Can New Populist Agenda Harness Passions, Create Movement From Below?
Hoping they can drive a revamped public conversation and fuel a populist counter-movement from the left against an otherwise rightward lurch in the country, a coalition of progressive organizations this week is championing a new agenda designed to galvanize those demanding an economic, political, and ecological transformation in the United States.
Representing more than 2 million active members from their respective organizations in more than 32 states, the four members of the coalition—the Campaign for America’s Future, National People’s Action, US Action, and the Alliance for a Just Society—say that the nation’s numerous and interwoven crises have drawn them together during a historic moment that demands a populist response.
“The ideas in our agenda create a clear line in the sand for all candidates. At the end of the day the question is simple: do you stand with everyday people or do you stand with big-monied corporate interests?”
—George Goehl, National People’s Action”We’re in a populist moment here in America,” said Roger Hickey, co-director of the Campaign for America’s Future, on a Thursday press call. “Even conservative Republicans are telling us that and average Americans nod in agreement when Sen. Elizabeth Warren tells us that our economy and our government have been rigged in favor of the wealthy and the big corporations.”
According to Hickey, the 12-point agenda the group has unveiled—which will be featured prominently at the Populism2015 Conference running through this weekend in Washington, DC—goes well beyond what any politician is now offering. “It is an integrated platform to create jobs and sustainable prosperity,” he said.
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Isaiah Poole, CAF’s communications director, says the agenda—officially titled, — was designed to put “on notice politicians who offer workers patches and palliatives to soften the blows of actions that have served to shrink the middle class and concentrate wealth at the top. This is not about remediation. The demand is for restructuring.”
With the official announcement earlier this week of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, the groups recognize that the political horizon and media landscape is quickly fixating on 2016 and they argue the moment is crucial to make sure their clear set of progressive priorities is not pushed out of the conversation.
“There is a bottom-up progressive populist sentiment building in this country,” said George Goehl, executive director of National People’s Action, “It’s no secret that we are looking for political leadership, but we are also not waiting for that leadership. Populism2015 and the agenda we are organizing is one sign of that. The ideas in our agenda create a clear line in the sand for all candidates. At the end of the day the question is simple: do you stand with everyday people or do you stand with big-monied corporate interests?”
“When you organize, you can win. Our power is in our numbers.”
—LeeAnn Hall, Alliance for a Just SocietyFred Azcarate, executive director of US Action, says the coalition’s agenda is a set of “bold ideas” which would create an economy and democracy that works for all, not just the wealthy and powerful. The coalition, he explained, will seek to use its combined resources—including more than 600 full-time organizers nationwide—to fight for paid sick days, expanded health care coverage, federal and local budgets that put people first, quality child care and education, an increase of Social Security and other earned benefits, and a broadly shared vision of both racial and economic justice.
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