Archive for August, 2017

Rep. Maxine Waters mocked at California tea party conference – Los Angeles Times

Aug. 12, 2017, 9:28 a.m.

A fair number of politicians faced withering criticism and ridicule at the Tea Party California Caucus meeting in Fresno this weekend, including Gov. Jerry Brown, GOP Assembly Leader Chad Mayesand especially Los Angeles Democrat Rep. Maxine Waters.

An unflattering picture of Waters, obviously doctored, was flashed on a screen just after Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Elk Grove) delivered the keynote address Friday evening.

Woody Woodrumof the conservative activistgroup California Screaming Eaglestold the crowd that it was Waters' reaction when she heard McClintock was coming to speakto California tea party members, drawing a big laugh in the room.

It was just a joke, Woodrum said later.

Woodrum said it wasnt meant to be mean-spirited. He said the photo hasbeen floating around the Internet.

Waters has been one of Republican President Trumps harshest and most vocal critics in Washington, making the 78-year-old congresswomanpopularamong young progressives.

The attention began when Waters refused to attend Trump'spresidential inauguration. She also skipped his first speech to Congress, telling the Los Angeles Times, I dont honor this president. I dont respect this president. And Im not joyful in the presence of this president.

Waters,in her 14th term, also hasnot been a fan of the tea party, saying in 2011 that the members could go straight to hell.

Waters' spokesperson has not yet responded to a requet for comment.

UPDATE 6:28 p.m.: Updated with information that Waters' spokespersonhas not yet responded.

This post was originally published at 9:28 a.m.

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Rep. Maxine Waters mocked at California tea party conference - Los Angeles Times

How Socialists Can Win – Slate Magazine

Bernie Sanders campaign increased the profile of American socialism, but it hasnt led to a legislative waveyet. Above, Sanders speaks a rally in Covington, Kentucky, on July 9.

Jay LaPrete/AFP/Getty Images

In the 2010 midterm elections, the first of the Obama presidency, Republicans took back the House by gaining 63 seats, the largest midterm swing since 1938. Among the beneficiaries of that swing: the Tea Party, a patchwork of local organizations and larger monied groups unified by an anti-tax, anti-government, anti-Obama platform, whose candidates won 47 seats in Congress on Election Day. Millions voted in the election. According to an analysis done by the group Patchwork Nation, there were only around 67,000 members of Tea Party groups nationwide.

Anyone puzzled by the attention increasingly being given to the Democratic Socialists of America should look to the Tea Party as an example of the organizations potential impact. The DSA, which had its biannual convention in Chicago last weekend, has grown from about 8,000 members a year ago to around 25,000 today.

The left hasnt done this kind of base-building in a very long time.

That alone doesnt make up a voting constituency of any meaningful size. Nor did the Tea Partys base of activists. Nevertheless, from 2010 on, the far-right activist movement helped push a political message that resonated with a larger base of voters who became a force in primary campaigns. Granted, most of those candidates lost in 2010 and in the elections following, and in recent years the movement has largely faded from public attention. But the Tea Partys influence on the Republican Party and on conservatism more broadly has been massive. The paranoiac populism that brought Trump to the White House entered the mainstream through the Tea Partys rise, and many Republicans currently in office across the country owe much of their prominence to the movement, including Mike Pence, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and Rand Paul. Beyond electing visible political leaders, the Tea Party additionally influenced the creation of the House Freedom Caucus as well as other legislative blocs at the state level. Even when it lost, the movement dragged the GOP further right by demonstrating the existence of a large constituency willing to unseat establishment Republicans in primary elections.

One can imagine the DSA waging a similar insurrectionist campaign against the Democratic Party and mainstream politics more broadly. The DSA, of course, doesnt have the kind of money that the Tea Partys pseudo-grassroots groups received from wealthy donors. It also doesnt have anything resembling the conservative media apparatus to elevate and amplify its rhetoric. But it does have a number of organizers fresh off a presidential primary campaign that garnered more than 13 million votes last year.

Bernie Sanders success hasnt yet translated to a sudden legislative wave: There are 14 DSA members serving in state and local offices around the country along with a few more unaffiliated socialists, so it remains to be seen whether the 2016 experience and the DSAs organizational capacities can garner major electoral victories. But the DSAs current size and geographic spread suggests that it could well be capable of joining the pantheon of other prominent left-of-center groups hoping to push Democrats left in 2018, including the Sanders campaigns official offshoot, Our Revolution, as well as news-friendly organizations like Indivisible, MoveOn.org, Brand New Congress, and Swing Left.

But the DSA is ultimately thinking much bigger than winning in 2018. It spends most of its time and resources on issue advocacyorganizing for minimum wage hikes, union rights, and other issues that often play out via local demonstrations, canvassing, writing, and holding public events. By design, much of this activity doesnt necessarily sync with election cycles. Across the country, including areas far from traditionally liberal enclaves, the DSA is trying to build support for specific policies and an ideologynot just candidates.

The left hasnt done that kind of base-building en masse in a very long time. The goal is to get people to think differently about politics, not just get them to the polls. On the right, these were the kinds of efforts that made the conservative movement a movement half a century ago. Its wild success, which had been but a dream to activists who saw Barry Goldwater humiliated in 1964s presidential election, has been funded in large part by major corporations and wealthy Americans who have benefited from the countrys rightward shift on economic policy. But the conservative movement was also the product of on-the-ground activism and organizing, dating back to the formation of groups like the John Birch Society and Young Americans for Freedom. In a few short decades, these groups and others helped commit roughly half the country to the ideological priors that had once made Goldwater unelectable. The conservative movement succeeded by pursuing not just votes, but minds. In social clubs and churches and in the pages of pamphlets and magazines, they made the case for conservatism as a set of organizing principles for American society.

Join Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz as they discuss and debate the weeks biggest political news.

You would not be wrong to look at the current efforts of the DSA, and the growing network of leftist publications and podcasts like Jacobin and Chapo Trap House, and see a reverse portrait of the modern conservative movement as a young ideology. At local chapter meetings, held not just in New York City and Chicago but in places like Wichita and Oklahoma City, veteran activists and newcomers meet to learn about and debate political questionsthe very civic space that many routinely mourn as Americas having lost. Attendants are then called to put what theyve learned into practiceor praxis, as a Marxist might say. This can be done on behalf of disadvantaged people in their own communities, or in national campaigns like the push for Medicare for All.

To turn the passion of those ground-level activists into transformative political power will require the DSA to continue growingnot as big as its detractors might think necessary, but a good bit. Should it do so, establishment Democrats could well find that the organization has the infrastructure and ideological coherence not just to mount real challenges to establishment politicians, but to rally a constituency large enough to challenge the liberal consensus itself. A constituency for socialism.

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How Socialists Can Win - Slate Magazine

Obama Responds To Charlottesville Violence With A Quote From Nelson Mandela – HuffPost

Former President Barack Obama tweeted a quote from former South African President Nelson Mandela Saturday in an apparent response to the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.

No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin or his background or his religion.People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love.For love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite, Obama tweeted.

The quote is from Mandelas autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom. Obamas series of tweets also featured a photo of him greeting children at a day care facility in Bethesda, Maryland, in 2011.

President Donald Trump mentioned Obama in his response to the Charlottesville protests, during which white supremacists and other fringe groups clashed with counter-protesters.

We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides on many sides,Trump said Saturday. Its been going on for a long time in our country, not Donald Trump, not Barack Obama. Its been going on for a long, long time.

At least three people died in the Charlottesville area Saturday. A 32-year-old woman was killed after a car plowed into a group of anti-racist protesters. Two more people were killed in a helicopter crash near Charlottesville. The Associated Press has reported that the crash was linked in some way to the violence in Charlottesville, but the details were not immediately clear.

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Obama Responds To Charlottesville Violence With A Quote From Nelson Mandela - HuffPost

Barack Obama ‘talked trash all day’ when he played golf with Anthony Anderson and other celebs – Washington Post

Barack Obama isnt afraid of a little competition. When youre in politics, you cant be. Now that the ex-president has finished up his stint as the leader of the free world, however, one might think hed ease up a bit.

Not so, actor Anthony Anderson told Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon this week. Talking about a recent round of golf the Black-ish star played with Obama, Olympian Michael Phelps and NBA star Chris Paul, the actor described Obamaas one ruthless individual on the links.

President Obama talked trash all day, Anderson said, five-and-a-half hours of nothing but trash talk and he took all of our money.

Andersontold Fallon the ex-president walked away with nearly $2,000 from the game, collecting $700 from Phelps, $600 from Paul and $300 from the actor.

I was like, man, is this even right? Anderson continued. I was like, youre the president, here. Can you take money from civilians?

Obama apparently answered affirmatively, telling Anderson, Im a civilian now. So yes, I can take it.Anderson alsodescribed Obama as a great golfer, noting that while he doesnt hit the ball far, hes straight as an arrow.

He played with one ball the entire time, Anthony said. He didnt lose a ball.

Or the round, it seems.

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Barack Obama 'talked trash all day' when he played golf with Anthony Anderson and other celebs - Washington Post

Obama Is Returning To Politics This Fall, And Trump Isn’t Going To Like It – Newsweek

The time has finally come:Barack Obama is about to publicly get back into politics.

The former president may have spent the beginning of this year on vacation, but he and his aides are planning his return to the Democratic Party this fall,The Hill reported Friday.And even though many of his efforts will center on fundraising and campaigning for people like Virginia gubernatorial candidate Ralph Northam, experts say Obama needs to be careful with Donald Trump.

Related: Is Trump really more popular than Obama? President sparks debate by retweeting favorable Twitter poll

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"He would be the target against which Trump would direct his fury," Southern Methodist University political science professorCal Jillson told The Hill. "From Trumps perspective, nothing better could happen."

Indeed, Trump is not likely to welcome Obama's comeback. The current commander in chief can't stop talking about his predecessor. Earlier this week, after a Washington Post report indicated North Korea was expanding its nuclear capabilities, Trump retweeted a message from former U.S. ambassador John Bolton saying that "our country & civilians are vulnerable today because @BarackObama did not believe in national missile defense. Let's never forget that." He also retweeted an unofficial poll asking who was a better president.

"This president has a very unusual obsession with his predecessor and constantly comparing himself to President Obama," Obama-era Assistant Defense Secretary Derek Chollet told CNN. "This is not a president who seems to be singularly focused on what is a genuinely a global security threat in North Korea."

Part of this may have to do with Trump's poll numbers. His approval ratings have been slipping for months, recently hitting 37 percent. Obama left office at 59 percent, according to Gallup.

Since he moved out of the White House, Obama has spoken out a couple of times against Trump and his policies. In January, for example, a spokesman for the ex-presidentissued a statement opposing Trump's travel ban. In June, Obamadenounced Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.

Nobody quite knows what Obama will do going forward to help the Democratic Party, which suffered from division during the primaries before losing the general election last year. The former president has reportedly been taking meetings with lawmakers in the House and Senate, as well as Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez, but he's previously said he wants to help develop "a whole new generation of talent" that could revitalize the group.

"There are such incredible young people who not only worked on my campaignbut I've seen in advocacy groups," Obama told NPR in December. "I've seen [them be] passionate about issues like climate change, or conservation, criminal justice reform. You know, campaigns tofor a livable wage, or health insurance. And making sure that whatever resources, credibility, spotlight that I can bring to help them rise up. That's something that I think I can do well, I think Michelle [Obama] can do well."

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Obama Is Returning To Politics This Fall, And Trump Isn't Going To Like It - Newsweek