You are diagnosing national trends. You’re maybe the most famous voice on the left currently. What can we expect from you in the next four years?
I don’t know. I think I’ll have probably more answers as we get through transition, and to the next term. How the party responds will very much inform my approach and what I think is going to be necessary.
The last two years have been pretty hostile. Externally, we’ve been winning. Externally, there’s been a ton of support, but internally, it’s been extremely hostile to anything that even smells progressive.
Is the party ready to, like, sit down and work together and figure out how we’re going to use the assets from everyone at the party? Or are they going to just kind of double down on this smothering approach? And that’s going to inform what I do.
Is there a universe in which they’re hostile enough that we’re talking about a Senate run in a couple years?
I genuinely don’t know. I don’t even know if I want to be in politics. You know, for real, in the first six months of my term, I didn’t even know if I was going to run for re-election this year.
Really? Why?
It’s the incoming. It’s the stress. It’s the violence. It’s the lack of support from your own party. It’s your own party thinking you’re the enemy. When your own colleagues talk anonymously in the press and then turn around and say you’re bad because you actually append your name to your opinion. I chose to run for re-election because I felt like I had to prove that this is real. That this movement was real. That I wasn’t a fluke. That people really want guaranteed health care and that people really want the Democratic Party to fight for them.
But I’m serious when I tell people the odds of me running for higher office and the odds of me just going off trying to start a homestead somewhere — they’re probably the same.
It's true that there really is just no way to win. If you lose your election, you fail so many people, and you look like shit. If you win, you have to spend all this time around the ghouls in government, they stab you in the back constantly, the media paints you as the devil almost every day, you can't get on social media without being relentlessly attacked, and you also have to deal with death threats—at the very least. On top of that, good luck on getting Medicare for All or a Green New Deal passed. I don't blame her for feeling this way at all.
Also have to remind everyone that AOC is an imperialist, and one of the "progressive" dems she mentioned is my House representative, Jared Golden, who did indeed vote for Medicare for All, but I strongly suspect he was pulling a Susan Collins—only voting for it because he knew the bill would fail. If there's ever a chance that an M4A bill might actually have traction, there's no fucking way he'll vote for it. A few months ago he also voted to continue the war in Afghanistan, and he takes millions of dollars from Silicon Valley. AOC is light years ahead of the average Democratic official, but she's far from what we need.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Except the point is that scoring points with guillable progressives doesn't hurt you electorally like centrist dems are saying.
Which is why it's so fucking nonsensical that they'd be so bold as to claim it and expect anyone to take them seriously
deleted by creator
No, my analysis is that winning is entirely based on outreach and voter mobilization. Elections aren't really about ideology like many of us like to pretend they are, that should've been the lesson from the dem primaries.