Nov 07, 2022
Will Democrats save themselves and the country?
The big mainstream media won't do it for them. Based on their twin rules that "if it bleeds, it leads" and "both sides-ism," they're content to simply keep citing inflation and crime numbers while the Republican Party largely rotates angry slogans (Woke! Grooming! Cancel culture! Critical race theory!) with the subtlety of Russian foot soldiers. Such fears and smears crowd out any sustained coverage of the stakes, of who's lying and with what consequences.
Democrats have to hit back on two fronts -- explaining why there's inflation and then turning the tables.
How can it be that a Democratic Party that has enacted so many successful programs for middle-class families over the past years and decades is no better than tied with a GOP that would have disgusted Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Dwight Eisenhower, and even Ronald Reagan?
It's late but not too late for Democrats to retake the offensive and expose a party of corruption, repression, and plutocracy. To advance that prospect, this past spring we organized WinningAmerica.net -- 24 prominent public advocates and civic leaders offering their best language and get-out-the-vote strategies. Remember, no one of us knows more than all of us.
The result was "Crushing the GOP," a collective volume that decodes Republican disinformation and proposes three core messages beyond abortion for the campaign's final stretch -- on democracy, the economy, and Social Security.
Economy and inflation
Until now, Democrats have avoided rebutting hyperbole about inflation for fear of elevating what Republicans believe is their strongest issue. The GOP, however, has already been shouting about it from the rooftops, and you can't beat something with nothing.
Democrats have to hit back on two fronts -- explaining why there's inflation and then turning the tables.
High prices are the result of worldwide inflation, as well as the pandemic, Vladimir Putin's war, and price-gouging of consumers, since -- when it comes to gas, food, cars, etc. -- prices are set by businesses, not government.
What is the GOP plan to lower them? It has none, other than running $100 million in ads that blame Democrats while the Biden administration is striving to lower drug and energy costs and health premiums in the Inflation Reduction Act, which the GOP unanimously opposed. And this administration produced more jobs in two years than the 16 years of Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump combined, each of whom bequeathed America two steep recessions.
There must now be a relentless comparison of the economic records of Biden and Trump.
GOP vs. democracy
Although each party blames the other for the crisis of democracy, there's no comparison: Only one party started a bloody insurrection to overthrow a democratically elected government, enacted state voter suppression laws, and is mobilizing "Vote Watchers" to menace people using ballot drop boxes.
Biden got where he is by being a nice guy and an avatar of bipartisanship. His administration and party will now be judged by whether he can rise to the occasion and respond to the eternal political question, "Who's on your side?"
The focus on democracy is not mere virtue-signaling but explains why we can't fix the economy. Fair elections are the way we translate public sentiment into public laws, which won't happen when the minority party tries to stifle votes of, especially, people of color.
That's the reason Congress refuses to increase the $7.25 frozen minimum wage and extend the $300-a-month child tax credit to 58 million children.
Less democracy means less income for average families. Yes, market-driven prices are too high, but democracy is priceless.
Social Security and Medicare
Americans know they've paid into these programs over a lifetime but most don't know that the GOP wants to sabotage both. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, and Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah and Rick Scott of Florida, are threatening to refuse to raise the debt ceiling unless these programs are cut. This is an issue that can move undecided voters.
At this point, only the Biden White House has the "bully pulpit" to reach voters over the shouting of the hosts at Fox News and talk radio. Biden got where he is by being a nice guy and an avatar of bipartisanship. His administration and party will now be judged by whether he can rise to the occasion and respond to the eternal political question, "Who's on your side?"
The answer: "Republicans are dangerous extremists who are stealing your rights and wallets."
Join Us: News for people demanding a better world
Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place. We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference. Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. |
Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.
Ralph Nader
Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate and the author of "The Seventeen Solutions: Bold Ideas for Our American Future" (2012). His new book is, "Wrecking America: How Trump's Lies and Lawbreaking Betray All" (2020, co-authored with Mark Green).
Mark Green
Mark Green was the first public advocate for New York City and is the author or editor of 25 books, including including "Who Runs Congress?" (1972), "Losing Our Democracy" (2004), and "Wrecking America: How Trump's Lies and Lawbreaking Betray All" (2020), co-authored with Ralph Nader. His new book—"Inflection Election: Democracy or Fascism in 2024?" (Skyhorse Publishing)—is out later this month.
Will Democrats save themselves and the country?
The big mainstream media won't do it for them. Based on their twin rules that "if it bleeds, it leads" and "both sides-ism," they're content to simply keep citing inflation and crime numbers while the Republican Party largely rotates angry slogans (Woke! Grooming! Cancel culture! Critical race theory!) with the subtlety of Russian foot soldiers. Such fears and smears crowd out any sustained coverage of the stakes, of who's lying and with what consequences.
Democrats have to hit back on two fronts -- explaining why there's inflation and then turning the tables.
How can it be that a Democratic Party that has enacted so many successful programs for middle-class families over the past years and decades is no better than tied with a GOP that would have disgusted Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Dwight Eisenhower, and even Ronald Reagan?
It's late but not too late for Democrats to retake the offensive and expose a party of corruption, repression, and plutocracy. To advance that prospect, this past spring we organized WinningAmerica.net -- 24 prominent public advocates and civic leaders offering their best language and get-out-the-vote strategies. Remember, no one of us knows more than all of us.
The result was "Crushing the GOP," a collective volume that decodes Republican disinformation and proposes three core messages beyond abortion for the campaign's final stretch -- on democracy, the economy, and Social Security.
Economy and inflation
Until now, Democrats have avoided rebutting hyperbole about inflation for fear of elevating what Republicans believe is their strongest issue. The GOP, however, has already been shouting about it from the rooftops, and you can't beat something with nothing.
Democrats have to hit back on two fronts -- explaining why there's inflation and then turning the tables.
High prices are the result of worldwide inflation, as well as the pandemic, Vladimir Putin's war, and price-gouging of consumers, since -- when it comes to gas, food, cars, etc. -- prices are set by businesses, not government.
What is the GOP plan to lower them? It has none, other than running $100 million in ads that blame Democrats while the Biden administration is striving to lower drug and energy costs and health premiums in the Inflation Reduction Act, which the GOP unanimously opposed. And this administration produced more jobs in two years than the 16 years of Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump combined, each of whom bequeathed America two steep recessions.
There must now be a relentless comparison of the economic records of Biden and Trump.
GOP vs. democracy
Although each party blames the other for the crisis of democracy, there's no comparison: Only one party started a bloody insurrection to overthrow a democratically elected government, enacted state voter suppression laws, and is mobilizing "Vote Watchers" to menace people using ballot drop boxes.
Biden got where he is by being a nice guy and an avatar of bipartisanship. His administration and party will now be judged by whether he can rise to the occasion and respond to the eternal political question, "Who's on your side?"
The focus on democracy is not mere virtue-signaling but explains why we can't fix the economy. Fair elections are the way we translate public sentiment into public laws, which won't happen when the minority party tries to stifle votes of, especially, people of color.
That's the reason Congress refuses to increase the $7.25 frozen minimum wage and extend the $300-a-month child tax credit to 58 million children.
Less democracy means less income for average families. Yes, market-driven prices are too high, but democracy is priceless.
Social Security and Medicare
Americans know they've paid into these programs over a lifetime but most don't know that the GOP wants to sabotage both. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, and Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah and Rick Scott of Florida, are threatening to refuse to raise the debt ceiling unless these programs are cut. This is an issue that can move undecided voters.
At this point, only the Biden White House has the "bully pulpit" to reach voters over the shouting of the hosts at Fox News and talk radio. Biden got where he is by being a nice guy and an avatar of bipartisanship. His administration and party will now be judged by whether he can rise to the occasion and respond to the eternal political question, "Who's on your side?"
The answer: "Republicans are dangerous extremists who are stealing your rights and wallets."
Ralph Nader
Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate and the author of "The Seventeen Solutions: Bold Ideas for Our American Future" (2012). His new book is, "Wrecking America: How Trump's Lies and Lawbreaking Betray All" (2020, co-authored with Mark Green).
Mark Green
Mark Green was the first public advocate for New York City and is the author or editor of 25 books, including including "Who Runs Congress?" (1972), "Losing Our Democracy" (2004), and "Wrecking America: How Trump's Lies and Lawbreaking Betray All" (2020), co-authored with Ralph Nader. His new book—"Inflection Election: Democracy or Fascism in 2024?" (Skyhorse Publishing)—is out later this month.
Will Democrats save themselves and the country?
The big mainstream media won't do it for them. Based on their twin rules that "if it bleeds, it leads" and "both sides-ism," they're content to simply keep citing inflation and crime numbers while the Republican Party largely rotates angry slogans (Woke! Grooming! Cancel culture! Critical race theory!) with the subtlety of Russian foot soldiers. Such fears and smears crowd out any sustained coverage of the stakes, of who's lying and with what consequences.
Democrats have to hit back on two fronts -- explaining why there's inflation and then turning the tables.
How can it be that a Democratic Party that has enacted so many successful programs for middle-class families over the past years and decades is no better than tied with a GOP that would have disgusted Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Dwight Eisenhower, and even Ronald Reagan?
It's late but not too late for Democrats to retake the offensive and expose a party of corruption, repression, and plutocracy. To advance that prospect, this past spring we organized WinningAmerica.net -- 24 prominent public advocates and civic leaders offering their best language and get-out-the-vote strategies. Remember, no one of us knows more than all of us.
The result was "Crushing the GOP," a collective volume that decodes Republican disinformation and proposes three core messages beyond abortion for the campaign's final stretch -- on democracy, the economy, and Social Security.
Economy and inflation
Until now, Democrats have avoided rebutting hyperbole about inflation for fear of elevating what Republicans believe is their strongest issue. The GOP, however, has already been shouting about it from the rooftops, and you can't beat something with nothing.
Democrats have to hit back on two fronts -- explaining why there's inflation and then turning the tables.
High prices are the result of worldwide inflation, as well as the pandemic, Vladimir Putin's war, and price-gouging of consumers, since -- when it comes to gas, food, cars, etc. -- prices are set by businesses, not government.
What is the GOP plan to lower them? It has none, other than running $100 million in ads that blame Democrats while the Biden administration is striving to lower drug and energy costs and health premiums in the Inflation Reduction Act, which the GOP unanimously opposed. And this administration produced more jobs in two years than the 16 years of Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump combined, each of whom bequeathed America two steep recessions.
There must now be a relentless comparison of the economic records of Biden and Trump.
GOP vs. democracy
Although each party blames the other for the crisis of democracy, there's no comparison: Only one party started a bloody insurrection to overthrow a democratically elected government, enacted state voter suppression laws, and is mobilizing "Vote Watchers" to menace people using ballot drop boxes.
Biden got where he is by being a nice guy and an avatar of bipartisanship. His administration and party will now be judged by whether he can rise to the occasion and respond to the eternal political question, "Who's on your side?"
The focus on democracy is not mere virtue-signaling but explains why we can't fix the economy. Fair elections are the way we translate public sentiment into public laws, which won't happen when the minority party tries to stifle votes of, especially, people of color.
That's the reason Congress refuses to increase the $7.25 frozen minimum wage and extend the $300-a-month child tax credit to 58 million children.
Less democracy means less income for average families. Yes, market-driven prices are too high, but democracy is priceless.
Social Security and Medicare
Americans know they've paid into these programs over a lifetime but most don't know that the GOP wants to sabotage both. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, and Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah and Rick Scott of Florida, are threatening to refuse to raise the debt ceiling unless these programs are cut. This is an issue that can move undecided voters.
At this point, only the Biden White House has the "bully pulpit" to reach voters over the shouting of the hosts at Fox News and talk radio. Biden got where he is by being a nice guy and an avatar of bipartisanship. His administration and party will now be judged by whether he can rise to the occasion and respond to the eternal political question, "Who's on your side?"
The answer: "Republicans are dangerous extremists who are stealing your rights and wallets."
We've had enough. The 1% own and operate the corporate media. They are doing everything they can to defend the status quo, squash dissent and protect the wealthy and the powerful. The Common Dreams media model is different. We cover the news that matters to the 99%. Our mission? To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. How? Nonprofit. Independent. Reader-supported. Free to read. Free to republish. Free to share. With no advertising. No paywalls. No selling of your data. Thousands of small donations fund our newsroom and allow us to continue publishing. Can you chip in? We can't do it without you. Thank you.