No matter what the outcome of the
2020 election, there remains much work to do. Our economy is
wrong-sided, and we have to right-side it. Our tax code rewards the
wealthy and penalizes others. Our regulatory system protects
corporations, not people. Almost a hundred environmental regulations
from the Obama years have been reversed. Schools have fewer
protections than they once had. Workers have fewer protections, and
unions are under attack. And the Supreme Court has been stacked to
favor oligarchs, not everyday people. The very right to vote has been
compromised with rules that marginalize too many people.
It
is my fervent hope that the Biden-Harris ticket will prevail in this
election, but even if they win, there is still much work to do.
First, the coronavirus needs to be controlled. Mark Meadows, the 45th
President’s chief of staff, says the administration will do
nothing to contain the virus, and their wanton disregard of essential
public health tenets (hand-washing, mask-wearing, social distancing)
reflects their casual approach to the virus. A President Biden would
tackle this issue, but he will need to be pushed to ensure that the
process is egalitarian and that those who have suffered
disproportionally, like Black folks, will get more remediation than
those who have not so suffered.
Economic
recovery and economic expansion should be high on the agenda. Again,
those who have suffered from covid and repressive economic policies
need special attention. Biden-Harris must address the racial wealth
gap, the relentless unemployment rate differential, and systemic
poverty. Some of the employment situation can be addressed through an
infrastructure improvement program. The American Society of Civil
Engineers consistently grades our roads, bridges, water quality, and
public buildings with substandard grades. The appropriate investment
of federal dollars would not only be good for employment but also for
the economy.
Our
criminal justice system must be fixed, and federal initiatives to
stop police brutality must be developed. Environmental issues must be
vigorously addressed. Health care must be treated as a right, and it
must be universal. The “do” list is long, and it may
include expanding the Supreme Court’s size. It’s not
court-packing, as some would suggest; it’s right-sizing
something that has gone wrong. The point is that a Biden-Harris
victory may be cause for celebration, but it is also an invitation
for all of us to roll up our sleeves and get to work, not only at the
federal level but also at the state and local level.
I
can hear my conservative friends already asking what all this will
cost. We know the 2017 tax cut cost the Treasury trillions of
dollars. We seem only to be interested in cost when we are looking at
people on the bottom. There appears to be much less concern about
programs designed to benefit the wealthy. Then, some of the work we
have to do is to transform our mindset, decide what kind of economy
we want, and then work to create it. That may mean a very different
approach to our predatory capitalist system, and it may mean
restructuring the system to make it more people-focused. It is a
possibility!
Now
we know what it is like to live with a graft-centered leader who has
thrown our nation under the bus for his selfish gains. We have the
opportunity to learn what it is like to live with a more
people-centered leader. Still, we should be clear that Bidden-Harris
leadership will be center-left predatory capitalism. They will need
to be pushed, and we need to be prepared to push them. If we have
learned anything from the Obama years, it is that a closed mouth
won’t get fed. Black folk were so happy to have a Black
president that we were reluctant to push him and his administration
very hard. Much as we may like Biden-Harris, we must be willing to
push them.
When he accepted the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King said, “I
have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three
meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds,
and dignity, equality, and freedom for their spirits. I believe that
what self-centered men have torn down, men other-centered can build
up.” Biden-Harris will move us closer to King’s dream,
but they won’t take us all the way there. Not unless we push.
We know what we have to do.
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