So after 8 years of the GOP blocking shit at every turn during Obama's years, and blocking Obama's nomination of Garland for SCOTUS and after a defeat to the least liked Republican candidate of all time because of arrogance and incompetence, and after all these proclamations of 'resisting Trump' and what-not, the Democrats are seriously still so spineless. You have Schumer, the self-proclaimed leader of the so-called Resistance who keeps approving Trump's fascist nominees:
This approach by Schumer is echoed when talking about the way in which the GOP responded to Garland as pick for the SCOTUS:
Just look at the confirmation hearings of Trump's horror cabinet where the following 14 Democrats voted for Mike Pompeo: (who talks about the Rapture, advocates torture, thinks that we're at war with Islam, goes on far-right radio, etc.)
Then you have *only* 4 Democrats voting against Nikki Haley as the UN Ambassador. She opposes the Iran Deal and is an enthusiastic supporter of Israeli apartheid.
They simply think this is some chivalrous game where you win some and you lose some. Meanwhile the Republicans are going for the throat and people are facing a fascist government.
Mazel makes the point really well:
As Sarah Jones writes for the New Republic, the "Democratic Party hasn't earned the right to silence its critics.". E.g. the criticism of Cory Booker:
They seriously need to buckle up and start doing some introspection instead of blaming shit on Russia or whatever reason they use to absolve themselves from the mess they have helped create.
Sorry if I'm being a tad inflammatory here, but it's simply frustrating to watch the so-called Resistance not taking the GOP and Trump's fascism seriously and keep voting in for Trump's picks *after* how the GOP execute their politics through sheer power and not chivalry.
Trump is "using populist rhetoric to cover up a hard-right agenda," Schumer told CNN on Sunday. "We certainly feel that we have to bring to the American people how different this Cabinet is — how hard-right, how many conflicts of interest, billionaires."
So far though, Schumer's tough talk doesn't square with his voting record. As of now, the Senate has voted on three of Trump's nominees: General James Mattis for the Department of Defense, General John Kelly for the Department of Homeland Security, and Mike Pompeo for the Central Intelligence Agency. Schumer has voted for every single one of them, and, absent meaningful opposition, each of them has been confirmed. Trump is batting 1000 at assembling the cabinet he wants.
[...]
That the leader of the Democratic opposition had to be led by the nose to demand a bare minimum of legislative oversight before co-signing on someone who pointedly refused to disavow American torture chambers raises the question: If this is what resistance looks like to Schumer, what distinguishes it from collusion?
This approach by Schumer is echoed when talking about the way in which the GOP responded to Garland as pick for the SCOTUS:
Tarini Parti @tparti
Asked about how the Merrick Garland experience would affect Dems handling of SCOTUS nom, Schumer: "we're not playing tit for tat here."
Just look at the confirmation hearings of Trump's horror cabinet where the following 14 Democrats voted for Mike Pompeo: (who talks about the Rapture, advocates torture, thinks that we're at war with Islam, goes on far-right radio, etc.)
- Joe Donnelly of Indiana
- Dianne Feinstein of California
- Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire
- Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota
- Tim Kaine of Virginia
- Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota
- Joe Manchin of West Virginia
- Claire McCaskill of Missouri
- Jack Reed of Rhode Island
- Brian Schatz of Hawaii
- Chuck Schumer of New York
- Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire
- Mark Warner of Virginia
- Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island
Then you have *only* 4 Democrats voting against Nikki Haley as the UN Ambassador. She opposes the Iran Deal and is an enthusiastic supporter of Israeli apartheid.
They simply think this is some chivalrous game where you win some and you lose some. Meanwhile the Republicans are going for the throat and people are facing a fascist government.
Mazel makes the point really well:
As Sarah Jones writes for the New Republic, the "Democratic Party hasn't earned the right to silence its critics.". E.g. the criticism of Cory Booker:
Consider the controversy that erupted over Senator Cory Booker earlier this month. Activists and columnists (including me) excoriated Booker for rejecting a bipartisan affordable drugs proposal during the Senate's Vote-a-rama. Booker's justification—that Canadian drugs present safety concerns—doesn't survive scrutiny. And his vote was hardly an exception. He once sat on on the board of Trump education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos's education reform group. He's been silent on the subject of single-payer health care and has supported raising the federal minimum wage to $12 an hour. (The Democratic Party platform supports a $15 minimum wage.) His school choice fetish when he was mayor of Newark, New Jersey, left its public schools in upheaval. He voted for the 21st Century Cures Act, which reduces drug regulation and benefits pharmaceutical corporations.
[...]
This is a debate Democrats need to have. The problem is that the same camp that is championing establishment ideology is also claiming that any attacks on that ideology are a blow to Democratic unity. If the Democratic Party wants to flourish, it must adapt to its changing electorate and it cannot do this if it will not listen to new voices. It's not enough for Democrats to call themselves The Resistance. They must also explain what it is they're resisting. Is it simply Trump? Or is it the ideology that helped put Trump in power?
Here, Democrats should take a lesson from the left. ”Movements can mobilize people to refuse, to disobey, in effect to strike," Frances Fox Piven recently wrote in The Nation. ”[P]eople in motion, in movements, can throw sand in the gears of the institutions that depend on their cooperation." Fight for 15, Occupy, Black Lives Matter: They point the way forward. So, too, did last Saturday's Women's March. In each instance, people rallied around a cause, not a person or a party. They did not turn out for politicians, they were not attracted by celebrities. They turned out because they wished to identify themselves with a specific values statement. Their actions teach us what it means to do politics—and warn us against defining politics in electoral terms alone.
They seriously need to buckle up and start doing some introspection instead of blaming shit on Russia or whatever reason they use to absolve themselves from the mess they have helped create.
Sorry if I'm being a tad inflammatory here, but it's simply frustrating to watch the so-called Resistance not taking the GOP and Trump's fascism seriously and keep voting in for Trump's picks *after* how the GOP execute their politics through sheer power and not chivalry.