Trump
Updates to the Midterms:
Trump
has spent the last week sending out tweets trashing former FBI
Director Jim Comey about his recently published book, “A
Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership,” which details
his experiences over the past two decades with a scathing look at
his tenure in the Trump Administration before his firing.
The
raid on the home and offices of Trump’s personal lawyer,
Michael Cohen, has revealed that Cohen was also arranging sexual
hush payments for the Republican National Committee’s deputy
finance chair, Elliott Broidy, who had an affair with a Playboy
Magazine model and that he also represented Sean Hannity, the Fox
News anchor, who has been a staunch supporter of both Cohen and
Trump.
Trump
launched missiles to destroy what have been characterized as benign
sites in Syria in the wake of its assaults on its own citizens with
chemical weapons, but only after warning Russia of the time and
targets, as another way to distract from coverage of scandals
enveloping his presidency.
Trump
and his minions, Cory Lewandowski, his former campaign manager,
Sarah Huckabee Sanders, White House press secretary, and Kellyanne
Conway, counsel to the President, who coined the term ‘alternative
facts,’ all lie constantly, as does the President, about
nearly all matters in the national interest as a way to keep the
nation from focusing on reality.
Stormy
Daniels (Stephanie Clifford) and her lawyer, Michael Avenatti,
released a composite sketch of the man she says threatened her in
2006 over her affair with Trump, and she is offering a $100,000
reward to anyone wo can identify him, causing new headaches for the
Trump White House, while gobbling up print and broadcast media
coverage despite the efforts of Trump and his gang to silence her.
Teachers
and Democrats are at a crossroads as they face the 2018 midterm
elections which could have a major impact on their future stability
and success. If Republicans keep control of the U.S. House and
Senate as well as the majority of state legislatures and
governorships, teachers can expect a continuing push to privatize the
nation’s public schools. Despite their recent victories in
increasing their pay, we can expect a claw back on wages, an
escalation in contributions to their benefits packages, and a
downsizing of their pensions through continued state under-funding,
and a switch from defined pensions to 401k accounts which will result
in lower payouts over the long term. Democrats, on the other hand,
will see more determined roll backs of Social Security, Medicaid,
Medicare, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, and numerous
other options designed to secure a social safety net that former
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt began constructing in 1933 which
has been expanded and refined through Democratic and Republican
presidents for more than three-quarters of a century.
The challenges facing
teachers are especially critical at this time when they are the
linchpin in the Democrats’ quest to regain political power at
the state and federal levels in 2018. They have to make certain that
the Democrats they vote for will support the core of their policies
and that they will constantly champion them, publicly and privately,
at all levels of government. Too often, the Democrats teachers have
supported have said one thing during campaign season and done another
after they have ascended to and/or have been returned to office,
e.g., Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ). Sen.
Feinstein is currently being punished (denied the Democratic
endorsement) by her previous Democratic supporters for not being
sufficiently progressive as she runs for reelection for a seat she
has held since 1992.
Many
proclaim that teachers and other rank-and-file Democrats have little
choice because if they do not vote for the flawed Democrats, then the
anti-public education Republicans will win. But the truth of the
matter is that the Republicans win anyway when these same Democrats
join with them to support anti-public education policies and programs
that undermine the teaching profession. An alternative is for
teachers to make it clear that they will withhold on-the-ground
organizing (i.e., phone banking, door knocks, lit dropping, GOTV
efforts, etc.) from Democratic election and reelection efforts. In
2012, Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) let
that be known, indirectly, when teachers went on strike in early
September 2012, two months before the presidential election.
They
walked out to maintain existing health benefits and to limit the
reduction of cuts among social workers, etc. in addition to a wage
increase—similar to the issues that caused teachers in West
Virginia, Oklahoma, and Kentucky to stop work. When teachers from
Nevada, Iowa, Ohio, Florida, and other battleground states made plans
to bring busloads of their members to Chicago in a show of
solidarity, the Obama Administration communicated with Chicago Mayor
Rahm Emanuel to encourage him to settle the strike quickly, which he
did. Obama could not politically afford to have teachers in these
states (all of which he won) otherwise occupied during this
critically important political coordination period. Another
alternative for teachers is to run one of their own for office as
they have done in in recent special elections.
Democrats,
overall, need to be more respectful of their base supporters as they
prepare their final plans to win 2018 midterm elections. A hopeful
sign is their decision to downplay their internal opposition to the
current Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), their most prodigious
Congressional fundraiser, until after the midterms have concluded.
But they also need to mend fences with African American females, many
of whom are upset about their participation in national strategy and
the lack of Democratic National Committee (DNC) support of their
peers running for state and national office. Democrats cannot hope
to win the targeted Republican seats unless they are able to
replicate the huge turnout and voting margins that propelled Sen.
Doug Jones (D-AL) over the top in his upset victory over Roy Moore,
his Republican opponent.
The
keys to Democratic victories are at hand. The question is whether
teachers and Democrats will use them to unlock state and federal
victories.
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