Where’s the Alternative to
Trump’s Austerity Budget? Look to Bernie Sanders’ Progressive Caucus.
The Congressional Progressive
Caucus has proposed a radical People’s Budget—but to pass it, we need to take
over the Democratic Party.
Anyone who has doubts about
what’s at stake in the battle for the future of the Democratic Party should
read The
People’s Budget: A Roadmap for the Resistance, released in May by the
Congressional Progressive Caucus. (Comprised of 75 U.S. representatives and
Sen. Bernie Sanders, the CPC is the largest caucus in the House.)
As an economic manifesto that
puts “political and economic power back in the hands of the people,” the
People’s Budget is not only a rebuke to Trump and his draconian 2018 budget,
but a challenge to a Democratic Party that has for too long elevated the
well-being of Corporate America over that of working people and the
environment.
In his 2018 budget, Trump
invests $200 billion in infrastructure spending over the next 10 years.
Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao explained it this way to reporters: “The
administration’s goal is to seek long-term reform on how infrastructure
projects are regulated, funded, delivered and maintained.” That’s
Republican-speak for “privatization of public assets.” To help fund these
“reforms,” Trump is looking to raise the gasoline tax and turn Interstate
highways into toll roads, two measures that would disproportionately impact
rural Americans.
The People’s Budget, operating
under the radical principle that “public money should go toward the public
good,” would invest $2 trillion in infrastructure over the next 10 years “to
transform our fossil-fuel energy system, overburdened mass transit,
deteriorating schools, lead-contaminated water systems, and crumbling roads and
bridges.”
The Economic Policy Institute estimates
that in its first year, the CPC budget would create 2.4 million jobs for people
of all backgrounds in both urban and rural America. The CPC proposes funding
these public works with a financial transaction tax on the sale of stocks and
bonds.
Yet, no matter how hard one
wishes, the CPC’s grand ideas will come to naught if they aren’t accompanied by
a corresponding plan to gain the power needed to implement them.
If the best thing one can say
about Trump is that he is consistently dead wrong, the second best is that he
has galvanized the opposition, and that opposition is mobilizing to take back
Congress in 2018. After all, a budget like The People’s Budget only has a
chance of passing if we have a progressive Democratic Congress and a Democratic
president—and that can only happen if the Democratic Party manages to address
the social discontent in the body politic and return to its progressive, populist
roots.
One hopeful sign: The
Bernie-Hillary divide has begun to blur as progressive Clintonites find common
cause with Berniecrats. Theo Anderson reports in this issue’s cover story, “Bernie
Sander Supporters Are Taking Over the Democratic Machine, One State at a
Time,” how Kimberly Ellis, a progressive African-American activist who
supported Hillary Clinton in the primaries, made a bid in May for the chair of
the California Democratic Party, backed by both the California Nurses
Association and Our Revolution.
In a hotly contested election,
Ellis lost, but only by 62 out of about 3,000 votes cast—a victory if one sees
the ballot box being half full, rather than half empty.
If the Democratic
establishment wants to win in 2018 and 2020, they should embrace their left
flank and engage with the energized constituencies that are clamoring for a
just redistribution of wealth and power in American society.
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