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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRepublicans will be more than happy to see Democrats fighting over their leadership, instead of unifying
...changing Dem leadership is nothing more than reshuffling the same deck of cards in the middle of the game.
WE don't elect the people who lead the respective chambers of Congress; the Dem membership makes that choice. That makes all of this silliness about replacing Schumer such a foolish and dishonest pursuit.
Neither elected Democrats, or the republicans they oppose are going to move an inch in response to Schumer leaving his position. And republicans will be more than happy to have Democrats more focused on fighting their own leadership (fucking AGAIN) than on fighting them.
For that matter, it will make no never mind to republicans for Democrats to fight with each other in the minority in perpetuity. Whoever thought up this campaign has zero to offer the party on the other side of that self-immolating act; other than some new face starting in that role from ground zero, with few connections and less experiential knowledge.
More importantly, you've just blown up your party in front of the nation, and your replacement is not operating from a position of strength as this scheme pretends; they're just a dubious leader of a deliberately broken party.
Did people learn NOTHING from the suicidal demands that our historically successful incumbent president withdraw, without even a clue how we'd proceed from that point? Did these people even consider that they might push this to a crescendo of recrimination and just simply fail to advance anyone? That's essentially where we are now.
You know, I made the same arguments until I was blue in the face the last time we tried this stupidity, and, predictably, you couldn't find most of the people who pushed that travesty at campaign time because they were still out there trashing the party claiming our 'messaging' wasn't perfect enough for them, and doing nothing but trashing the nominee at every sign their scheme was a tragic failure.
Now, it appears they're back for more of this unprecedented political genius that's, again, more concerned with subtracting members from our party than adding them.
They're keyed in on the leader that all of the Dems presently in office voted for to represent THEIR consensus opinions in legislative debate. They're strangely obscuring the source of that leadership - likely because of the absurdity and heresy of just opposing the entire Dem membership who placed him in that role.
What an absolute crock of shit. FAFO.
Skittles
(171,509 posts)and hopefully most voters will feel the same in November
bigtree
(94,157 posts)...but you completely missed MY point and replaced it with your own projection.
SOMEONE may well think it's fine and dandy to risk arguing in the minority in perpetuity. Fuck, no one has made a move to explain what the aftermath will look like. Just this zeal to tear down, exactly the same destructive energy we saw in the presidential race.
Pure genius, I tell you. Yeah, republicans will be just fine with us in the minority, divided and fighting over sophistry about the role of our leaders. They're just fine without Kamala Harris or Joe Biden in the presidency, as well.
We should be more circumspect and conduct ourselves on more than just these absurd recriminations against leaders in our party who have already produced for us when they have the numbers to make legislative progress.
Cute, though supposing it doesn't matter that republicans laughed at us all the way to the presidency while we bickered over essentially successful pols who were infinitely more qualified and able than the opposition.
All we needed to do was unify, but some genius found a way to divide us. Yeah, republicans reveled in that like it or not, attentive to that fact, or not.
Skittles
(171,509 posts)I AM SICK OF THE SAME OLD SAME OLD.
bigtree
(94,157 posts)...AND ACTING AS IF THEY'RE BLAMELESS WHEN THAT STUPIDITY CAUSES US TO ULTIMATEY LOSE.
When are those people going to take responsibility for their political malpractice?
Skittles
(171,509 posts)in any other job with "results" like the last election a lot of the leadership would be LONG GONE
DONE HERE
bigtree
(94,157 posts)...the people who convinced Biden to step aside NEVER accounted for the loss that resulted.
Dems GAINED seats in Congress, a record number of flips, even though we fell short. Did you forget the razor slim margin?
Who was responsible for turning voters away from Democrats?
Legislators who had already fought and WON elections against republicans, or the political geniuses who spent that election trashing Democrats on 'Gaza' or claiming we didn't know how to talk to working people; and on and on?
It's STILL happening, and there's STILL no accounting for the denigrating effect it has on the party and in the minds of voters.
SUPPORT isn't this backbiting navelgazing effort to change the leadership MONTHS before we vote.
WHO normalized this stupidity in the minds of Democrats? It's insidiously self-defeating.
Orrex
(67,057 posts)Keep doing that, and keep frothing about malpractice while you're at it.
I'm sure it'll bring a blue tsunami in November.
SocialDemocrat61
(7,566 posts)dem4decades
(14,019 posts)bigtree
(94,157 posts)...like every other Democrat in that role.
That's why Democrats ALWAYS produce progressive legislative change, and produce a strong growing economy as they focus on the people.
Schumer is essentially the same type of Senate leader that's fought republicans for decades and decades. He leads by the consensus of his membership, like every other leader before him did since the days of party bosses ended decades ago.
I don't have unrealistic opinions about the Dem leadership, because I'm clear-eyed about who put them in that role, and fully aware that pols who insist on bringing their personal agenda to the job aren't really able to reconcile differences between often disparate interests and concerns from diverse regions of the nation.
I think most people criticizing him don't understand the role of the Democratic leader and think he has some magic stick that he can just wave around and move the intractable republican majority to vote for Democratic initiatives.
It's sophistry, or it's just a misunderstanding of the dynamic of a minority party, or even a slim majority, and the role leaders play in organizing the membership to unite on legislation.
'Liking' Schumer isn't the point at all here. It's the collective consensus of the Dem membership that drives the process, not one individual; not in our successes or our failures. Schumer's term hasn't ben an exception to any of that.
And remember, EVERY legislative advancement Biden made went through his Senate during his term as leader. Look at his career timeline, especially in the period we're discussing, and acknowledge the work he's done and the progress he's overseen.
Look at the timeline. It's so much more than the caricature that critics present with one line posts telling him to quit.
Career Timeline of Chuck Schumer: Major Achievements and Milestones
https://populartimelines.com/timeline/Chuck-Schumer/career-achievements
What's not to like in all that?
msongs
(73,676 posts)creeksneakers2
(8,005 posts)mzmolly
(52,779 posts)before we start in-fighting please.
Ferrets are Cool
(22,923 posts)SocialDemocrat61
(7,566 posts)Dems in disarray narrative.
Historic NY
(39,987 posts)they are going to be told to stand down. ...
stopdiggin
(15,388 posts)subjected to .. ? When exactly is this 'stand down' going to take place?
stopdiggin
(15,388 posts)if we're going to truly honest about it.
"Give me what I want .. or I'm taking my ball and going home .. "
Over .. and over .. and over ......
luv2fly
(2,658 posts)Fellow DUers? Senate Democrats?
Since you're being truly honest and all...
Skittles
(171,509 posts)apparently we are all supposed to be cheerleaders
mzmolly
(52,779 posts)The Republican cluster-f is apparent, even to many former Republicans. Whats with the urgency to replace Democrats? Jesus, we have bigger things to worry about.
stopdiggin
(15,388 posts)that does not deliver ____ XYZ? (insert here your favorite purity test, threshold or parameter .. )
They're not that difficult to find. Being as they are never particularly shy of voicing either their discontent, or their benchmark(s) for support.
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betsuni
(29,038 posts)and starting a political revolution to transform the country into a fantasy utopia is the goal. Democrats are the true roadblock to the revolution, they are convinced, based on things that aren't true, myths and conspiracies and BS.
Accusing Democrats of corruption, taking bribes, immorality (genocide for example), ignoring the working class and on and on and on is "constructive criticism" and asking for some evidence of such crimes offends them.
When the lies are debunked the name-calling begins: cheerleaders, posse, swarm, echo chamber, accusations of thinking the party is always right like a cult, etc.
The leader has said it out loud more than once: "This campaign was never about electing a president of the United States, as enormously important as that was. This campaign was about transforming America."
For the American people it can be the difference between life and death right now, here in the reality based world.
mzmolly
(52,779 posts)Well said! Not to mention, the world is suffering the consequences.
creeksneakers2
(8,005 posts)luv2fly
(2,658 posts)Those who bristle at being told how to think?
Those who wish for change?
SocialDemocrat61
(7,566 posts)Those who spend more time and effort bashing Schumer, Jeffries and so-called 'establishment' dems than they do criticizing Trump and Republicans. Those who claim both parties are the same. Those who still say Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris were the 'lesser of two evils'. Those who blame Barak Obama for Roe being overturned rather than Trump and Bush. And anyone who proudly declares that they vote 3rd party.
luv2fly
(2,658 posts)SocialDemocrat61
(7,566 posts)How is it inaccurate because of context?
Response to bigtree (Original post)
Celerity This message was self-deleted by its author.
617Blue
(2,445 posts)They would be petrified of a Leader Murphy or Warren
bigtree
(94,157 posts)...I remember all of the drag on the party was coming from Manchin and Sinema in committee and sometimes in floor votes.
That's what this solidly progressive Senator had to deal with as he presided over historic, progressive legislative changes in the Senate that Biden signed into law.
That's the fucking history, not this self-serving campaign against him at the point Democratic voters refused to equip him and the party with enough members to do anything more than say 'no' to republicans and perform for critics on teevee.
The party members elected him, and he's consistently represented the consensus that THEY agree on. He has zero power to advance his own personal agenda on his own initiative.
The party has always operated by consensus, long since the ancient days of party bosses and other backroom, anti-Democratic bullying that used to substitute for what people voted for.
And get this right, if you don't get anything else. The party isn't made up of a majority of Warrens and Murphys. It just isn't.
The Democratic party is a coalition of disparate interests and concerns from myriad regions of the nation who hold often diverse views about how to proceed legislatively, and work to reconcile those differences as best they can into legislative action or law.
The leaders they elect aren't dictators, they're organizers of that membership's votes on legislative initiatives. THAT is why they ALWAYS produce a centrist-minded, moderate leader who can bring together all sides, often engineering compromises which represent progressive progress.
Maybe not the slam dunk people demand, but realistic advancements that take advantage of where the membership can agree.
THAT effort isn't going to be effectively served by leaders who are leaning to one extreme of the political makeup of the Democratic membership; not to mention the solid conservatism of the republican party.
That dynamic isn't the invention of Schumer, who would be more than fine with scheduling votes on stridently progressive legislation if he had a majority like when, say, Lyndon Johnson enjoyed when his Democratic Congress advanced the Civil Rights bills.
Even at that, Schumer presided over historic legislative advancements with TWO quasi-Dems who bent over backwards to republicans.
Pols from either the liberal wing of the party or the conservative wing aren't going to be as effective at bringing senators together on legislation as the centrists have been in these tight majorities we've been getting in the past few decades which aren't enough to overcome filibusters in the Senate.
No stridently progressive pol is going to be able to effectively influence stridently conservative Dems under pressure from constituents in 'red' states to bend on bills as effectively as the moderates THEY regularly choose to represent them, and vice versa.
So much of this completely ignores the actual makeup of the collective Dem membership and assumes that our coalition is as progressive as Warren and Murphy.
It's just not, and this is a tragic flaw in this pushback on a Senate Dem leader who hails from a majority progressive town who is decidedly more progressive than that collective membership. It's his ability to moderate his own views and represent the consensus of the party which enabvled him to make the legislative progress we saw out of a Senate majority that regularly had to have the VP preside to break tie votes.
Most of the critics complaints are fiction, and supposing a Warren or Murphy would be effective leaders of a mostly moderate membership is fantasy, imo.
stopdiggin
(15,388 posts)That is SO outside the bounds of political reality! (not to mention ANYTHING we have seen in this current climate .. )
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betsuni
(29,038 posts)2016: Establishment Goldman Sachs Wall Street
2024: GAZA GAZA GAZA GAZA GAZA GAZA GAZA
Now: AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC AIPAC
bigtree
(94,157 posts)...evidently normalized in the minds of some.
Correct that republicans benefit most from that deliberate divisiveness.
betsuni
(29,038 posts)Emile
(42,132 posts)Orrex
(67,057 posts)They love it, in fact, because it distracts from the real problem, that leadership is unfocused, lacking in clear direction, fails to connect with voters, is slow to react to Trump's endless onslaught of chaos and criminality, and is tepid and tentative when it does so.
lees1975
(7,036 posts)who are just watching out for their own interests.
What wins elections is boldness, some risk taking, and commitment to stick with a cause and see it through, not negotiate away our position and power. We need to stop thinking about what Republicans might think, and focus on the threat to Democracy, and not doing that is weakness.
bigtree
(94,157 posts)...and their majority in Congress as some essentially do their dirty work tearing down our leaders for them.
After all, the entire gripe about the leaders is that they're not 'messaging' well enough.
Seems strange to publicly complain about that as if dragging your own party leaders is some sort of messaging genius, and actual opposition to republicans.
Scrivener7
(59,409 posts)if you disagree" is the new "Garland's got this and you're stupid and a bad Democrat if you disagree."
Whatever.
MineralMan
(151,166 posts)displacedvermoter
(4,350 posts)bigtree
(94,157 posts)...probably just media baiting, but had enough of an impact here that I'm weighing in with my own views.
here:
Democratic senators quietly explore post-midterm leadership change
According to the Wall Street Journal, frustration with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has reached a point where some Democrats are considering asking him to step aside after the midterm elections. Senator Chris Murphy reportedly told progressive activists in February that informal vote counts were being conducted to gauge support for his removal, though he later said he did not recall mentioning a tally. The discussions reflect a serious undercurrent of dissent within the caucus during a politically sensitive period.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/democrats-weigh-ousting-schumer-after-midterms/gm-GM0999F6C3
...there were a couple of these that just surfaced, conveniently, months before we go to the polls to (ostensibly) oust republicans.
displacedvermoter
(4,350 posts)As someone else noted.
demmiblue
(39,660 posts)
Sympthsical
(10,958 posts)We've been playing this game as long as I've been an adult.
I have a lot of gray hair now.
Stop. Apologizing. For. Power.
FFS. What about the last decade has screamed, "We are killing it, y'all!"