President-elect Donald Trump has a “historically small” political mandate. But do Democratic lawmakers have what it takes to gather their own political capital and “to stand up for what’s right,” as Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) put it this week?
One day after House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and her top lieutenants held onto their leadership posts—leaving some to wonder whether the Democratic Party is ready to do the sort of reckoning progressives have called for in the wake of the 2016 election—youth and advocacy groups are holding a nationwide day of action Thursday “demanding that Democrats oppose Donald Trump’s hateful agenda without compromise.”
“If you negotiate with an authoritarian racist and his cabinet of cronies and nationalists, we will support primary challengers against you.”
—Yong Jung Cho, #AllofUs
The demonstrations kicked off Wednesday with a multiracial, millennial-led sit-in at Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s New York office, where CREDO political director Murshed Zaheed declared: “This is no time for reconciliation from Democratic leaders. Trump did not win the support of a majority of voters and he does not have a mandate. If Chuck Schumer does not change his ways under a bigoted, racist, anti-poor, and misogynistic Trump presidency, millions will suffer.”
Similar actions are taking place in at least seven cities on Thursday under the banner #JointheOpposition.
Following Pelosi’s win on Wednesday, The Nation columnist John Nichols said it was now up to her and Schumer to follow Warren’s advice and “be an actual opposition party in the coming era of Trumpism.”
He cited remarks Warren made on the Senate floor this week, in which she declared:
Democrats face their first test in this regard with a looming vote on H.R. 6392, the Systemic Risk Designation Improvement Act.
As David Dayen explained in the Fiscal Times:
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Unsurprisingly, Warren went on a Twitter tirade against the bill on Wednesday afternoon:
“Deregulation historically has never been a partisan game,” Dayen wrote. “Democrats and Republicans have typically worked together to roll back rules and open up the Wall Street casino for business. H.R. 6392 could represent a return to those times, or the moment when Democrats join together and say no, forcing Republicans to funnel victories to the banking industry on their own. If I were a Democratic member of Congress, I know what I’d rather have on my conscience.”