Tag: netroots nation
Bernie Sanders Bites Back on #BlackLivesMatter

Bernie Sanders Bites Back on #BlackLivesMatter

When Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley were onstage at the progressive activism conference Netroots Nation on July 18, they were interrupted by #BlackLivesMatter protesters, who asked them to say the names of black women who had died in police custody, a reference specifically to Sandra Bland, who had died of an apparent suicide on July 13 after being jailed for a minor traffic violation three days earlier.

Sanders, who has a history of involvement in the civil rights movement dating back to the 1960s, was criticized for appearing callous and condescending.

“Black lives, of course, matter…but if you don’t want me to be here, that’s OK,” he said as protesters booed and shouted, while he transitioned to his stump speech on economic inequality.

Although both O’Malley and Sanders were seemingly caught off guard, in the aftermath they began incorporating the protesters’ questions and assertions into their rhetoric.

O’Malley apologized shortly after the incident.

Sanders went on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday to respond. He said that, to him, #BlackLivesMatter and economic injustice are intertwined, calling them “parallel problems.”

“We have to end institutional racism, but we have to deal with the reality that 50 percent of young black kids are unemployed, that we have massive poverty in America, that we have an unsustainable level of income and wealth inequality,” he told Chuck Todd on July 26.

“As Martin Luther King told us, we have to address both.”

Sanders, as mayor and then governor of a predominantly white state, would theoretically have an advantage with his 50-plus years of civil rights activism. Despite his bona fides, he has never needed to court a black vote — a fact he’s acknowledged. And that’s where the disconnect occurs.

As Barrett Holmes Pitner, a black journalist for The Daily Beast who interned for Sanders over a decade ago explained, his messaging has little appeal to black voters and, because he comes from a tiny white state, most don’t even know who he is. “…[B]lack voices question his credibility because he has never needed to prove himself to this community. Being a champion of civil rights within a bastion of white America holds little sway with black voters.”

But now it’s time to try.

On Meet the Press, Sanders affirmed his support for what the protesters stood for.

“The issue they raised is actually a very important issue…This is an issue of concern that I strongly share,” he said, though he rejected the notion that institutional racism and inequality were two separate issues, which is the crux of the debate among many activists.

As Ryan Cooper argues in The Week, race and class are not independent of each other:

Being poor is a known factor in about every social ill. Blacks do commit more crime than whites on a per capita basis, but this is largely explained by a poverty rate that is nearly three times greater. Thus, poor neighborhoods suffer both a lot of crime and crushingly heavy policing. When they are arrested, poor people often can’t afford bail, or to hire a decent attorney, leaving them defenseless before the incarceration machine.

Poverty means constant stress and exhaustion as people struggle to balance critical needs on a tight budget — and its disadvantage is transmitted through time. Family income is tightly correlated with children’s test scores, chance of college attendance, and future class position. Money, quite simply, is power.

And it’s power that the activists are fighting against; entrenched interests that have historically dismissed their concerns. That’s why #BernieSoBlack, a hashtag mocking Sanders’ comments at Netroots Nation, trended last week.

Incorporating the language of #BlackLivesMatter seems to be Sanders’ next move on this front. In addition to attending the Southern Christian Leadership Conference — a black civil rights organization whose first president was Dr. King — over the weekend, he toured Louisiana, which has the second largest black population in the country, holding rallies and fundraisers. But while he’s got the momentum among mostly white liberal voters, blacks — and other minorities — are still waiting to see if he can effectively understand them.

Photo: Bernie Sanders at Netroots Nation, July 18, 2015. yashmori via Flickr

Senator Elizabeth Warren To Liberals: I’m Fighting Back

Senator Elizabeth Warren To Liberals: I’m Fighting Back

By Lesley Clark, McClatchy Washington Bureau

DETROIT — Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) wowed a friendly crowd of influential liberal activists Friday in Detroit, pledging to fight against Republicans and the “sleazy lobbyists” she says have rigged the rules in Washington and harmed the middle class.

Warren took the stage in a crowded ballroom to calls of “Run, Liz, run” by activists waving “Elizabeth Warren for President” signs — and did little to disappoint.

Speaking before the nation’s largest gathering of liberal activists, she railed against giant corporations, secret trade deals and Republicans she said were too cozy with big business.

“The tilt in the playing field is everywhere,” Warren said in a 15-minute speech that had the audience at the Netroots Nation on its feet. “We can whine about it, we can whimper about it or we can fight back. I’m fighting back.”

Progressives are hoping the populist Massachusetts Democrat makes a run for the presidency in 2016, challenging former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from the left. Though Warren has said she’s serving out her Senate term, which expires in 2019, her speech at times had the feel of a campaign.

She credited the activists with seeing that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which she helped develop, is up and running, declaring that it’s forced financial institutions to return more than $4 billion to consumers.

“You called out sleazy lobbyists and cowardly politicians,” she said. “You said, ‘We the people will have this agency,’ and you won the fight.”

Warren, who enjoys fervor among liberals for leading a charge to overhaul the financial system, called for more Wall Street regulations, accusing big banks of crashing the economy but continuing to “swagger through Washington blocking reform.”

Activists swooned, even if they’re not convinced she’ll run for president. She’s already proved a powerhouse this year, raising $2.6 million for other Democrats and campaigning for Senate candidates across the country.

“I love her. I would be 1,000 percent behind her,” said Mooney Gow, 52, of Sacramento, Calif., a “Warren for President” hat perched on his head as he streamed out of the ballroom. “She would move the needle to the left, and that’s her job. ”

Ready for Warren, a group that hopes to draft the senator to run for president, made a major splash at the event, handing out placards, stickers and faux straw boaters emblazoned with “Elizabeth Warren for President.”

One volunteer suggested a use for the Warren sticker: Affix it to the “Ready for Hillary” coffee tumblers that Ready for Hillary, Clinton’s campaign-in-waiting, had distributed. Clinton didn’t speak to the group.

Warren’s popularity has spurred Republicans to put her on their radar.

America Rising, a conservative group that does opposition research on Democrats, sent out a fundraising appeal this week that says it’s tracking Warren now, along with Clinton.

“Democrats are launching a campaign to draft liberal Democrat Elizabeth Warren for president,” the appeal says. “America can’t afford to let that happen.”

Activists have lauded Warren, a onetime Harvard professor, for her candor, and she didn’t mince words Friday. Though the Obama administration is pressing a major trade deal, Warren laced into the secrecy around it, saying Wall Street, pharmaceutical companies and “big polluters are smacking their lips at the possibility of rigging” the deals.

Conservatives, she charged, are “guided by an internal motto: ‘I got mine; the rest of you are on your own.’ ”

She delivered a list of liberal values, including combating climate change, raising the minimum wage, mandating equal pay, protecting Social Security and revamping immigration law. Some of her loudest applause came as she voiced opposition to the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision on contraceptives.

“She hits a chord with us,” said Cathy Casas, 59, a retiree from Tampa, Fla., who’d arrived early to secure a seat in the ballroom so as not to miss a minute of Warren. “She’s so real, so genuine. Not a plastic politician.”

Photo: Senate Democrats via Flickr

Video of Senator Warren’s speech can be seen below: