New: Rana Abdelhamid, a progressive activist and founder of a women's self-defense group, is challenging Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) from the left. huffpost.com/entry/rana-abd… via @HuffPostPol
Abdelhamid, an Astoria, Queens, native, told me that the pandemic exposed inequities she's experienced her whole life.
“It’s time for ... a representative who will fight for all of us ― not just certain groups or certain neighborhoods.”
Abdelhamid had to move six times as a kid due to rising rents and her dad had to give up on a deli he owned for the same reason. Her mother was hospitalized with COVID.
She wants to focus on housing. "It’s an issue that impacts gender justice, racial justice, climate justice."
Abdelhamid founded a women's self-defense group after experiencing an Islamophobic attack.
She supports "defunding" the police, ie, reducing funding and spending it on "community infrastructure."
Maloney was a classic 1990s, early 00s Democrat with plenty of right-leaning votes, but she's also a member of @USProgressives and co-sponsor of Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.
What the new NY-12 will look like is a key variable. If Astoria gets cut out and more of Manhattan put in, that could help Maloney.
Last two cycles, Suraj Patel fought Maloney to within a handful of points.
But the suspicion with which the movement left greeted him deprived him of a unified anti-Maloney bloc.
Now Abdelhamid says his time has passed.
Cutting-room floor: Abdelhamid, a former @amnestyusa board member and daughter of Egyptian immigrants, believes the U.S. should make human rights a bigger factor in how it delivers aid, including to Egypt and Israel.
She doesn't support BDS.
Final point: Abdelhamid's full-time job is in marketing for Google.
.@justicedems laid off nine of its 20 staff members a few weeks ago.
I looked at both the proximate and deeper reasons, as well as the broader implications for the left -- at the ballot box and on Capitol Hill. huffpost.com/entry/justice-…
7 out of 9 people laid off were paid by Organize for Justice, the group's 501(c)4 -- the lobbying, organizing, and podcast arm.
The move signals a move away from leg. and organizing work, and a doubling down on core election mission.
Political giving is indeed down virtually across the board, which is affecting smaller, grassroots-money dependent groups more.
JD told me 62% of its donations thus far are in increments of <$200.
New: Chicago Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson relentlessly defined his opponent as a "Republican" and presented a progressive plan for reducing crime that he had confidence would resonate with voters.
A few key elements:
-- Johnson began inoculating himself on "defund" by leaning into public safety before the runoff
-- He hit Vallas hard as a "Republican" from the night he made the runoff
-- 15-second TV ads to establish name ID
...
...
-- "Brandon is better" message tailored to an electorate seeking change
-- One-third of Johnson's advertising budget went to digital, where precise targeting enables dollars to go further
-- Plan to raise taxes offset by promise not to raise property taxes
...
... Johnson has attacked García in late January for "abandoning the progressive movement" with, among other things, his plans to fill the police backlog. nbcchicago.com/news/local/bra…
Scoop: @ClyburnSC06 is endorsing @Brandon4Chicago in the Chicago mayoral race, providing the progressive contender a critical boost in his showdown with centrist Paul Vallas.
Clyburn has already been bundling money for him for weeks.
Johnson met with Clyburn in Selma, Alabama, and they developed a personal bond made stronger by their shared background as former teachers and sons of pastors.
Johnson also met with President Biden while he was there.
Clyburn: “Commissioner Johnson and I share many characteristics: our spirit of activism, our professional beginnings as public school teachers, our commitment to justice, and we are both PKs (Preacher Kids)."
The key takeaway: GOPers believe that the Dobbs decision prompted more Democratic "super voters" to participate in polls, at once inflating Dem share of likely electorate, and encouraging Dems to over-rely on abortion rights, Jan. 6, and democracy themes as their salience faded.
Wallace-Wells paints a scenario in which Democrats are once again victims of the educational polarization that has increased their traction with college graduates and decreased it with non-college graduates, especially men, and increasingly Latino and Black non-college men ...
New: Facing Republican Joe O’Dea, a construction CEO critical of Trump, Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) has emphasized economic policy differences.
My look at how Bennet, a Child Tax Credit champion, is running as a critic of "trickle-down economics": huffpost.com/entry/michael-…
Some highlights:
-- Even in increasingly blue Colorado, Bennet's tax-centric populism -- complete with denunciations of Reagan and "neoliberalism" -- is unique. Polis and Hickenlooper sound different.
-- He embraces the Bernie left's analysis that inequality gave oxygen o Trump.
-- It's kind of remarkable how different Bennet sounds *from himself* running in 2010. He had a whole section on his website on "entitlement reform." web.archive.org/web/2010101501…