I've
never met Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year old New York activist,
but I am surely looking forward to it. This giant-slayer of an
organizer (she worked for Senator Bernie Sanders during the 2016
campaign) was out-spent, but certainly not out-worked, by her
opponent, Rep. Joseph Crowley (D-NY). Crowley had served in Congress
for ten terms and was the fourth-highest ranking Democrat in
Congress, one who had openly coveted Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi's
position as Minority Leader in Congress. He spent $1.5 million in
his first primary race since 2004, while Ocasio-Cortez spent just a
fraction of that.
Congresswoman-elect
Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez (wow! It feels good to type that, and she is
a shoo-in because the district is mostly Democratic) won because,
despite fewer funds and less name recognition, she had a ground game
that did not quit. The day after her election, she told CNN that her
team "knocked on doors that had never been knocked on, reaching
voters who had been dismissed." Lacking money for the
television ads Crowley spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on,
Ocasio-Cortez used social media to get the word about her candidacy
out. She didn't mind being sharply critical of Crowley, highlighting
his disconnection from the New York district that includes parts of
the Bronx and Queens, and focusing on the demographic mismatch
between a 50 plus white man representing a district that is majority
minority. Ocasio-Cortez's hard work paid off – she had more
than 57 percent of the vote, hardly a nail-biter.
In
some ways, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez sounds something like Stacey Abrams, the
Democratic powerhouse who made history when she became the
first-African American woman to win a primary party nomination for
governor and in the South, at that. When Abrams first declared her
candidacy she was met with skepticism, and especially from some in
the Democratic Party establishment. But she had been registering
some of the voters that the party had ignored, and if she can get
about 100,000 more registered and voting, she has an excellent chance
of being elected governor.
Unfortunately,
the national Democratic Party and some state parties have done a poor
job of dealing with the nation's shifting demographics, and with the
demand from younger, browner, and more focused voters to dispense
with business as usual. In Washington State, for example, Tirzah
Idahosa is a candidate for the 30th Senate District. The union
member, volunteer lobbyist, former correctional officer and foster
parent is a founder of Democrats for Diversity and Inclusion and a
precinct captain. In a primary race with another Democrat, she tells
me that she has been advised to "wait her turn" or to run
for something "lesser" like the school board. Don't these
mainstream Democrats get that advising folks to "wait their
turn" is what is turning so many away from the polls? President
Barack Obama didn't wait his turn when he was advised to, and he beat
Hilary Clinton soundly and out of turn!
Mainstream
Democrats didn't get the Bernie memo, but Senator Bernie Sanders had
a good night on Tuesday, June 25. Not only did he have the
Ocasio-Cortez victory to savor, but another of his acolytes, former
NAACP President Ben Jealous, won the Democratic gubernatorial
nomination in Maryland. His opponent, Prince George's County
Executive Rushern Baker, was in many ways both the superior candidate
and the one better poised to beat Republican governor Larry Hogan.
But Jealous had the Bernie machine and the enthusiasm of younger
people who saw Baker as "business as usual."
In
Boston, City Councilor Ayanna Pressley has challenged incumbent
Representative Mike Capuano (D-Ma) for his congressional seat.
Capuano has used the power of his incumbency to persuade members of
the Congressional Black Caucus, including civil rights icon,
Congressman John Lewis, to support him, a colleague, instead of
Councilor Pressley. If some of the CBC representatives spent time
with Ayanna Pressley, they'd like her and wish they had someone with
her passion as a colleague. But Capuano thinks his seniority (he has
only been in office 5 years) should be persuasive and dismissed
Pressley's candidacy by telling the Boston Globe "if we decide
to send junior people, good luck." His rank will yield his a
key subcommittee chairmanship in Congress if Democrats can take the
House back. Or, if Democrats can win the house, it will put Pressley
in line to be a committee chair just a few years from now. Capuano
forgets that demographics have shifted in his Congressional district,
which is now majority-minority. He also ignores that fact that not
so long ago he, too, was a junior person in Congress.
Younger,
more progressive Democrats like Ocasio-Cortez and Pressley aren't
trying to "wait their turn," they are trying to turn our
country around. The Democratic Party ought to look at these
candidacies as a second wake-up call. The first happened when
Senator Bernie Sanders nearly beat Senator Hillary Clinton for the
Democratic nomination and lit a fire among young change agents that
won't be contained by the power of incumbency or the condescending
rhetoric that folks should "wait their turn."
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