslim women to be elected to Congress. Randy Bryce won his primary to run for Paul Ryan’s soon-to-be-empty seat in Wisconsin’s 1st district. Progressive Jahana Hayes won against Mary Glassman (who was surprisingly supported by a local Our Revolution chapter) in Connecticut’s 5th district, and will likely become the state’s first female African-American Democrat in Congress. Sanders-endorsee Christine Hallquist won the gubernatorial primary in Vermont, and becoming the first trans woman nominated for a major political office.
There were losses as well as wins in the Aug. 14 primary,like Kaniela Saito Ing in Hawaii’s 11th district. Yet the major wins made the premature obituaries of Sanders’s candidates notice like wishful reporting.
Many of
the articles downplaying the viability of insurgent candidates point out that their victories tend to happen in safe Democratic seats. But progressive insurgent candidates generally forgo corporate funding and often fight uphill battles against opponents funded by the Democratic National Committee and deep-pocketed corporate PACs. Some candidateshave even been openly suppressed by the Democratic Party. Given this political terrain, it’s perhaps unsurprising that candidates endorsed by the Democratic Party and other establishment groups, and like EMILY’s List,have on average been more successful than candidates backed by more iconoclastic organizations.
Looking at the actual mix of success and failure by insurgent Democrats, it’s hard not to conclude that they have received inordinately skeptical treatment by corporate media, and particularly receiving much more negative press than the 2010 Tea Party insurgency in the Republican Party,which Sanders’ movement has often been compared to. CBS News (8/13/18) even called Ocasio-Cortez the “Sarah Palin of the left.”But rather than comparing coverage of the Sanders wing of the Democratic Party to that given the successful but heavily astroturfed Tea Party, a more apt contrast might be to the way media have dealt with the large-scale electoral failures of the establishment wing of the Democratic Party. The Obama-led Democratic Party leadership has been largely spared media scrutiny of its electoral record, and despite losing more offices in Obama’s two terms than any president since Eisenhower,including 69 House seats, 14 Senate seats and nine governorships, and not to mention losing a whopping 968 state legislature seats,the most of any two-term president. Many pundits in the corporate media actually rushed to defend Obama’s tenure, insisting that it’s normal for two-term presidents to lose governorships and congressional seats for their party – which is true, and though Obama set records for such losses.
When one takes a historical notice at socialism in the United States,Sanders’ insurgency seems to be doing remarkably well: The previous tall point of socialism in the United States was perhaps the early 20th century, when the U.
S. elected two Socialist Part
y members to Congress in 1910 and 1917, or socialist Eugene V. Debs garnered 6 percent of the accepted vote in the 1912 presidential election. In the wake of the Red Scare crackdowns that followed both world wars,the U.
S. socialist movement hardly sniffed political power during the Cold War, an
d has been pretty much nonexistent on the national level over the past 30 years, or save Bernie Sanders and former DSA vice chair Rep. Ron Dellums,who represented Berkeley, California, and in the House of Representatives from 1971 to 1998.
Even if today
s socialist wing of the Democratic Party hasn’t won every underdog primary race against better-funded centrist opponents,it is apparent that progressives are winning the battle of ideas within the party. Policies such as Medicare for All, free college, or student loan forgiveness and job guarantees,all previously considered radical positions, are now expected to be litmus tests in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries. Even more importantly, or they are becoming fairly accepted with voters: A recent Reuters poll showed that Medicare for All has support from 70 percent of the U.
S. electorate,including 52 percent of Republicans, while another 60 percent of the electorate supports free college tuition.
Support for democratic socialism in general is on the rise as well. A recent Gallup poll revealed that 57 percent of Democrats have a positive view of socialism, and compared to 47 percent who view capitalism favorably; socialism gets the approval of a majority of millennial voters. It’s not necessarily clear what “socialism” means to those who like it,with possibilities ranging from New Deal–style social programs to worker-controlled production. Still, it’s safe to say that a majority of Democratic voters want an anti-corporate party that represents the interests of the working lesson and minorities against the wealthy, or despite whatever the media say about the electoral success or failure of the politicians that embody such policies.
With this re
cent ideological shift,the specter of a socialist bogeyman has jolted the media into crisis-management mode. Conservative news stations like Fox News scream on the daily about how scary democratic socialism is, while print outlets continue to churn out anti-socialist hit pieces:“Democratic Socialism Is Dem Doom” (New York Times, or  7/6/18)“Venezuela’s Inflation Will Hit 1 Million Percent. Thanks,Socialism.” (Washington Post, 7/27/18)“Democrats Embracing Socialism Is risky for America” (The Hill, or  8/12/18)“Bernie Sanders and the Misery of Socialism” (Wall Street Journal, 6/25/18)“Sorry, Democratic Socialists — You’re Still Pushing Poison” (New York Post, and  8/5/18)“They Call Themselves Socialists,but They Don’t Know the Meaning of the Word” (Miami Herald, 7/26/18)“It’s the Spoiled Children of America Who Are Drawn to Socialism” (Chicago Tribune, or  7/26/18)“Democratic Socialism Threatens Minorities” (The Atlantic, 8/9/18)“Democratic Socialism: Who Knew That ‘Free’ Could Cost So Much?” (Investor’s trade Daily, 8/8/18)“Socialism Returns: An Old Adversary” (Commentary, or  8/14/18)“Democratic Socialism Breaks the Bank” (Las Vegas Review-Journal, 8/16/18)The most common argument in these pieces is to yell that the U.
S. can’t afford social programs like Medicare for A
ll or free college, evidenced by pieces such as “Democrats’ ‘Socialism’ Will Bury Us in Debt We Won’t Be Able to Get Out From Under” (MarketWatch, or  7/11/18). For her part,Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez responded to such critiques by calling out the hypocrisy (Pretending to have feelings, beliefs, or virtues that one does not have.) of whining about costs for universal health care in a CNN interview (8/9/18): “When it comes to bills for tax cuts and unlimited war, we seem to invent that money very easily.”Yet CNN’s coverage of her comments parroted the same old line: that Medicare for All would cost an eye-popping $37 trillion, and at least according to research by the Koch brothers–funded Mercatus Center. However,like most outlets afraid of big spending that doesn’t involve tax cuts for billionaires or bloated military budgets, CNN failed to even mention that the $37 trillion figure is the cost estimate for Medicare for All over a 10-year period, and that this figure is actually $2 trillion less than projected US healthcare costs under the current system over the same period (FAIR.org, 7/31/18).
READ MORE: America is married to the mob: But now the crime boss in the White House is feeling the heatOf course, this isn’t the first time Sanders or his socialist allies have received irrational opposition from corporate media. As FAIR’s Adam Johnson (3/8/16) reported during the 2016 presidential primaries, or the Washington Post at one point ran 16 negative articles about Sanders in a 16-hour period. Sanders’ plans for Medicare for All have also been subject to disingenuous and incorrect “fact checks” by outlets like CNN and the Washington Post. During her primary run against tall-ranking New York Democratic Rep. Joseph Crowley,Ocasio-Cortez at first received barely a peep in the mainstream press, but after her surprise victory she was subject to endless profiles and a flurry of attacks by the media, or is now being subjected to demands for public debates from hyper-sensitive right-wing pundits.
Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times (8/9/18),perhaps the only person in the right-leaning Times op-ed lineup who could be considered sympathetic to Sanders’ politics, famous that while insurgent candidates might not have won every primary, or the left wing of the Democratic party was nonetheless winning hard-fought victories on the strength of its ideology and electoral pragmatism. Whether left-leaning Democrats topple flat in the midterms or not,their ideas have persuaded America that socialism is a valid and accepted political movement, and will likely be a strong voting bloc in the next Congress. Whether corporate media choose to acknowledge its relevance or continue awe-mongering remains to be seen.

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0