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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 2016)
Street Roots • March 18-24, 2016 COLOR, from page 8 which is kind of a double-edged sword. If you come from a country where voting was punished or somewhat risky, there’s a cultural tradition on some level. But also they’ve not been invested, with civic engagement coordinators in churches and faith-based institutions. Actually, I was down in San Diego recently, and I learned that Mexico is required by law to advertise PSAs about their upcoming election in San Diego because there are a lot of Mexicans in San Diego. So the country of Mexico is advertising its upcoming election, . which is in July. But there’s no advertising in San Diego for the San Diego elections (in terms of it being a law). So we do not invest in informing and prioritizing and getting everybody out to the polls. J.Z.: In this current election, where are the candidates getting it wrong and where are they getting it right when it comes to courting this progressive bloc? S.P.: I think that Bernie’s focus on inequality resonates in a country and communities that have great amounts of inequality. I think his language around criminal justice reform has gotten much better and much stronger. That’s all for the good. I still think he has a way to go in terms of appreciating the distinctness of racial inequality, separate and apart from economic inequality in this country. So the level of emphasis of the singularity of racism, I would say, is insufficient. On Hillary’s side, she gets the singularity issue. She speaks to it better. She is challenging whites to engage in owning and understanding their privilege, and she’s introducing to the public discourse language about race that I haven’t heard in 30 years. J.Z.: For example? S.P.: She has said you have to look at race as a distinct entity. She gave a speech in Harlem recently specifically talking about that issue. She called for a hundred-plus-billion- dollar program to address the inequality in the communities of color, so that kind of specific focus is helpful. I still think she should go further. It’s almost like you need to blend the two of them. You have her race specific lens and then Bernie’s radicalism melded together. J.Z.: It’s a two-way street. If you’re a progressive voter and you don’t have a candidate who reflects your views, you’re cornered. It’s also about getting more people of color and progressives engaged in politics. Where are we with that side of it? News That helps advance the movement. It sends a signal to people who care about those issues, and it brands them in connection with them. That’s something that can be done right now and people need to be challenged on. Someone in the movement said that people see the protagonist in social change as somebody else. Part of my mission with this book is to let people see that we have a majority now - we actually can make the change. So people can step up and run. People can probably have a bigger impact on getting elected than they may even fully appreciate or realize. J.Z.: What you’re talking about seems like an extension of your work on the Obama campaigns. This idea of taking back ownership of the political system from the corporate world and bringing it back to the people. It seems a revisioning of2008 and the “Hope” campaign. S.P.: Yes - and the actual meta lessons of 2016 is that the big corporate-donor dominance is not carrying the day. Jeb Bush raised 100-plus million dollars and went nowhere. Whereas Bernie has 5 million, small-dollar contributions, and that has really propelled him to the place he’s in. I think that says something about the limits of big money and the potential of small money collected and aggregated through our technological tools. J.Z.: It often seems that the politics addressing people of color are relegated to the extremes - reactions to police behavior, overt discrimination and messaging how to alleviate violations on their lives. And that often seems dismissive of real proactive discussions around alleviating poverty, strengthening our education system, and so on. S.P.: The language and the topics changed as the election moved from Iowa and New Hampshire to the South. Now, as they move out of the South, are they going to continue talking about the issues they did in the South? North Carolina, Virginia even Georgia are places that could be competitive if there could be an inspired, mobilized black vote. Another big test or challenge is going to be what happens with the vice presidency? Are we going to finally desegregate the office of vice president? We’ve never had a person of color in that office. It’s strictly of calculation of what you think the electorate will tolerate. And either of these older white candidates are going to need a younger, inspiring person of color to balance out the ticket I think it’s absolutely necessary for either candidate to get the large, enthusiastic support they’re going to need if they’re going to win. J.Z.: Beyond the history of overt policies S.P.: It’s about the (future) candidates, and against minorities, what’s the consequence when also holding the current candidates progressives and people of color aren’t engaged accountable. There’s more that should be with the election. I think of your example of the done to pressure the current Democratic G.I. Bill, which actually had many racially candidates who have raised between them discriminatory policies built into it. What are $200 million. Can they take $2 million to we losing today, policy wise? create or support existing efforts? The Black Lives Matter movement and their allies are S.P.:-The clearest, the most recent is the trying to identify and run candidates for district attorney and to train operatives to run Democrats lost the House and lost the Senate. And then with that, lost the those campaigns. Can these campaigns put opportunity to pass immigration reform. So $2 million to that effort and partnership with . we had that moment, and the potential to Black Lives Matter and seed the ground for move those things forward, and lost it And there to be new leaders and new candidates? Page 9 now we’re stymied on the Supreme Court pick. Had we not lost the Senate, we could, as you’re supposed to do, nominate a replacement and put that person on the court, which then has policy implications for all the issues before the court. Union rights, immigration issues, freedom of choice. All those issues. J.Z.: As a figurehead, has Obama carried the day in bringing along this progressive body? S.P.: It’s almost like which sectors? There was the video with the young black giri crying when she heard that Obama was not going to be president anymore. I think in terms of the children of this country, who have only known the Obamas as the first family, that is going to be hugely significant to the future of this country for decades. In terms of the immediate next level of the "Part of my mission with this progressive book is to let people see that political we have a majority now - we infrastructure, actually can make the change. we’re not where we need to be. So So people can step tip and run. there needs to be People can probably have a both a bench of bigger impact on getting elected candidates and than they may even fully operatives. Too appreciate or realize." much of the political party infrastructure is still controlled by whites and not focused on communities of color, so there’s still a lot to be done. J.Z.: You mentioned earlier the distinction between racial and economic inequalities. Our newspaper works with people in poverty. What needs to happen to bring more people of poverty into our political discussions? S.P.: Part of it is delivering. There’s a video the White House put out of a young conservative white man introducing the president, saying that Obamacare saved his life. That he had opposed the president both times, and he was atoning for that. Providing a policy agenda which delivers for everybody is part of the issue. Too little of our politics is explicitly relevant to poor people in terms of seeing why they have to participate, how will it actually improve their lives directly. I think the public policy debate is too timid and too narrow. For example: What I talk about in the book is a wealth tax, not just an income tax. The top 1 percent in this country has $26 trillion in wealth. That’s a household of $13 million or more in assets. If you just did a 2 percent wealth tax, you could end poverty - just on the top 1 percent of people in the country. And it doesn’t even have to take money from them. With your stock market returns, you should be able to make 10 percent on your money, so we’re saying just make 8 percent and we’ll end poverty. If there was a campaign and it was a part of our dialogue where the top 1 percent will just have to get richer a little slower, then you can end poverty - that would be very different. joanne@streetroots. org