Elizabeth Warren Offers Democrats More Than a 2016 Candidacy—She Offers a 2014 Agenda [View all]
John Nichols
DetroitElizabeth Warren says she is not running for president in 2016despite the enthusiastic Run, Liz, Run chanting that erupted when the senator from Massachusetts took the stage at this years Netroots Nation conference. But Warren came to Detroit with the platform on which Democrats should be running in 2016.
And in 2014.
Warren is frequently described as a populist. And she can certainly frame her message in populist terms, as was well illustrated by the strongest statement of her Friday Netroots Nation address: A kid gets caught with a few ounces of pot and goes to jail, but a big bank launders drug money and no one gets arrested. The game is rigged.
But as the Rev. William Barber, of North Carolinas Moral Mondays movement, reminded the conference in a Thursday evening keynote address, populism is not an ideology or a program unto itself. Populism can go left or go right. Populism can be cogent or crude. What matters is the vision that underpins a populist appeal.
What Elizabeth Warren brought to the Netroots Nation gathering was a progressive vision that is of the momenta vision rooted in the understandings that have been established in the years since the Republican wave election of 2010. As Republicans in Congress practiced obstructionism, and as an increasingly activist Supreme Court knocked down historic democratic protections, Republican governors aggressively attacked labor rights, voting rights and womens rights. Citizens responded with rallies, marches and movementsin state capitals, on Wall Street, across the country. They developed a new progressive vision that is more aggressive and more precisely focused on economic and social justice demands, and on challenging the power of corporations and their political allies.
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