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Progressive agenda takes a beating in Capitol – Press-Enterprise

The left or progressive wing of Californias Democratic Party has a dream and believes that the states political structure is primed to make it reality.

The oft-expressed dream is to transform California into something like Sweden, France or the Netherlands with an expansive array of cradle-to-the-grave services, a highly unionized green economy and, of course, the high taxes to pay for it.

With huge Democratic majorities in the Legislature and a governor lending verbal support, those on the left believe its a unique opportunity to advance the vision.

However the vision clashed with political reality this week as its centerpiece creating a single-payer health care system to replace the private-public, insurance-based model now in place stalled out in the Assembly because not enough Democrats would vote for it in an election year.

Those who had been pushing single-payer for years, hoping that a victory in California would galvanize a national system, were incensed that the author of the bill, Assemblyman Ash Kalra of San Jose, refused to take up the bill.

Assembly Bill 1400s chief sponsor, the California Nurses Association, turned on Kalra, saying, Nurses are especially outraged that Kalra chose to just give up on patients across the state. Nurses never give up on our patients, and we will keep fighting with our allies in the grassroots movement for CalCare until all people in California can get the care they need, regardless of ability to pay.

CalMatters reporter Alexei Koseff revealed that Kalra later told supporters on a Zoom call, I dont believe it would have served the cause of getting single payer done by having the vote and having it go down in flames and further alienating members, adding that he was short of the required 41 votes by double digits.

The issue created a two-way squeeze on Democratic legislators an open threat from progressives to deny party endorsements if they didnt back Kalras bill and an implied threat from opponents that a vote for it would be characterized as a support for a huge tax increase. With redistricting making election outcomes less certain, Kalra protected his colleagues by not forcing them to vote either way.

It was not the lefts only setback. Another priority bill, aimed at bolstering rent control, also died without a floor vote. The states Ellis Act now allows landlords to evict tenants from rent-controlled housing if they sell the property, and has long been a target of progressive activists.

Their measure, Assembly Bill 854, would have required new owners of rent-controlled housing to hold their properties for at least five years before invoking the Ellis Act. The fact that they couldnt even make their positions public on two major progressive priorities today, I consider that an insult to the public, honestly, said Shanti Singh, legislative director for Tenants Together.

The only good news for progressives Monday was passage albeit barely of another priority measure. Assembly Bill 257 would create a European-style governmental council to set wages and working conditions for the franchised fast food industry McDonalds, Burger King, etc.

The proposed Fast-Food Sector Council, dominated by employees and appointees of union-friendly politicians, would bypass the traditional union organization and collective bargaining process.

If enacted, AB 257 would be a precedent for other economic sectors resistant to unionization, such as agriculture. But its fate in the state Senate is far from certain as it faces very stiff opposition from the franchise industry and the larger business community.

California may eventually make the progressives social democracy dream a reality, but it wont happen anytime soon.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how Californias state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

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Progressive agenda takes a beating in Capitol - Press-Enterprise

The restraint crowd facepalms over Biden’s Ukraine threats – POLITICO

Last week, two progressive Democrats issued a statement chiding the Biden administration for preparing troop deploymentsto Europe and military aid to Ukraine that the lawmakers said could escalate the crisis. On Wednesday, the U.S. announced Biden was sending 3,000 troops to Eastern Europe in response to the Russian threat to Ukraine.

We have significant concerns that new troop deployments, sweeping and indiscriminate sanctions, and a flood of hundreds of millions of dollars in lethal weapons will only raise tensions and increase the chance of miscalculation, Reps. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) said. Russias strategy is to inflame tensions; the United States and NATO must not play into this strategy. Lee was the only member of Congress to vote against the war in Afghanistan following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

In think tanks and academic institutions, meanwhile, a growing crop of restraint-oriented scholars are trying not to get drowned out by their more numerous hawkish colleagues. Some of these scholars had hoped that, in the wake of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, they could now focus on convincing Biden to pull American troops out of Iraq and Syria. Instead, they are dealing with what feels like a new trans-Atlantic Cold War, just as tensions between the United States and China are also rising in the Pacific.

This is not as easy as some of the other cases, where, for example, its much more clear that the United States shouldnt engage in any more regime change operations in the Middle East, acknowledged Will Ruger, who helped steer funding to restraint-focused scholars from the libertarian-leaning Koch network and now leads the American Institute for Economic Research.

The Ukraine crisis threatens to divert U.S. military and economic resources toward a potential land war that many restrainers believe simply isnt in Americas interest. But it is unusually complicated because it also involves NATO, long-standing American military commitments to European allies and Putin, a dictator bent on redrawing the world map, whom many restrainers loathe.

The crisis also has exposed how restrainers remain a relatively weak force in Washington, including in Congress, despite the voices of progressives skeptical of military intervention who had hoped for a more sympathetic ear from the Biden team.

Richard Fontaine, chief executive officer of the bipartisan Center for a New American Security, said the Biden administration is dealing with the world as it is.

Im sure no one would have preferred to have a crisis with Russia over Ukraine, said Fontaine, who previously advised the hawkish late GOP Sen. John McCain. But you could either do nothing or you could do something. And if youre going to do something, then its going to be a mixture of deterrence and possible accommodation to reasonable Russian concerns.

Restrainers are found on both left and right in Washington. They include conservatives, often but not all in the libertarian mold, as well as some vocal progressive Democrats. Their ranks and influence have grown, with new think tanks and funding aimed at spreading their philosophy.

The motivations of restrainers are not all the same. Some care more about not spilling blood, others about not wasting treasure. For many, it comes down to the particular conflict; some are deeply worried about how America will face an increasingly powerful China, for instance. But broadly speaking, the goal is to limit the use of what they believe often is counterproductive U.S. military force.

A recent Twitter exchange between Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin and Rep. Ro Khanna, a progressive Democrat from California, captured some of the conflicting impulses facing restraint-oriented public figures thanks to the Ukraine crisis and the many countries and alliances it involves.

Ukraine has the moral high ground, Khanna tweeted at one point. We can impose sanctions & speak out clearly against Putin aggression. But our national security requires us not to get significantly entangled in a conflict that would weaken us vis a vis China.

When Rogin argued that letting Russia off the hook for Ukraine set a bad precedent for how restrainers would deal with a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, Khanna insisted that was a different situation because Taiwan was more tied to the U.S. economy.

Khanna was unavailable for comment. But his argument hints at the choices some restrainers believe the U.S. must make in deciding when to get involved in a foreign crisis. Those choices raise questions about restrainers willingness to ignore the causes of human rights and democracy when they believe it serves the U.S. national interest.

As they see the debate over Ukraine spiral into threats of a potentially long, bloody war, many restrainers are saying, I told you so.

The roots of the problem, these restrainers argue in op-eds and other forums, lie at decisions years ago by the United States and some of its allies to allow for the possibility of one day admitting Ukraine and Georgia as members of NATO.

The growth of the military alliance has long been a sore point for Putin, who has led Russia for more than two decades and sees NATO as a threat to his countrys influence over many of its neighbors. In remarks Tuesday, Putin alleged that U.S. officials are merely using Ukraine as a tool to hinder the development of Russia.

The Russian president has already carried out limited invasions of both Ukraine and Georgia; his build-up of 100,000 troops along Ukraines border this time, though, augurs grander plans.

Ukraine and Georgia are unlikely to join NATO anytime soon. Still, the U.S. should have taken their membership off the table completely in earlier talks with Putin in exchange for significant moves on his part, such as withdrawing forces he has in those countries, said Gavin Wilde, a former National Security Council official who dealt with Russia.

Wilde, who describes himself as a liberal internationalist-turned-restrainer, says it doesnt help that the United States and its allies have often conflated NATO a defensive military pact with ideas like democracy, the rule of law and human rights.

Now it seems like that particular opportunity to deescalate and get some concessions from Putin may have passed, said Wilde, who is now with Defense Priorities, a restraint-focused think tank.

Plenty of foreign policy practitioners disagree with Wildes diagnosis.

Ivo Daalder, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO, said restrainers want to blame everything on NATO expansion when much of the problem really comes down to Putin.

Its a problem of Putin believing he will only be secure if he can control his neighborhood, Daalder said, adding that the Russian dictator in particular fears that democratic progress in places like Ukraine will embolden Russians to rise up against him.

Daalder and others also dismissed the notion that Bidens decision to pull U.S. troops out of Afghanistan had much to do with the doctrine of restraint.

Biden had long advocated for an end to the United States presence in Afghanistan, believing it was a fruitless fight that drained resources from more important standoffs, including with Russia and China, Daalder argued.

Still, plenty of restrainers are taking comfort in Bidens promise that U.S. troops will not play a direct fighting role in any battle for Ukraine, even though some may be sent to beef up the American presence in nearby NATO countries as a deterrent.

He continues to display a realist sensibility, said Stephen Wertheim, a restraint-supporting scholar who last year co-authored a Foreign Affairs essay titled Biden the Realist. The problem? Its competing with both the constraints of politics and a liberal internationalist streak, too.

Despite Bidens promises now, restrainers worry that the conflict will evolve in a way that drags the United States into a direct shooting war, especially if hawkish lawmakers pressure the White House and campaign politics require a tough on Russia stance.

You hear people talk about supporting an insurgency in Ukraine. What does that mean? Covert actors on the ground? What happens if they get killed? Ruger said. What happens if this gets escalated?

One of the trickiest parts of arguing for restraint in the case of Ukraine is the risk of being accused of supporting Putin, whose human rights record includes poisoning political opponents and eviscerating media freedoms.

Commentator Peter Beinart, who long ago came to regret his support of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, recently described accusations that restrainers are pro-Putin as a type of cancel culture. He noted that supporters of deposing tyrants like Iraqs Saddam Hussein often failed to calculate the longer-term risks.

In deposing Saddam, the U.S. launched a war that took roughly 200,000 Iraqi lives, strengthened Iran, and helped create ISIS, Beinart writes. In deposing Muammar Qaddafi, the U.S. helped turn Libya into a failed state, thus scattering weapons and fighters across West Africa, some of whom reportedly helped launch a coup in Burkina Faso last week. All of which makes it quite plausible that keeping NATO membership open to Ukraine will help provoke a Russian response that leaves that country less stable, less free, and less peaceful than it would be if the U.S. supported Ukrainian neutrality.

There are other factors in play as U.S. lawmakers and others weigh the implications of the Russian threats against Ukraine. Some people involved remember well the Cold War and are reflexively inclined toward a tough-on-Russia stance. Others came of age in the post-9/11 era and are skeptical of American use of force abroad. Many are almost reflexively anti-war: A coalition of such groups released a statement Tuesday calling on Biden to end the U.S. role in escalating the extremely dangerous tensions with Russia over Ukraine and blaming the crisis on NATO expansion.

Some of the sentiment is based in pure politics. To some liberals, opposing Russia and supporting Ukraine is equivalent to opposing former President Donald Trump, who repeatedly tried to curry favor with Putin and was accused of halting U.S. military aid to Ukraine in a bid to force the government in Kyiv to investigate Biden.

Its tough to predict sometimes who will land on what side, said Stephen Miles, president of Win Without War, a progressive organization. After all, one of the most powerful voices speaking out against U.S. support for Ukraine is conservative Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

The political signaling is all screwed up, Miles said.

For people like Wertheim, Ruger and others, simply the fact that there is a debate already is a victory for restrainers. Ten or 20 years ago, such voices were far more easily drowned out, they say. Now, even members of the Biden administration will at least listen.

The Biden administration at the very top has proved to be more amenable to restrainers way of thinking than expected, Wertheim said. When it comes to Russia and Ukraine, the president and his aides need to think of the long-term consequences, Wertheim added, including how a commitment to this conflict could impact their stated desires to focus U.S. foreign policy more on China.

The way things are going now, the likely outcome will be an increased U.S. commitment to Europe, and that really will be an unfortunate outcome, he said.

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The restraint crowd facepalms over Biden's Ukraine threats - POLITICO

Sam Seder Debates Marxist Jackson Hinkle About Whether The Progressive Democratic "Squad" Are Corporate, Imperialist Sellouts -…

This week's development in the "Democrats in Disarray" storyline comes from The Majority Report with Sam Seder in a video titled: Sam Debates Electoral Politics With A Jimmy Dore Fan

The show description says: "American Patriot and Marxist-Leninist Jackson Hinkle joins the Majority Report to debate Sam Seder regarding if the Squad progressives are sellouts for staying silent and giving President Joe Biden support. Sam Seder challenges Hinkles position of the media treating the Squad favorably as well as the opinion that the Squad should simply leverage their votes to capitalize on their negotiations with Biden to pass a progressive agenda swiftly through the Senate."

Hinkle highlights the difference between "establishment progressive" Democrats in Congress and a segment of the "anti-imperialist" left grassroots.

Seder begins: "I was told that you are a communist and you wanted to come on to debate: You said, I'd love to focus to the conversation on your support for The Squad. I personally believe the Squad and progressives in Congress are sellouts who have abandoned virtually every aspect of progressive principles over the past few years."

"I am a Marxist-Leninist anti-imperialist American patriot," clarified Jackson Hinkle.

Sam Seder made this point: "You've made your assessment that they're getting preferential treatment because they're not being roasted by the establishment? And then you say they're getting money from George Soros... In the form of giving it to the Sunrise movement? ... So you're contending that they sold out for over $2,700 from George Soros?"

"No, if you listen to anything I just said, I cited numerous examples where The Squad has been given preferential treatment. To just select that one, in particular, is disingenuous," Hinkle replied. "What I want to talk about, and what you seem to not want to talk about, is your continuing support for the Squad, who is going along with the Democratic establishment on all these votes they could be blocking to get concessions in return, and in some cases they are supporting anti-progressive measures and bills."

Another of the main points Hinkle tried to make is about the Squad's bona fides on anti-imperialist foreign policy:

JACKSON HINKLE: A 12% increase?

SAM SEDER: 12%, 11% increase, 13%.

JACKSON HINKLE: You don't have a problem with the State Department, who is leading coups across this world, who is launching hybrid warfare through the National Endowment for Democracy, like Venezuela like you said you had a problem and warmongering on Venezuela. You said you don't have a problem with an increase to the State Department when they could be getting concessions for progressive policies?

Another big topic was Hinkle asking Seder: "Did you criticize The Squad when AOC funneled $160,000 to DCCC corporate Democrats after promising not to?"

"First of all, she, I actually didn't," Sam Seder said. "I think there's value in doing that. I think what politicians should do, broadly speaking, is go in and try to get legislation that is positive to pass."

"Don't you also think that given that AOC specifically said she was not going to donate to them, do you think that's a problem that she went out and donated to them?" Hinkle followed up.

"I think people can take issue with that," Seder agreed. "I didn't spend enough time emphasizing it as you apparently wanted me to."

"So why did you not?" Hinkle asked. "You just told me you didn't talk about it a minute ago."

There was also this exchange where Seder appears to get the upper hand about Rep. Ilhan Omar taking money from George Soros:

The Extremely Online left and the Jimmy Dore-verse both seem to have really enjoyed the conversation:

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Sam Seder Debates Marxist Jackson Hinkle About Whether The Progressive Democratic "Squad" Are Corporate, Imperialist Sellouts -...

Trump takes control of the Jan. 6 story while the media and Congress sleep on it – Salon

Over the weekend, emboldened by a cowardly mainstream media and a slow-moving January 6 House Select committee, Donald Trump escalated his efforts to seize control of the story of the violent insurrection at the Capitol he incited last year. At a rally held in Conroe, Texas, on Saturday, Trump painted the insurrectionists as martyrs and heroes, claiming those who have been arrested and charged more than 700 "are being treated so unfairly" and promised, "if it requires pardons, we will give them pardons."On Sunday, Trump doubled down, releasing a statement all but confessinghe had wished for then-Vice President Mike Pence to overturn the election on January 6.

"Mike Pence did have the right to change the outcome," his statement claimed. "Unfortunately, he didn't exercise that power, he could have overturned the Election!"

RELATED:Why voters don't blame Republicans for the Capitol riot no GOP leaders have been arrested yet

The statement makes clear what Trump's intentions were when he incited the people to storm the Capitol on January 6, some of whom were recorded chanting "hang Mike Pence." (Trump has previously defended the chanters.) On Monday,Asawin Suebsaeng of the Daily Beast reported that Trump has been conspiring for months with GOP lawmakers, should they regain control of Congress in the midterm elections, to abuse their power to launch fake "investigations" into January 6 aimed at further confusing public understanding of the riot and painting the insurrectionists as martyrs.

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Trump's boldness in trying to rewrite the history of January 6 is horrific, but not shocking. The man has never failed to press an advantage. He has a huge one when it comes to gaining control of the narrative of January 6: There's no one really out there stopping him. The mainstream media is falling behind on the job, failing to treat Trump's downright criminal aggression on this front with the gravity it deserves. Meanwhile, Democrats who ostensibly control Congress and the White House are too slow-moving and cautious in their response, giving Trump the opening to go all-out with his valorization of January 6 and efforts to stoke further attacks on democracy.

The one-year anniversary of January 6 came and went. President Joe Biden marked the occasion with a speech, and plenty of information was leaked to the press, but overall, it simply didn't garner the attention needed to counter Trump's revisionist history. Promises were made that "televised hearings and reports that will bring their findings out into the open," and yet this entire month went by without a single hearing.

Last week, committee member Rep. Jamie Raskin told Dean Obeidallah in a Salon Talks interviewthat the planned hearings have been pushed back to "later in the spring, April or May more likely." Raskin blamed the delay on people like Trump's former chief of staff Mark Meadows for doing the "hokey pokey." Meadows, who has been refusing to cooperate,received a referral for contempt of Congress in December. Democrats are not rising to the moment. It's been seven weeks and Meadows still has not been arrested by Biden's Department of Justice.

RELATED:Trump is feeling the heat from investigations and wants his mob to save him

It's tempting to shrug off these delays. One could even argue that maybe it's better to have hearings closer it is to the midterm elections. But this failure to move faster is bad news for democracy. It was entirely predictable that Trump would successfully pressure his lackeys into not cooperating. The failure of the January 6 committee to anticipate that and prepare for it means that they will likely be snookered again and that "April or May" may come and go with more hearing delays caused by Trump, who now has good reason to believe he will avoid answering for his crimes for the rest of year, to the committee or anyone else. The failure to arrest Meadows, and to get more charges flowing for other non-cooperators, is clearly emboldening Trump even further.

Trump has a very good reason to delay things as much as possible: It gives him an incredible opportunity to shape the narrative. As usual, it's an opportunity he is taking full advantage of. While loyal Democratic voters won't be fooled, low information voters who also tend to be the swing voters who decide elections can and already are being manipulated by Trump's disinformation. Both focus group and polling data show that these kinds of voters have no idea how serious January 6 was, or how much the GOP is covering up for Trump's crimes while conspiring to make sure the next coup is successful. Troublingly, even Democratic voters routinely underrate the ongoing risks. The longer Democrats fail to educate voters, the more time Trump has to make sure his lies stick.

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But it's not just Democrats. The mainstream media paid very little attention to Trump's escalation over the weekend. When there was front page coverage, the focus was not on the danger of Trump's open and ongoing coup. Instead it was filtered through the "horse race" style of covering politics. The Washington Post ran with "Trump's Texas trip illustrates his upsides and downsides for Republicans and their midterm hopes" while the New York Times had"Trump's Grip on G.O.P. Faces New Strains." Given those headlines, readers might imagine Trump's behavior is mainly a problem for the GOP's midterm prospects, not an open threat to national security and our democracy.

Peter Baker, a preeminent political reporter for the New York Times, acted baffled in a Sunday night tweet as to why there wasn't a bigger public reaction to Trump's statements."Old enough to remember when it would have been shocking to see a former president admit that his goal was to have 'overturned the Election.'," Baker tweeted.

As many pointed out in reply, a main reason the public seems unaware is that Baker and his colleagues are failing to make them aware. As one Twitter user noted, "Then make it a 96 pt headline on the paper where you work and have influence. The media decides how shocking something is and you know that." Others pointed out that the press was able to make a scandal over the non-story of Hillary Clinton using a private email server, and all but yawn and shrug it off when Trump publicly admits his fascistic intentions. As anyone at a progressive publication can attest, reader interest is there. There might even be more if mainstream media treated it as a scandal instead of a page A24 oddity.

RELATED:Republican voters don't actually "believe" the Big Lie about January 6 they're in on the con

Neither the Democrats nor the media are helpless in the face of Trump's continued provocations. The January 6 committee needs to be smarter about anticipating Trump's tactics, and moving faster to gain control of the narrative. Biden's Department of Justice needs to arrest Meadows.The media could choose to treat Trump's continuing efforts to end democracy with the same five-alarm coverage they gave to Clinton's mundane use of a personal email account.

The public takes its cues about what is important and what is not from leaders and media figures. If journalists and Democrats don't step up more aggressively, then Trump's lies about January 6 will keep gaining more traction. It will get even worse if Republicans control Congress next year, and use their own hearing power to offer Trump's lies an even bigger gloss of mainstream respectability. Every day Trump is allowed to control the narrative, his power only grows stronger.

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Trump takes control of the Jan. 6 story while the media and Congress sleep on it - Salon

Knicks Tom Thibodeau is losing control of Julius Randle on the court – Empire Sports Media

It wasnt more than a year ago that Knicks All-Star power forward Julius Randle was averaging 24+ points per night on average. Enjoying his best season to date, Randle justified a four-year, $117 million extension, but his fall-off this season has been dramatic.

Ranging from hostile remarks toward the media to a downward pointing thumb as fans questioned his passion for the team, Randles pedestal has shrunk to a mere tree-stump.

In fact, rumors have floated that Randle could be on the trade block in the coming days as the deadline quickly approaches on February 10. However, head coach Tom Thibodeau still believes in his star forward, even if hes had a progressively more difficult time controlling his efficiency and extracting his true potential.

Whether Randles ego has consumed his selflessness or hes simply regressing to the mean, the veteran has been a shell of his former self, putting the Knicks in a progressively more difficult position.

Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau has admitted to associates hes had more trouble getting Randle to play with a selflessness this season than during last season, an NBA source toldMarc Bermanof theNew York Post.

Berman also noted that some believe Randle could be trying to justify his massive contract extension with more burdon regarding scoring production. The problem is that sometimes the best way to excrete value is simply playing a complementary role.

With RJ Barrett averaging over 20 points per game to start the new year, Randle has fallen to the No. 2 scoring option, which isnt necessarily a problem.

The issue lies more in his disdain for not being the top scorer but being the Robin to RJs Batman. The roles are reversing, and Randle seemingly cant handle the downgrade.

Randle is averaging a measly 16.4 points per game and shooting 24.2% from the 3-PT range to start the new year. Alternatively, Barrett is blossoming into the star New York needs him to be, which coincides directly with Juliuss regression, oddly.

If the two cant find a way to thrive together, the Knicks will have to make a big change, and it might involve sending Randle packing.

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Knicks Tom Thibodeau is losing control of Julius Randle on the court - Empire Sports Media