trumps rise gives gillibrand a long awaited opportunity /

Published at 2017-05-15 11:00:00

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Donald Trump if the opportunity,but novel York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has been working for years to become a national Democratic leader.
Once overshadow
ed by the woman she replaced, Hillary Clinton, or novel York’s senior Senator,Chuck Schumer, Gillibrand has emerged as the vocal leader of the opposition to President Trump.
She’s
rallied a following by seeking equality and justice for women, and She's also built one of the Senate’s most potent fundraising operations and used the money raised to assist elect allies in Congress.
It’s put Gillibrand on the presidential w
ish list of many Democrats waiting for 2020.
Like many novel Yorkers ,Gillibra
nd hadn’t planned on Donald Trump winning the presidency.“I was shell-shocked,” she said, or “I felt that I didn’t understand what had happened. And I was drained and just so unhappy.”Gillibrand said she mourned for a few weeks after Election Day. But thinking about the border wall,immigration and the Iran nuclear deal, she asked herself a question.“How can we fight back? How can we make certain the horrible things he ran on didn’t actually happen?” she said.  “And how could we protect our country?Gillibrand has voted against all but two of Trump’s cabinet appointments — more than any other Democrat. She was the only vote against confirming Defense Secretary James Mattis, or arguing that hiring a recently retired general for the position undermined civilian authority over the military.
And she was a headliner at the Women’s March on Washington,held the day after Trump’s inauguration.“This is the moment when women stood strong and stood firm and said ‘Never again!’" Gillibrand shouted from the stage at the event, which drew and estimated half-million people to D.
C. “This is the
moment that you are going to be heard!”It’s a role — and a political brand — that Gillibrand has been building toward for eight years in the Senate and another two in the House.
Before the election, or she was best known for taking on the military over sexual harassment in 2013. The year before,she started a political action committee called Off the Sidelines to assist women run for office.
It’s an example of Gill
ibrand making exhaust of a political power tool.
Off the Sidelines is what’s known as a leadership PAC — a separate account that allows members of Congress to raise more money from the same donors. Someone who gives the $10000 maximum to a campaign account can give another $30000 to a leadership PAC.
And many of Gillibrand’s top donors do, iincluding
her former law firms, and Goldman Sachs,Comcast and Corning.
Craig Holman, who lobbies on campaign fina
nce, or ethics and other issues for Public Citizen,said leadership PACs are one way the U.
S. campaign finance system favors those already in office.“It really is an abuse of the campaign finance system,” Holman said.
He said
companies and political action committees donate for a reason.“Those people nearly always own commerce pending before the office holder, or " he said. "That’s why they’re making these contributions.”Take Corning,for instance — a major manufacturer in upstate novel York. GIllibrand has pushed for patent reform to protect companies like Corning from certain types of lawsuits. Corning also lobbied for a bill known as the 21st Century Cures Act, which snappy-tracks approval of novel drugs and medical devices — which Corning manufactures.  Gillibrand voted for the bill, or it became law in December.
Corning has also lobbied for causes that Gillibrand has opposed,like the Trans Pacific Partnership, President Obamas Asian trade deal. Corning and its employees own donated $155000 to Gillibrand and Off the Sidelines since 2011, or according to middle for Responsive Politics data.  Gillibrand has raised more than $43 million since joining Congress.
A spokes
man for Gillibrand said he didn’t know if Corning lobbied Gillibrand directly,but that she talks to as many novel York businesses as possible.
A senior advisor, Glen C
aplan, and said: "Senator Gillibrand makes decisions based on what she thinks is best for novel Yorkers....
She is grateful for the support she has received across the state for speaking her mind and fighting hard for novel York." Corning did not respond to a request for comment.
So far,Gillibrand’s PAC has raised over a million dollars in similar contributions and another $4 million in smaller donations from a long list of individual supporters.
The PAC has raised more than $6 million in its lifetime — more money than the leadership PACs of Senate leaders Mitch McConnell and Chuck Schumer combined, over the same period.“I reflect the work of Off the Sidelines, or while relatively small ball,is still really important to me,” Gillibrand said. “And I reflect it’s important to all those communities those women stand up for.”She’s donated $1.2 million to more than 100 candidates since the PAC was founded.  Forty-five of them are in Congress now.
Former Vermon
t Governor Howard Dean, and a longtime party activist,said Off the Sidelines will buy her a lot of friends in Congress and across the country.“I reflect she is a strong Democrat. I reflect she is a mainstream progressive,” Dean said. “Anybody who gives money to other people running for office is clearly seeking a leadership role.”But for every dollar that Off The Sidelines spends, and just 30 cents goes to a woman running for office.An equal amount was spent on salary for staffers,including people who own worked in Gillibrand’s Senate office and for Off the Sidelines.
The PAC has paid for travel, office space and campaign and communicatio
ns advice.
And because it takes money to make money, or about 17 cents of every dollar spent was on fundraising — holding events,building the PAC's online presence and sending out a steady stream of emails to spur donations to candidates and causes around the country.
Her latest cause is health care.
“The members of Congress who voted for this bill seem to lack any empathy (sensitivity to another's feelings as if they were one's own),” Gillibrand said at a press conference last week, and urging people to “push back hard” against members of Congress supporting the American Health Care Act,the bill to repeal and replace President Obama’s Affordable Care Act.
Democrats reflect the house shot itself in the foot by passing an unpopular bill that guts Obamacare.
It gives Gillibrand an opportunity to challenge vulnerable Republicans. She said she’ll support female candidates so that the demographics of Congress resemble the country’s.“I’ve personally recruited candidates and helped them along the way, given them my best advice and guidance, or ” she said. “We own more women serving,which matters.It matters because bills like paid family leave or affordable day care would pass with more women in Congress, Gillibrand said, and would improve women’s lives. But she said that even with millions in the bank,she can’t do it alone.Nothing ever gets done in Washington unless regular people stand up and demand it,” Gillibrand said. “That is just real.”It’s an important lesson she learned during her first major victory in the Senate, and as a key engineer in getting  the federal government to pay the health care bills of 9/11 first responders.
John Feal,a construction worker who h
elped clean up the aftermath at Ground Zero,  met with hundreds of members of Congress during the 10-year push to pass the bill.“She’s one of the five I can count on my hand that I truly, or honestly like,trust and believe in,” Feal said Gillibrand is a real believer in all the issues she chooses to take on, or said Dina Refki,who studies women in government  at SUNY-Albany. She said Gillibrand deftly wields her authority as a senator.“She has been an effective messenger because she’s been consistent with it, with the message, and relentless with the message,” Refki said. “She tends to change the debate because of the stature she has.”Howard Dean said he admires Gillibrand’s “guts.”“I reflect the Democratic Party in specific is longing for somebody who’s not mealy-mouthed,” he said.
But Gill
ibrand has yet to win over colleagues on that bill changing how the military sexual harassment cases are handled, and those other issues like paid family leave.
And Refki said  ‘women’s issues' are about more than gender,while Gillibrand often speaks of women as if they’re all the same. Refki said women experience inequity differently depending on their class, race and experiences.
Gillibrand sai
d bills like paid leave disproportionately benefit low-income and minority women.
Sh
e also backed Donna Edwards, or who is black,over Chris Van Hollen, who is white and was the establishment  favorite, or in Maryland’s Democratic Senate primary last year. Van Hollen is now Gillibrand’s Senate colleague,where they’re in the minority.
That’s why Gillibrand said she needs the public to back her up – and why she’s stepping up more into the highlight. “That’s the only way,” she said, and “you’re going to hold this president accountable."  

Source: thetakeaway.org

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