The movement of which we are all a part will restore a wounded America's promise. Because our agenda has not been completely fulfilled, we will be continuing this blog under the rubric of “Our Unfinished Work". This new approach will be shorter and will deal every two weeks with a single issue or challenge. Each time it will include specific action steps we can carry out. Please stay with me as we protect and take advantage of our gains and build toward the fall of 2022. If you are not already on our mailing list, please click here to be added to our list. You can also follow me on Facebook where you can read and share these messages.
You can read analyses of when and how Donald Trump will ultimately acknowledge the impending presidency of Joe Biden. You can review Senate scenarios. You can check in on arguments between Democrats, thankfully focused for the most part on future public policies. Or, you could do the right thing, set all those things aside for a minute, and then let your heart nearly burst with gladness and relief. Let your wounded soul heal a bit. Celebrate. Do not permit yourself to move away from this moment of victory too quickly.
Refugees, we are saying goodbye to Stephen Miller, whose idea was to exact maximum pain upon you. Students, Betsy Devos is exiting, after not supporting public education in any way. Americans who don’t think the Justice Department should be a presidential law firm, say so long to Bill Barr. Jared Kushner, we are thrilled you are leaving but we will hear more about how you unsuccessfully deployed your college friends as the front line in the virus battle. Mike Pompeo, soon Trudeau, Merkel and Macron will not be obliged to return your calls. EPA administrator Andrew Wheeler, all of those executive orders you enforced will become unenforceable.
Most of all, Donald Trump, we have no illusions that your legendary mean-spiritedness will cease, or that you will develop new allegiance to the truth. You will continue your sullying and bullying. We know you will have to be watched, and opposed, and fact-checked, and we are definitely up to that task. We are your worst nightmare. We are not going to go away. We are happy that you aren’t going to be living in our House any more.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris emphasize that possibility is the word that guides us going forward. Week by week, we will need the same relentlessness that made us successful on November 3. And, to follow their leadership, we must fully understand what we won and what we must still secure.
What we have already won is huge. Soon after his inauguration, Joe Biden will reconnect to NATO, recommit to the Paris Accords, rejoin the World Health Organization and rescind current travel bans placed on Muslim countries. From that point on, he will be our leader in ending the virus and its grip on America, and the resultant rebuilding of the economy. He will be the appointer of judges, and the creator and sustainer of global alliances. He will be the manager of thousands of talented people who will return federal agencies to their mandates. Notably, he will take over the executive powers and fashion the executive orders which have been the province of Trump. On that front, in a few months he will undo virtually all that Trump has done.
With regard to the anticipated behavior of the Senate, it is way too early for pundits to grant Mitch McConnell superpowers. Regardless of who wins the two runoff races in Georgia, McConnell’s role in 2015 is an imperfect analogy to what will emerge in 2021. Biden will get tax policy leverage because current individual rates expire in 2025. The House speaker is Democrat Nancy Pelosi, not Republican Paul Ryan. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski and Mitt Romney are in a different position relative to their party.
However, regardless of the Georgia results, the Senate makeup will make it impossible for Joe Biden to get anywhere near everything he wants from Congress. In these two years, he will be able to expand the Affordable Care Act and (with the help of executive orders), significantly address climate change. Neither of these two efforts will be as expansive as Biden had hoped.
These battles will put immense pressure on the 2022 elections, where there will be 34 Senate races, including 22 Republican seats. Republicans Charles Grassley of Iowa and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania have already announced their retirement, and Republicans will also have to defend their seats in North Carolina (Richard Burr) and Wisconsin (Ron Johnson.) The map advantages the Democrats, though off year elections usually favor the party that doesn’t hold the presidency.
Buoyed by defeating Trump, and by the many things Biden and Harris can do whether or not Congress has an expansive agenda, resistors are ready to continue the fight. We can start by addressing our own understandable angst over how anyone (let alone 70 million people) could buy into Donald Trump’s con.
The problem with “This makes me feel awful about America” is that it doesn’t lead to any productive path. Trump has had his own personal television channel in a nation glued to screens. He surfaced racism, homophobia, misogyny and countless conspiracy theories to attract a scary amount of voters. Trump has also accessed voter fears in these four areas which are worth recognizing, however painfully. We are better off remembering these currents than ignoring them. We will win and hold the Senate sooner, and occupy the Presidency longer.
- As pro-choicers we don’t have anything to do about it, but Trump had a number of voters whose support depends entirely upon the candidate being against the protections provided by Roe v. Wade. These voters are willing to ignore all other candidate characteristics, as they just proved.
- We want to dismiss the “socialism!” claims out of hand, especially in their bizarre application to Joe Biden. Liberals and progressive take to social media and mock the claims, wondering whether Republicans remember they embrace “socialist” programs like Medicare. This exchange is not going away, but we can improve our communication on the obvious and meaningful differences between American progressive social policy and taxation policy and the practices of Northern European countries. Many Democrats love Bernie and the party very much needs the progressive wing, but the fact that he has proclaimed himself a “democratic socialist”, is bound to make these discussions more complex.
- Trump has tapped into the decline in trust in government that has been an issue since Ronald Reagan ran against the government in his own presidential re-election campaign. Trump could not have been a worse manager of government. His mismanagement of the virus took him down, but it is still good to remember that Democrats rarely seize on stories of how they have made individual governmental programs more effective.
- Most subject to change than the three above issues is that many voters in industrial states are mourning the decline in family wage jobs for high school graduates. These jobs are sorely missed in many a community. Joe Biden is seen as responding to this problem, but other Democrats are not, which helps create an avenue for Trump’s fake populism. Even though Trump fleeced the same people in his tax “reform” this is still ground that must be taken.
As we navigate all of these matters, there is nothing sweeter than getting more votes than the other side, whatever the margin. That is what we can do on January 5 in Georgia. The two Republican candidates are spending their time attacking the election management of the Republican Secretary of State, who is being defended by the Republican attorney general. Meanwhile, their campaign themes up until now, have been working hard for President Trump. Such themes from the past will require revision. Besides, why would anyone want to bet against Stacey Abrams? Let’s stand with her by doing these three things:
1) Support Stacey Abrams’ Fair Fight | |
![]() | Ever since voter suppression cost her the Georgia governorship in 2018, Stacey Abrams has been delivering. There are countless other heroes that helped Joe Biden and Kamala Harris take Georgia, but none as indispensable as she was. She said we could do it when we hardly thought it possible. The Georgia Senatorial runoff elections are on January 5. Rev. Raphael Warnock can beat appointed incumbent Kelly Loeffler, who just survived a bitter primary. Jon Ossoff barely trailed incumbent David Perdue on November 3. Why not start this effort out right? Especially since the Georgia voter registration deadline is December 7, and especially if there is still money left in your donation jar, send a big socially distanced hug to Stacey Abrams by donating today. |
2) Put Yourself on Raphael Warnock’s List | |
![]() | Jon Ossoff has done a good job of getting the attention of supporters from around the country. We need to get strong support for Rev. Raphael Warnock, the senior minister at Martin Luther King’s church, Ebenezer Baptist in Atlanta. Rev. Warnock led the campaign for Georgia to participate in Medicaid expansion, thus delivering health care to several hundred thousand more Georgians. Unbelievably, one of the reasons why Republican Senators have not congratulated their old colleague Joe Biden is that they are afraid that it would cause Trump to be less enthusiastic in campaigning for their Georgia candidates. They think they might lose these two seats! One more reason to sign up to help Rev. Warnock today. Note his “Emergency Runoff Fund”. |
3) Send a Signal to GSA Administrator Evelyn Murphy | |
![]() | This is a big moment in the career of General Services Administration director Evelyn Murphy, who so far has been unwilling to sign the paperwork so the transition process can continue. She has a statutory duty to proceed but so far is unwilling to face the wrath of Donald Trump. Join Move On in petitioning her to do the right thing. And, email their media office at press@gsa.gov and ask when their agency is going to put their ethical requirements as public servants ahead of politics. |
For four years we worked so hard to get Donald Trump out of our nation’s House. True to prediction, “The harder the conflict the more glorious the triumph.” If we put our shoulder back to the wheel right away, there will be more to come.
David Harrison
Bainbridge Island, Washington
Thank you so much for pinpointing the areas where we need to improve our message. Those South Florida voters so worried about a socialist are really worried about a dictator, and I don't think that point was argued effectively. I remain frightened that in our current "Facts Don't Matter" world the election results may be set aside. The silence of Repubican Senators is disgraceful and it's too bad we don't have a Cicero to lecture them in their house.
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