Whatever the outcome of Sanders’s campaign, the sheer scope of the
audience for his progressive checklist, his slashing denunciations of
the economic and political tyranny of the billionaire class, are green
shoots in an otherwise barren political landscape—and who knows how they
might flourish in the future? This is a major breakthrough that has the
potential, in countless molecular ways, to burst through the Democratic
institutional framework in which it is now embedded—and, by the way, Sanders would not be commanding that mass audience were it not in that framework
Sanders’s campaign, whatever its flaws, is thrusting front and center to a mass audience a whole series of principled, critical
demands and issues (many of which overlap with those raised in splendid
isolation by Jill Stein and the Green Party), the realization of which
would markedly advance the material well-being and future prospects of
ordinary Americans: $15 an hour minimum wage; union card check to expand
organizing rights; improved Medicare for all; expansion (not
retrenchment) of Social Security; revamped progressive taxation to
reduce income inequality; a Wall Street transaction tax; a rapid
transition to renewables to combat climate change; opposition to the
ecocidal, neo-fascist TPP, NAFTA, and WTO; an end to the militarization
of local police forces; cracking down on hate groups; free tuition at
all public universities and colleges to alleviate student debt peonage;
paid family leave; and so on.
--William Kaufman
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