From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject We Were Told Joe Biden Was The 'Safe Choice'. But It Was Risky to Offer So Little
Date November 11, 2020 2:10 AM
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[A great many people did not vote for Joe Biden, they voted
against Trump. We have to recognise how narrow this win was ]
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WE WERE TOLD JOE BIDEN WAS THE 'SAFE CHOICE'. BUT IT WAS RISKY TO
OFFER SO LITTLE  
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Naomi Klein
November 8, 2020
The Guardian
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_ A great many people did not vote for Joe Biden, they voted against
Trump. We have to recognise how narrow this win was _

, Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung–New York Office

 

Naomi Klein delivered her election analysis at a Haymarket event on
Friday night. This is an abridged transcript of remarks. You can watch
the event here
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These have been a harrowing few days. And these days have been more
harrowing than they should have been. As we all know, Joe Biden won
the Democratic primaries based on the claim that he was the safest bet
to beat Donald Trump. But even if the Democratic party base was much
more politically aligned with Bernie Sanders, or Elizabeth Warren, in
their support for Medicare for All, a Green New Deal, for racial
justice, the party was sure that Bernie Sanders was too risky. And so,
as we all remember, they banded together and gave us Biden.

But I think that after days of gnawing our fingers down to the quick,
it’s fair to say that Biden was not safe at all, as we always knew.
Not safe for the planet, not safe for the people on the front lines of
police violence, not safe for the millions upon millions of people who
are seeking asylum, but also not even safe as a candidate.

Defeating Trump is a really important popular victory. A great many
people did not vote for Joe Biden, they voted against Trump, because
they recognize the tremendous threat that he represents. And the fact
that the movements that are behind so much of that political victory
are not able to even just take a moment and feel that victory, because
they are already under attack by the Democratic establishment, as it
seeks once again to abdicate all responsibility for ending us in the
mess that we are in, is really its own kind of a crime. People should
not have to be fighting off these attacks. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
should not have to be on Twitter all day, making the point that it is
not the fault of democratic socialists that the Democratic party has
underperformed in the way that it has.

In fact, she and so many others should be taking a bow for the
incredible organizing and leadership that they’ve shown in this
period.

Biden was a risky candidate for the same reasons Hillary Clinton was a
risky candidate. He was risky because of his swampy record because he
had so little to offer so many people in such deep crisis. It seems he
has secured an electoral victory by the skin of his teeth but it was a
high risk gamble from the start. And not only is the left not to
blame. We are largely responsible for the success that has taken
place, not the Lincoln Project
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which has, as David Sirota said, set fire to $67m in this election by
trying to reach suburban Republican voters.

We are the levees holding back the tsunami of fascism. The wave is
still gaining force, that’s why this is such a difficult moment to
celebrate. We need to shore up those levees, and we also need to drain
energy away from their storm. So how do we do that?

We need to, I think, recognize first of all that, though we may be
dealing with the same kind of corporate Democrats
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_we _are not the same. We have changed. Our movements have grown. They
grew during the Obama years, and they grew during the Trump years,
they have grown in size but they’ve also grown in vision. In the
vision of defund the police, moving the resources from the
infrastructure of incarceration, of policing, of militarism to the
infrastructure of care. Vision work has happened. The vision work
behind the Green New Deal has happened. And of course the movement
supporting Medicare for All.

Even as we approach this juncture with so much fatigue, we have to
remind ourselves that we have changed. That the presence of “the
Squad” is a difference from the Obama and Biden years. Obama and
Biden did not have to contend with Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida
Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley and now Cori Bush and Jamaal Bowman. So I think
where we go from here is, we need more coordination in all of this
rising power.

I think about that moment in 2018, when the Democrats took back the
House of Representatives. They were expecting their victory parade and
instead had their offices occupied by the Sunrise movement and
[Ocasio-Cortez] greeting them and pledging to introduce Green New Deal
legislation. That sort of inside-outside pincer is what we need to be
replicating again and again and again. That is a glimpse of the kind
of dynamic that we will need if we are going to win the policies that
are actually enough to begin to keep us safe.

What we have seen with the failure of the Democratic party to do the
one thing that we look to from a political party, which is be good at
winning elections. I don’t need to outline all the things we had
going in our favor but this election should have been a repeat of
Herbert Hoover’s loss in 1933. We are in the grips of a pandemic, a
desperate economic depression and and Trump has done absolutely
everything wrong.

This should have been a sweep. It should have been the sweep that we
were promised. And the fact is, the Democratic leadership bungled it
up on every single front. It wasn’t just a mistake. They did not
want to offer people what they needed. They are much more interested
in appeasing the donor class than they are in meeting the needs of
their constituents, who need them now more than ever.

==

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Naomi Klein is a senior correspondent at the Intercept and the
inaugural Gloria Steinem endowed chair of media, culture and feminist
studies at Rutgers University. She is an award-winning journalist and
best-selling author, most recently of On Fire: The Burning Case for A
Green New Deal.

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This is an abridged transcript of remarks Klein delivered at Where Do
We Go From Here?
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Haymarket Books event on 6 November 2020

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