When Kevin de León, the son of an undocumented Guatemalan immigrant and a teacher union organizer-turned-Calif. state Senate leader, stepped up to challenge Dianne Feinstein in 2018, the entire Dem Party establishment, including Obama, rushed in to make sure he posed no threat.
De León was 51 at the time and Feinstein was 85.
He ran an ad blasting Feinstein's hardline immigration comments in the 1990s: “I say return them to their own country, wherever that country may be,” she said of undocumented immigrants. huffpost.com/entry/kevin-de…
I am not saying that de León was perfect or even the right candidate for a progressive challenge.
But it's a telling example of how the Democratic establishment wields power -- harshly against challengers of all stripes and cautiously, if at all, against big business, the GOP.
This is in a state with a nonpartisan top-two system. Feinstein and de León were the top two vote getters in the primary and thus the only names on the November ballot. In other words, there was no danger of Democrats losing Feinstein's seat to a Republican.
These tactics deserve new scrutiny if Biden and Harris win, freeing up Harris' Senate seat ...
... On the rare occasions when a sitting senator retires, California's governor is allowed to appoint someone to serve there until the expiration of the term, guaranteeing the appointee will face voters for the first time as an incumbent with all the advantages that provides.
As a result, voters can go decades -- theoretically into eternity -- without getting the chance to vote in an open Senate race where newcomers have a better shot.
Thus far Gov. Newsom has not expressed interest in calling a special election and discussion has instead centered on who he'll pick: nytimes.com/2020/08/13/us/…
The good news for insurgents -- who are at the moment, clustered on the ideological left -- is that it's possible to beat the odds, just as @chesaboudin did against Suzy Loftus, whom SF Mayor London Breed had appointed to fill the vacant SF DA post: huffpost.com/entry/district…
The phenomenon of Democratic Party bosses trying to stack the deck is not limited to California.
In Georgia, a state party committee picked *the sitting state party chairwoman* to fill Rep. John Lewis' seat, rather than a placeholder: huffpost.com/entry/georgia-…
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Trump ran on: 1) Reviving manufacturing; 2) Providing universal health care; 3) Protecting Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid; 4) Lowering Rx prices; 5) Investing in infrastructure.
I encourage people following the Aaron Coleman-Stan Frownfelter election in Kansas to watch @ggreenwald's interview with Coleman in its entirety. It is a probing look at Coleman's political and personal journey. Glenn presses him very effectively too.
The portion about Coleman's adolescent abuse and revenge porn against female peers begins at 14:45 and ends at 23:00. The transcript is attached.
For those wondering, he apologizes for his comments to a relative of a victim in which he told that relative to move on.
Rather than just opine on this controversy, @ggreenwald "did the work" -- he performed original reporting that moved this story forward.
It's more than can be said of so many opinion columnists, either amateur or professional. Even Glenn's critics should commend him for it.
Some original information here:
--@DataProgress and @justicedems used a point system to grade incumbents based on viability of primary challenges.
--Internal polling showed Bowman down 30 points in May.
--The decision to focus on Engel's absence was poll-tested.
.@WorkingFamilies and @justicedems not only overcame lefty skepticism to super PACs -- they managed to get on TV a week+ before the cavalry came for Engel.
“We can really say we are using every single tool in our arsenal to put our candidates over the top,” @alexandrasiera.
New: Members of Congress from both parties asked the Federal Reserve to bail out unregulated lenders. They all received contributions from the lenders' trade group. huffpost.com/entry/wall-str… via @HuffPostPol
“It’s bad on the substance to have the Federal Reserve be lending to subprime consumer and small business lenders. It doesn’t look good when the members asking for that kind of bailout for these companies are also funded by those predatory lenders," @steelewheelz
The Federal Reserve revived a financial crisis-era program designed to bail out consumer lenders that are not banks.
Attention New York lefties: Thanks to an obscure provision in the recently enacted state budget law, Bernie is on the brink of being booted off the ballot in the June 23 primaries.
"It's a disaster": Advocates for low-income New Yorkers speak up about Gov. Andrew Cuomo's cuts to Medicaid and other programs. Cuomo also made sure to slip in a provision shanking the @NYWFP: huffpost.com/entry/governor… via @HuffPostPol
For the past few days, Cuomo had been enduring some negative press coverage for Medicaid cuts to hospitals during a pandemic: nytimes.com/2020/03/30/nyr…
Those cuts would also have jeopardized New York's access to $6.5 billion in federal emergency Medicaid assistance.
His response? Defer the Medicaid cuts until after the pandemic passes, allowing him to get both the federal billions *and* enact $2.5 billion in annual cuts (albeit later on).
This is in a Democratic trifecta state where Democrats control both legislative chambers.