Many PDA members know that our strategy to move the Democratic Party towards progressive positions, policies and programs, which the majority of Americans clearly embrace, entails both an inside and outside game. The inside strategy refers to supporting candidates running for office (federal, state and local) who represent our progressive platform. We’re working tirelessly (just ask Mike Fox!) to get progressive candidates elected and grow the progressive caucus at every level everywhere in the country.
The outside strategy refers to pushing, prodding and cajoling (some might call it “educating”) our elected members of Congress, State Legislature, City Council and School Districts to vote consistent with progressive positions. Oftentimes the outside strategy requires mobilizing Americans to engage in the political process, call and write Congress, and talk with their neighbors.
Here’s our chance! The Democratic Party of New Mexico is holding elections this Spring for DPNM state party positions, and each County is doing the same for local party positions. Here’s our opportunity to help move the Democratic Party from the inside and make it more responsive to New Mexicans who have given up on politics and/or the Democratic Party altogether.
Alan Minsky, Executive Director of PDA, writes in Common Dreams (Jan.13) — “Once again, the Democratic Party is in crisis. Activists both inside and outside the party have a big question to answer: Do insiders pivot to the center or the left? Do outsiders join the party or abandon it?
In both cases, the choice should be obvious: embrace the progressive economic agenda (move left) and enter the party en masse. This moment of crisis is an opportunity to get the party on track, to turn it into what people want and need. Indeed, the table is set for us to transform American politics and save our democracy. Read his entire piece here.
Minsky’s advice couldn’t be more timely with the Democratic National Committee (DNC) set to elect a new Chair and other Party officers on February 1. While most Americans are probably not tuned into the political machinations behind the selection of Dem Party leaders, we can be confident that the “old guard” (Clinton-Obama-Pelosi representing the corporate neoliberal wing of the Party) are deep in the thick of it.
This is the time for the rest of us – the youth, labor unions, climate activists, peace activists and everyone else disillusioned with politics and the status quo – to pay attention and demand a change, beginning with the Democratic Party.
According to the DNC, the 448 active members of the national committee include 200 elected members from 57 states, territories, and Democrats Abroad; members representing 16 affiliate groups; and 73 “at-large” members who were elected as a slate appointed in 2021 by the party chairman, Jaime Harrison. For a party that claims the word “democratic” and insists that it is a champion of transparency and accountability in government, the official roster of these 448 voters is not public. (https://prospect.org/politics/2025-01-10-opening-dncs-black-box/ )
Of the eight candidates running for DNC Chair, two have caught my eye after reading about each and watching all of them respond to questions at a couple of virtual public forums. I’ll explain in a future post why I think Ken Martin or Ben Wikler should be the next DNC Chair. But I’d like to hear your thoughts.