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Why the DNC Is Fighting WikiLeaks and Not Wall Street!

SHOULD THEY BE FIGHTING AND GOING AFTER WALL STREET?

Willingness to challenge Wall Street would certainly alienate some of the Democratic Party's big donors. And such moves would likely curb the future earning power of high-ranking party officials, who can now look forward to upward spikes in incomes from consultant deals and cushy positions at well-heeled firms. With eyes on the prizes from corporate largesse, DNC officials don't see downsides to whacking at WikiLeaks and undermining press freedom in the process.

Exactly 200 days before the crucial midterm election that will determine whether Republicans maintain control of Congress, the Democratic National Committee filed a 66-page lawsuit that surely cost lots of money and energy to assemble.

Does the lawsuit target purveyors of racist barriers to voting that block and deflect so many people of color from casting their ballots?

No.

Well, perhaps this ballyhooed lawsuit aims to ensure the rights of people who don't mainly speak English to get full access to voting information?

Unfortunately, no.

Maybe it's a legal action to challenge the ridiculously sparse voting booths provided in college precincts?

Not that either.

Announced with a flourish by DNC Chair Tom Perez, the civil lawsuit-- which reads like a partisan polemic wrapped in legalisms -- sues the Russian government, the Trump campaign and operatives, as well as WikiLeaks and its founding editor, Julian Assange.

It's hard to imagine that many voters in swing districts -- who'll determine whether the GOP runs the House through the end of 2020 -- will be swayed by the Russia-related accusations contained in the lawsuit. People are far more concerned about economic insecurity for themselves and their families, underscored by such matters as the skyrocketing costs of healthcare and college education.

To emphasize that "this is a patriotic -- not partisan -- move," Perez's announcement of the lawsuit on April 20 quoted one politician, Republican Sen. John McCain, reaching for the hyperbolic sky: "When you attack a country, it's an act of war. And so we have to make sure that there is a price to pay, so that we can perhaps persuade the Russians to stop these kind of attacks on our very fundamentals of democracy.

Still Unwilling to Confront Elite Interests

A loud and clear message from the Democrats' 2016 election debacle is that hoping for working-class votes while refusing to do battle against corporate exploiters of the working class is a political dead end. "The mainstream Democratic storyline of victims without victimizers lacks both plausibility and passion," says an independent report, "Autopsy: The Democratic Party in Crisis." Six months after the release of that report (which I co-authored), the DNC still is unwilling to polarize with elite corporate interests, while remaining extra eager to portray Russia and WikiLeaks as liable for the 2016 disaster.

So, unfortunately, this assessment in the "Autopsy" remains all too relevant: "The idea that the Democrats can somehow convince Wall Street to work on behalf of Main Street through mild chiding, rather than acting as Main Street's champion against the wealthy, no longer resonates. We live in a time of unrest and justified cynicism towards those in power; Democrats will not win if they continue to bring a wonk knife to a populist gunfight. Nor can Democratic leaders and operatives be seen as real allies of the working class if they're afraid to alienate big funders or to harm future job or consulting prospects."

URL: [opednews.com]

of-the-mountain 9 Apr 26
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3 comments

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0

You don’t bite the hand that feeds you.

2

They need to be calling the republicans on all the things that this idiot is trying to destroy. There isn't an area he hasn't tried to destroy from the environment to public TV and radio.The dems seem to be overwhelmed by the republicans and we do not appear to have any strong leaders. Hopefully someone will emerge before the fall.

The DCCC is too occupied with pushing progressive candidates out of the way in favor of corporate-approved ones.

2

We need campaign finance reform now. We need publicly funded elections. We need constraints on lobbyists. We need real change.

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