Defying national and
state-level Democratic establishment forces that have worked
to crowd out left-wing candidates and demonstrating that there is a
deep hunger among the American electorate for a bold
progressive agenda, candidates running on platforms of Medicare for All,
free college, and a living wage emerged victorious in several state primaries
on Tuesday and tore through the boundaries of what is conventionally considered
politically feasible.
"It feels like a
monumental shift," Arielle Cohen, co-chair of Pittsburgh Democratic
Socialists of America (DSA), told the Huffington
Post after four DSA-backed candidates defeated establishment Democrats in
Pennsylvania. "We won on popular demands that were deemed impossible. We
won on healthcare for all; we won on free education."
Running in Pennsylvania's
State House Districts 34 and 21 respectively, Summer Lee and
Sara Innamorato—both running on platforms consisting of Medicare for All,
strong environmental protection, and campaign finance reform—toppled what local
news outlets described as a "political dynasty" by trouncing
Democratic cousins Paul Costa and Dom Costa by a wide margin.
"They said it wasn't
possible without institutional support. That we couldn't talk about Medicare
for All, a living wage, about ending corruption in Harrisburg,"
Innamorato said during
her victory party Tuesday night. "And you know what we did instead? We
built something."
"The establishment's
scared," Pittsburgh DSA wrote on Twitter in
response to the upset victories, which also included wins by Elizabeth
Fiedler and Kristin
Seale over their establishment counterparts. "When we fight, we
win."
Signs of the grassroots
progressive wave that some predicted will ultimately sweep across the country
could also be seen in Idaho on Tuesday, where progressive Paulette Jordan
handily defeated her establishment-backed Democratic opponent A.J. Balukoff in
a bid to become the nation's first Native American governor.
If she wins in November,
Jordan—who ran on protecting public land from corporate plunder and criminal
justice reform—would be Idaho's first
Democratic governor in over 20 years.
"Today's elections prove
movement politics candidates, who rely on people power, can win, and win
powerfully," Ryan Greenwood, director of Movement Politics for People's
Action, said in a statement on Wednesday. "Candidates for public office
who commit to a racial and gender justice agenda that puts people and our
planet before profits are winning."
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