Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Tammy Baldwin Delivers Passionate Defense Of Progressivism

The typical political Democratic consultant today has simple advice for almost candidate these: Run to the middle, and whatever you do, don't let your opponent smear you as a liberal.

Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), running for Wisconsin's open U.S. Senate seat, suggested Democrats should ignore that "centrist" conventional wisdom.

In a speech at the Nation Institute's annual dinner -- which helps support one of the most liberal publications in the country -- Baldwin delivered an unapologetic defense of progressivism and its contribution to America.

"It's not that we've forgotten how to create wealth in this country. It's that we have allowed that wealth to be concentrated in fewer and fewer hands. And as the distance between top and bottom has widened, the bonds between us have stretched -- and broken," she said.

During her speech, Baldwin pointed to the "proud progressive tradition" in her own state as a model of what the movement can accomplish.

"Wisconsin was one of the first states to guarantee access to a free public education," she said. "We were the first state to ratify the 19th amendment allowing women the right to vote. We were the first to protect gays and lesbians from workplace discrimination. Wisconsin was the first state to grant collective bargaining rights to public employees. We invited workers' compensation. We invited unemployment insurance. But recently, that progressive tradition has come under attack by extremists."

In her remarks, Baldwin never mentioned any of the Republicans vying to take her on in the general election, but she nevertheless drew a sharp distinction between the conservative and progressive visions for America. Besides just criticizing the right, she outlined what the left stands for.

"Our vision cannot be defined on the other side's terms or on the other side's turf," she said, alluding to a frustration that has often characterized the progressive base, which gained steam in 2004 by outlining its opposition to the Iraq War and President George W. Bush's policies.

"It must be our fight -- for an economy and a government that works for the 99 percent. A fight that says we're all in this together. A fight that declares we have an obligation to each other. An obligation to be fair and just. And where there are wrongs, an obligation to change it," she continued. "Believing in that -- that's what it means to be a progressive."

More concretely, Baldwin called on Americans to "break the grip that big corporations and big banks have" on society, "hold Wall Street accountable," invest in schools, put the "middle class back to work" and "reclaim the American dream."

Baldwin argued that the Republican Party today is no longer conservative, but radical.

"We must expose today's Republican Party for what it's really become: not conservative, but radical," she said. "Conservatives -- I was always told conservatives respect and preserve things. But radicals -- radicals destroy."

Baldwin held up the protests over Gov. Scott Walker's anti-collective bargaining law that started in Wisconsin in February, as well as the Occupy protests around the nation, as indicators of the power of progressivism.

"We have learned something important in recent months. Something none of us should ever forget," she said. "The truth is, no amount of corporate money or right-wing lies can defeat a progressive movement that is energized and mobilized."

No comments:

Post a Comment