AOC - "Just a Regular Old Democrat Now" or "The ‘AOC Left’ Has Achieved Plenty"?

that bitch a straight up actress,

no more no less, she would be, whatever they paying her to be...!!

I mean thats damn near all politicians, but this bitch takes the cake....!!!

bitch faker than a rolex on canal street bruh!!
Yeah, she is fake and I marked her down as goofy when she talked about crime and police. Her take on pigs when all that shit was going down in 2020 is so fucking out of touch it speaks to a fake chick who grew up with a silver spoon like she did. And like Warren, who economic takes are laughable. Bitches think they playing real life with monopoly money.

That said, I don't think she is evil like some of these politicians(like mitch and manchin). AOC mostly just talk and social media.
 
AOC is a useless bitch.

Always On Camera is good for talking but doesn't accomplish anything. She can't get anything past because she doesn't know how to form a coalition. That's always been a problem of all the Bernie Sanders leftists in congress. She doesn't get anything accomplished for her home District because she's too busy being on camera instead of actually getting anything done. Her District in Queens is one of the ones that needs help when it comes to flooding and this dumb bitch voted against the Infrastructure Act. Everything about Call Me Sandy is a lie, she didn't grow up in the Bronx, she's never surrounded herself with Hispanic people she's a classic example of a white leftist just like the people who elected her.

When you want to see somebody who actually is a young representative who's move the needle look up Lauren Underwood.
 

People not trying to hear this bullshit, They listened to it 6 years ago and got Roe V Wade and affirmative action taken away amongst lots of other things. Fuck your revolution. We're trying to hold on to what we got.

Threatening to allow Trump to get re-elected unless you get what you want will just get you dog walked.
 
People not trying to hear this bullshit, They listened to it 6 years ago and got Roe V Wade and affirmative action taken away amongst lots of other things. Fuck your revolution. We're trying to hold on to what we got.

Threatening to allow Trump to get re-elected unless you get what you want will just get you dog walked.

That's a "don't leave the plantation" mentality. :smh:

The median wealth gap in America—the difference between the middle Black household and the middle White household—is around $164,000. The average wealth gap? Around $840,000. Using that as the measure, the researchers found it would take $7.5 trillion to halve the wealth gap, and $15 trillion to eliminate it.
Just trying to hold on to what we got?

FUCK THAT.

Much more is possible. And we're going to get it.
 
AOC is a useless bitch.

Always On Camera is good for talking but doesn't accomplish anything. She can't get anything past because she doesn't know how to form a coalition. That's always been a problem of all the Bernie Sanders leftists in congress. She doesn't get anything accomplished for her home District because she's too busy being on camera instead of actually getting anything done. Her District in Queens is one of the ones that needs help when it comes to flooding and this dumb bitch voted against the Infrastructure Act. Everything about Call Me Sandy is a lie, she didn't grow up in the Bronx, she's never surrounded herself with Hispanic people she's a classic example of a white leftist just like the people who elected her.

When you want to see somebody who actually is a young representative who's move the needle look up Lauren Underwood.

I'm going to ignore all the shit ahead of the final sentence that sounds like Jesse Watters wrote it and ask what makes you think Lauren Underwood is so great.
 
That's a "don't leave the plantation" mentality. :smh:

The median wealth gap in America—the difference between the middle Black household and the middle White household—is around $164,000. The average wealth gap? Around $840,000. Using that as the measure, the researchers found it would take $7.5 trillion to halve the wealth gap, and $15 trillion to eliminate it.
Just trying to hold on to what we got?

FUCK THAT.

Much more is possible. And we're going to get it.
Yeah fuck letting Trump get elected again. You guys can only get elected in the bluest of districts and haven’t passed shit.

And neither AOC nor Bernard Sanders give a single fuck about the Black wealth gap.

Bernard has been in office for 30 years and AOC has also been in office for years. Why don't you post what they have accomplished to shrink the Black wealth gap. I'll wait.
 
Yeah fuck letting Trump get elected again. You guys can only get elected in the bluest of districts and haven’t passed shit.

Katie Porter won in a red district on a Warren-style progressive economic agenda.

And Sanders outperformed Biden in the polls before the party colluded against him. Biden barely beat Trump during a pandemic where he told people to inject themselves with bleach. He would have lost without covid. So don't overestimate conservative Dems as electorally superior.
 

AOC has used her skills to win concrete, historic political victories

CHARLIE HELLER

Today’s socialist movement is the US’s strongest in generations, thanks mainly to the 81,000 member strong Democratic Socialists of America. The highly engaged of the DSA base has elected over 100 openly declared socialists to local, state, and federal offices.

As a longtime DSA organizer living in Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s district, I have seen firsthand how the most prominent of these post-Bernie socialists in office has contributed to historic political victories in New York State.

Still, most of us came to socialism to see programs like Medicare For All become reality. The chasm between enacting such policies and our present reality provides an ideal space for new kinds of cynicism to fester, often directed toward these electeds themselves.

This cynicism’s latest stage is epitomized by blogger Freddie DeBoer’s recent New York piece, “AOC Is Just a Regular Old Democrat Now.” To reach its hand-wringing conclusion, it looks at a series of mostly symbolic acts to determine that AOC and her fellow Squad members have hit a political dead end.

Frustratingly, DeBoer makes the exact argument he accuses AOC supporters of: ignoring concrete wins entirely. His failure to do so reveals the flaw inherent in nearly every prominent argument about what socialists in office should or shouldn’t be doing. Namely: that before debating what these electeds should do, we must understand what they can do.

Fortunately, even my own limited experience with AOC’s organizing shows that what they can do is a lot more than symbolic.

In 2020, DSA discovered that NRG, a multinational fossil fuel company, was close to breaking ground on a new fracked gas plant in Astoria’s “Asthma Alley.” We started the No Astoria NRG Fracked Gas Plant campaign, built a coalition of climate organizations, and after a two-year fight that brought in thousands of residents, won.

This was a historic victory: the first time a fossil fuel project has ever been rejected specifically on climate grounds in the United States. Equally important, it set a long overdue precedent that new gas plants could no longer be built in New York.

AOC elevated this campaign in such a way that it’s unlikely we could have won without her. Exposing the project was key to throwing a wrench in the nearly rubber-stamped process, and as our on-the-ground organizing sparked local attention, AOC used her media profile to blow it up into a major story.

Similarly, she held highly visible events that brought residents into our organizing we never could have otherwise reached. But her less-visible work was equally key. On the constituent side, her campaign worked to deep-canvass constituents and build public opposition (which I learned when I received a call about it myself)—all while working behind the scenes alongside our socialist state legislators to organize other politicians in opposition.

When the plant was ultimately rejected, we had secured public opposition from every elected official representing the area from the city council all the way up through Chuck Schumer. We won this campaign through organized people power, uniting with the especially fierce efforts of DSA state legislator Zohran Mamdani. But AOC enabled that pressure to reach institutions, people, and levels we could not have ourselves.

This year, DSA won an even bigger climate victory: winning a 4 year campaign to pass the Build Public Renewables Act. Its transformative vision and scale has been hailed as “the biggest Green New Deal win in US history,” which mandates the state to build publicly owned renewable energy, create green union jobs, lower bills, and slash racist pollution.

AOC’s early public support helped legitimize what started as “the socialist climate bill.” As the campaign reached its climax this year, she helped bring it across the finish line.

When The New York Times asked the country’s most well-known representative why Governor Kathy Hochul almost lost, she cited BPRA as the kind of program she needs to pass to win. When Hochul essentially filibustered the entire state budget to attack bail reform, AOC hosted a joint DSA rally with state and city DSA electeds to keep the pressure for BPRA and other key demands from dissipating. When she signed on to an unprecedented congressional letter publicly demanding that the governor pass the full BPRA and not her “lite” version in order to take full advantage of IRA funding (led by fellow socialist Jamaal Bowman, who himself took a major role in the fight), she was paying off federal pieces that the left helped win federally.

This wasn’t confrontation for its own sake—it directly supported transformative organizing at the exact time it was needed most. Again, the work of thousands of people across the state made this possible. But federal forces like AOC amplified this power, enabling socialists to defeat the fossil fuel industry and win the biggest Green New Deal Victory in US history.

Even from this look limited to campaigns I have personally been involved in, it’s clear that AOC is a major political force on a material level. Symbolic actions do matter. But an organizer concerned with winning material change would not, as DeBoer does, give a tactical endorsement of Joe Biden more political weight than unprecedented climate victories.

Once it becomes clear that socialists in office do have political power, we can start to better map the left’s capabilities and limits in ways that enable us to ask the kind of strategic questions that helped win campaigns like the above.

After years working on “Inside-Outside” campaigns that unite mass bases with local, state, and federal socialist electeds, I and fellow DSA organizers involved developed a framework based on how we have seen socialist elected power function (and fail) in practice: as force multipliers.

By channeling outside power into places—such as media, legislatures, regulatory bodies, and the general public via direct contact—multiply that movement power in ways that make new opportunities and victories possible.

It’s easiest to see this at work at the state and local levels that DeBoer claims do not exist. In 2017, DSA members had an active base of thousands in New York City. Yet we were not able to truly shape politics until we elected DSA state Senator Julia Salazar, who quickly led the charge on passing the nation’s strongest tenant protections. And when we added five more legislators in 2020, we became strong enough to stop a peak-of-his-powers Cuomo from cutting health care and public-sector jobs in 2021.

Still, this power is frustratingly insufficient to pass the kind of sweeping national transformations like Medicare for All that brought most of us to socialism in the first place. We can get an even more granular look from DSA’s own national campaigns, where we learned we had enough power to put pillars of the PRO Act and Green New Deal for Public Schools into the Build Back Better package.

What we were not powerful enough to do was overcome the right-wing corporate onslaught that prevented Build Back Better from passing at all (no one did). Electeds enable movements to punch far above our weight, but we only have so much weight.

Perhaps this is the root of the anger and cynicism so prevalent in these debates. While socialist electeds will never be without strategic and moral failings, the current limits of their power to transform the country is mostly reflecting our own movement’s limits.

Fortunately, the force multiplier framework highlights how building a base and winning more elected power are not in competition, but complementary
—and have been for the last seven years. And not just in major cities either.

Take Mid-Hudson Valley DSA, a small rural chapter which has grown into a political powerhouse. Formerly just a few dozen members, the chapter now regularly draws 50–60 members to events, and was an essential force in passing BPRA.

How? In 2021, MHV-DSA elected Phil Erner as Ulster County legislator, a small election that gained them local influence and credibility. Enough that in 2022, they pulled off a major upset, replacing a 27-year Assembly incumbent with member Sarahana Shrestha. Rather than pit electoral power and mass power against each other, this virtuous cycle models how, for the last seven years, they have been symbiotic.

The online bubble makes it easy to forget, but AOC is both the most well-known and the most popular member of Congress in the country. While less famous, local and state socialist electeds are similarly beloved. Not just for what they say, but what they enable organized movements to do.

The untapped potential for a truly coordinated movement strategy that can take advantage of this is enormous. We know because what has been tapped has led to real, historic accomplishments already. Our task now is to make it the foundation of so many more.
 
Katie Porter won in a red district on a Warren-style progressive economic agenda.

And Sanders outperformed Biden in the polls before the party colluded against him. Biden barely beat Trump during a pandemic where he told people to inject themselves with bleach. He would have lost without covid. So don't overestimate conservative Dems as electorally superior.
LMAO. Voting against him is colluding? You needed the rest of the Dems tp split the vote to allow Bernard's 30% of the vote to win.

But I'm not going to waste my time arguing with you. You're just like MAGA.

"Our guy didn't lose. It was rigged" Lmao.

Continue on.
 
Yeah, she is fake and I marked her down as goofy when she talked about crime and police. Her take on pigs when all that shit was going down in 2020 is so fucking out of touch it speaks to a fake chick who grew up with a silver spoon like she did. And like Warren, who economic takes are laughable. Bitches think they playing real life with monopoly money.

That said, I don't think she is evil like some of these politicians(like mitch and manchin). AOC mostly just talk and social media.

Nah she aint evil at all, but just a puppet... I mean some of the things she talks about

are real, but there is NO SUBSTANCE to it, she will just say shit, put on a show,

and at the end of the day, anybody following her is just wasting energy....

she is not an evil person, she just wants to be an Actress

and living out her dreams....but at whose expense...

COGITESNE??

pronounced. Co Gee Tes Nay,

meaning Do you understand..??

Latin, you know the shit we tried to teach muthafuckas

in Iberia, but they werent so quick, so they got a watered down version,

we call it italian and spanish today!!
 
LMAO. Voting against him is colluding? You needed the rest of the Dems tp split the vote to allow Bernard's 30% of the vote to win.

But I'm not going to waste my time arguing with you. You're just like MAGA.

"Our guy didn't lose. It was rigged" Lmao.

Continue on.

I didn't say it was rigged. Strawman lies. :smh:
 
There is nothing funnier than people on here trying to make excuses for AOC when she sucks. What I find even funnier is that the same people who are doing that are posting articles about the DSA and what they wanted meant is that the DSA is so white and organization you need to see some of the pictures of who they have in cities like Detroit Baltimore and the rest. AOC has done absolutely nothing she's passed no legislation and what they're going to do is try to say co-signing shit or putting your name as a cosigner is an accomplishment. It's the same foolishness is when they were calling Sanders the amendment King but when it came to actually passing legislation the only thing he had were the names of post offices. Don't let these knucklehead leftists DSA clowns lie to you they haven't accomplished anything and their whole goal is to hope that Democrats lose so that they can say see you need us. The fact is they haven't been needed and the 2018 elections and everything since then has shown that.

Anyway if you really want to see what the DSA looks like go on Twitter and put in this hashtag:

#DSAsoWhite

Oh since we talking about AOC and the Bronx

 
There is nothing funnier than people on here trying to make excuses for AOC when she sucks. What I find even funnier is that the same people who are doing that are posting articles about the DSA and what they wanted meant is that the DSA is so white and organization you need to see some of the pictures of who they have in cities like Detroit Baltimore and the rest. AOC has done absolutely nothing she's passed no legislation and what they're going to do is try to say co-signing shit or putting your name as a cosigner is an accomplishment. It's the same foolishness is when they were calling Sanders the amendment King but when it came to actually passing legislation the only thing he had were the names of post offices. Don't let these knucklehead leftists DSA clowns lie to you they haven't accomplished anything and their whole goal is to hope that Democrats lose so that they can say see you need us. The fact is they haven't been needed and the 2018 elections and everything since then has shown that.

Anyway if you really want to see what the DSA looks like go on Twitter and put in this hashtag:

#DSAsoWhite

Oh since we talking about AOC and the Bronx



DSA needs to do a much better job at reaching out to minorities.

But from your smearing of “leftists,” that doesn’t seem to be the issue. Seems like a red herring.

Martin Luther King was a democratic socialist. You hate King’s ideology and prefer corporate Democrats. Correct?
 
DSA needs to do a much better job at reaching out to minorities.

But from your smearing of “leftists,” that doesn’t seem to be the issue. Seems like a red herring.

Martin Luther King was a democratic socialist. You hate King’s ideology and prefer corporate Democrats. Correct?

I'm always amused at socialist and how they cling to mlk. One of the things you'll do is you'll go on about how the only reason MLK was killed was because he was starting to care about socialism versus civil rights. And you people disgust me when you do that. Because the socialist morons love to go on about how MLK was killed when he went down to help the unions in Memphis and they conveniently leave out that he went down to help the Black union in Memphis because they were dealing with racism issues.

My problem with the DSA and socialists and AOC is that all three are organizations that are overwhelmingly white and are become racist as fuck when they don't win and the masks come off. AOC and her statement about who is really Black when the discussion of reparations happened cause she was trying to give cover to Sanders and the entire leftist movement was very telling. Cory Bush not winning any Black portions of her district, including Fergerson, during her primary and winning cause of white voters is very telling. Jamaal Bowman shucking and jiving in front of the white House for a bunch of Sunrise Movement white kids is very telling.

There's a reason why leftists and their candidates don't win Black votes and wthe resentment shown when they don't is why they ain't shit.
 
I'm always amused at socialist and how they cling to mlk. One of the things you'll do is you'll go on about how the only reason MLK was killed was because he was starting to care about socialism versus civil rights. And you people disgust me when you do that. Because the socialist morons love to go on about how MLK was killed when he went down to help the unions in Memphis and they conveniently leave out that he went down to help the Black union in Memphis because they were dealing with racism issues.

My problem with the DSA and socialists and AOC is that all three are organizations that are overwhelmingly white and are become racist as fuck when they don't win and the masks come off. AOC and her statement about who is really Black when the discussion of reparations happened cause she was trying to give cover to Sanders and the entire leftist movement was very telling. Cory Bush not winning any Black portions of her district, including Fergerson, during her primary and winning cause of white voters is very telling. Jamaal Bowman shucking and jiving in front of the white House for a bunch of Sunrise Movement white kids is very telling.

There's a reason why leftists and their candidates don't win Black votes and wthe resentment shown when they don't is why they ain't shit.

I would wager you don't know what a socialist is. Prove me wrong. Go ahead, use google, and then try to explain why socialists are morons, and why they cling to MLK.

Seems like you got a problem with AOC.

The progressives are people who want us to be more like Europe (I am trying to explain this in terms you can understand) in that they recognize that capitalism, unregulated by socialist concerns (note that the root word here is social), serves the purpose of pursuing profit, at any and all costs.

Unregulated capitalism (capitalism not mixed with socialist concerns) have led to half of the goddamned country virtually bursting into flames this summer (115 plus temps 2 weeks in a row is unnatural just about ANYWHERE in the U.S.), and parts of the ocean heating up to more than 100 degrees.

Socialism argues that the purpose of government is to serve the people; social welfare is its primary directive. It is aligned with the way most social species on Earth live. Decisions (where to roam, when to flee, where to graze) are generally made on the basis of consensus. Alpha males and females exist (wolf packs, for example) but they hold their places with the consent of the rest of the pack.

Unregulated capitalism, which we are experiencing now, is rooted in capital (an innocuous term for money/wealth). In such a system, profit and wealth are primary concerns, at the expense of every and anything else. This is why BP was able to ignore Obama's directives to stop spreading dispersing agents in the Gulf of Mexico after they poisoned it (and the animals and people depending on that environment for survival) without so much as a slap on the wrist. When HUGE money talks, capitalists listen, even if it means your kids get sick from ingesting crude oil at the beach. Capitalism allows for he (it is almost always a he) who has the most gold, to make the rules that have the greatest impact. This is closely aligned with patriarchy, which is the central element of how a dictatorship works: there is one mightier than the mighty, usually rendered so through greed and excessive wealth, who calls all the tunes to which the rest of us dance. This is what tRumpism is all about.

Finally, you talk about why AOC has not passed any legislation. Do you even have a clue as to how the lower chamber of the legislative body works? Do you think that all she needs to do is get elected, and suddenly everyone else in the House (including nazis like Greene and Boebert) will just allow legislation she brings to the floor to be passed like so much cheap American beer?
With respect to Bernie Sanders, try googling speeches he made 30 plus years ago. They sound exactly like what he is saying now. He was right then, and he is right now. He has never wavered.

A lack of education and understanding of how the system works is something that should be overcome before one gets on one's soap box to critique.

To be clear, I am NOT a progressive, although I agree with much of their stated platform. I find some of there stances to be welcome alternative to the "go along to get along" slave mentality that seems to have held establishment democrats in a death grip for lo these many years.

To put it simply, your argument is weak at best. Shrill, uninformed bullshit at worst.

My work is done here. I got lurkin' to do.
 
Last edited:
@The Catcher In The Rye me , Colin and Brandon are NOT reading that shit

Out of the kindness of my heart, I'm sharing this for all people who don't have an NYT subscription:

By Lulu Garcia-Navarro
Aug. 30, 2023

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is used to being a lightning rod. Since her election in 2018, she has been celebrated and vilified by both parties, sometimes simultaneously. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, though, is no longer the freshman outsider. Now in her third term, with a high-ranking position on a powerful House committee, she has learned to maneuver in Congress, making allies on the left and working with her political adversaries. She says that might make the progressive wing of her party “suspicious,” but she’s comfortable having more influence on the inside.
We recently sat down to talk about this stage of her political career, as well as immigration, social media and how she feels about finding common ground with her right-wing colleagues. This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity.


So, how would you describe A.O.C. at 33?
Wow, what a question. I think that perhaps some of the things that would describe me in this moment might be: evolving, learning, challenging myself, but also rooted and grounded in who I am and why I’m here.

For a lot of people, 33 is a time when they are already established in a career and making plans about the future. You use these words — evolving, but rooted — and it kind of captures that tension. So I want to explore that with you. You are in your third term now. Your job’s not new. A lot has changed since you were first elected in 2018. What is the thing that has changed the most about you since you first took office?
I think I have a sense of steadiness and confidence in what I’m doing. My election was characterized by so much upheaval, both nationally and personally. We were in a time of great political upheaval when President Trump was elected. The Democratic Party at that time was kind of lost in many ways. We were in transition between an older party and a newer one, in terms of where we were coming from ideologically.
Then also myself. I was waitressing up until — I don’t know, March? And I won my primary just a few short months later. And even coming into Washington, not just figuring out how I orient myself politically, coming from a background of direct action and activism, but then also adding on the entire profession of legislating at a federal level.
And then also the class dynamics, the gender dynamics that come from being a poor or working-class person going into an environment of extraordinary privilege. There were years of learning ahead of me.

When you say things have changed for you personally —
When I first came into office, I was unproven in a way that I think many other people may not be, right? There are a lot of people that are elected with a history of legislating. And I very much felt that I had to prove two things at the same time that were often at odds with one another.

I had to prove to the people that elected me that I am committed and very well grounded in all of the values and issues and fights — from taking on a party establishment that can be very calcified to continuing to fight for landmark progressive issues like Medicare for all, and comprehensive changes to our immigration system or criminal justice reform.
And the second was that I had to prove to this world of Washington that I was serious and skilled, and that I wasn’t just here to make a headline, but that I was here to engage in this process in a skilled and sophisticated way. That I did my homework, so to speak.


You built your brand as this political outsider, but now you’re the vice ranking member on the powerful House Oversight Committee, the No. 2 spot for Democrats on that committee. So clearly you have proved at some point that you do mean business. Do you see yourself as more of an insider now?
I don’t think so. I mean, on a certain level, once you are engaged as a legislator, you are on the inside. That is a function of the role. And that grants myself or anyone else in a similar position the tools to be able to translate this outside energy into internal change.

I’m curious if you understood in 2018, when you were first elected, that holding power and having relationships was going to be vital to how you moved the party?

When I first came in, I came into an environment that I sensed was never going to give me a chance, and into a party that was extremely hostile to my presence, extremely hostile to my existence. That’s one of the reasons I dug so powerfully into my work.
I think a lot of women and people of color — and especially women of color — have heard time and time again, “You have to work twice as hard to get half as far.” And I felt like I had to work way, way harder to not even get half as far, you know? I knew that relationships and expertise, of course, were important, but I also felt that door was closed to me at that moment. And so the best thing that I could do is just work as hard as I possibly could to get to a point where I had earned the benefit of the doubt.
One of my first hearings ever was questioning Michael Cohen, and I remember the commentary at that time was, “She’s just going to put on a show.” And I knew that I was capable of more than that. I think anyone who is used to being underestimated can relate to that experience.

I want to read you two recent headlines from New York magazine. They were written within a week of each other. The first is “A.O.C. Is Just a Regular Old Democrat Now,” and that accuses you of compromising on your progressive ideals as you work within the party system. And then came the rebuttal, which was “The ‘A.O.C. Left’ Has Achieved Plenty,” which argued that your wing has pushed the party leftward. Why do you think your role is still being parsed this way by Democrats and by those on the left?

Part of it is because we haven’t really had a political presence like this in the United States before. I think very often you had this consummate insider that was bankrolled by corporate money and advancing this, frankly, very neoliberal agenda. And those were the people that we were used to seeing in power. And so I think over time there’s been an inherent association between power, ascent and quote-unquote selling out.
I often say to my grass-roots companions that the left, for a very long time, was not used to having power in the United States. And so when we encounter power, we’re so bewildered by it —

Suspicious of it?
Suspicious of it — that there’s no way in this country you can accrue any kind of power without there being some Faustian compromise.

I want to ask you about an unlikely political marriage. In the spring, you teamed up with Republican Matt Gaetz of Florida, an extremely controversial right-wing member of Congress, to ban fellow Congress people from trading stocks. Are you two friends now?
I think that is a generous characterization. I’d also like to add that the Republican lead on that legislation is Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, a moderate Republican. And you know, I think many of us worked very hard on this legislation, because it speaks to a secondary or maybe a third dimensional cleave in both parties.

In order to get elected to the House, it requires just an absolutely ridiculous sum of money and access to capital that most people do not have. And this issue of banning members of Congress from trading an individual stock, I think, speaks to the class realities. Those members who are resistant to it, as well as members who are supportive of it, speaks to a very clear class difference in the U.S. Congress and is actually an area of common interest between Republicans and Democrats that come from a similar place on that issue.


I guess what I’m asking is if you are willing, then, to work with your ideological enemies if it’s for what you consider to be the greater good?
Of course. And I think the oversight committee has opened many windows to that. There are elements of the libertarian right, or the Freedom Caucus, that oppose the level of defense contracting in the military budget. Civil rights and privacy violations are another area where I have discovered some elements of common interest. They’re very few and far between, but where we identify them, I think it’s important to burrow in on them and see what is possible.

I want to ask you about the way that you politically engage, because you’ve defined a certain style. You’re extremely effective at using social media. We are now, though, in a different moment than we were when you first ran. There’s a real backlash to social media. Has your thinking on your use of it shifted?
Well, I do think that our media environment, including our social media environment, has changed dramatically over the last five years. Elon Musk taking over Twitter has dramatically changed the media environment. You’ve had this mass exodus from the platform. It’s become much more difficult for me, myself, to use. And that I think is reflected in my presence on some of these platforms.

What would make you get off X, formerly known as Twitter?
You know, this is a conversation that I’ve had. If one monitors my use of that platform, it has fallen precipitously. I think what would constitute a formal break is something that we actively discuss — whether it would require an event or if it’s just something that may one day happen.

You have 13 million followers there, so it’s a huge audience. It’s your largest audience on social media.
Absolutely. And that’s why it’s not something to be taken lightly.

I guess what I’m curious about is, for someone like you who has integrated the use of social media so much into the way that you engage with people, and especially young people — how you see your participation in a platform like Twitter or X, and how Elon Musk has been using it. It seems antithetical to what you have said you fundamentally believe in. Your being on the platform, it could be argued, somehow supports his platform.
It’s a legitimate point. It’s something that I have absolutely struggled with. I’ve certainly pulled back on my activity on the platform due to those concerns, and I do wrestle with that.

Something that I’ve been focusing on a lot more is building audiences in alternative places. But, even now, when there are extraordinary events that happen, like natural disasters in the state of New York, I do think it’s important to be able to have access to a messaging platform that people may trust. But it’s uncomfortable. We’ve seen the media take different approaches to this — the differences between NPR or The Washington Post or whatever it may be, contending with these same questions.

You recently took a trip to Latin America with other progressive Latino colleagues. You went to Chile, Brazil and Colombia, all countries led by recently elected leftist leaders. And you spoke about how important it is to have a growing number of Latinos now in Congress who are interested in the region. But there was something else you said that struck me, and it made me wonder about this new era for you. You said, “We are here because fascist movements are global, and as a result, progressive movements also have to be global if we’re going to rise to the challenges of these times.” Do you see that as the natural progression of your work? Moving your ideas internationally, even if they might conflict with the foreign policy of the leader of your own party?
I wouldn’t necessarily characterize my foreign policy goals as oppositional to the president’s or to the United States. I am a member of Congress. I have sworn an oath to this country, and I take that oath very seriously. But I do believe that those progressive foreign policy goals do represent a departure from the inertia of our Cold War past.

Let’s say you were from a very different part of the political spectrum than I am, and you believe that we have to take this very strong, realpolitik approach, that we must be countering China in the most aggressive terms possible. Let’s say you believe all of those things. I still think that even if you were motivated by that, we would still come to similar conclusions, which is that we must reckon with our interventionist past in Latin America because it has created a trust problem among our neighbors in the Western Hemisphere.

When a country has had a history of interventionism, of supporting coups, of spying on our neighbors, why would you trust them now? And so whether you’re doing it for moral reasons or realpolitik reasons, it’s not just about it being the right thing to do. I think it’s a smart thing to do in order for us to reset and build trust and relationships with our hemispheric partners.

In the Republican debate, you had Ron DeSantis say that perhaps an invasion of Mexico might be in order to stop drug trafficking.
Such a suggestion is so reckless that it’s difficult to even capture. But the political incentive for Ron DeSantis to say something like that speaks to the lack of real attention that we pay domestically to our role as a member of this hemisphere. Part of our increased engagement in the region is not just about how we are thought of in Latin America, but also domestically, how we understand our closest neighbors.

Speaking of our closest neighbors, I want to talk about immigration. Under Biden, more asylum seekers are being held in private detention centers than under Trump. Families are still being separated. The Biden administration kept Trump-era policies that sped up deportations and made it harder for legitimate claimants to come to the U.S. So, what grade do you give the administration on immigration?
Immigration is arguably this administration’s weakest issue. This is one area where our policy is dictated by politics, arguably more so than almost any other.
There are very clear recommendations and suggestions that we have made to the administration to provide relief on this issue, and it’s my belief that some of the hesitation around this has to do with a fear around just being seen as approving or providing permission structures, or really just the Republican narratives that have surrounded immigration. We also need to examine the root causes of this migration and address that this problem doesn’t start at our border, but it starts with our foreign policy.

I mean, it doesn’t start at our border. And I know that this has been a right-wing talking point, but I do want to understand your thinking here. Why haven’t you used your considerable clout as a Latina leader to visit the border and highlight the ongoing issues there now, like you did during the Trump administration?

Well, this is something that we’re actively planning on. What I have done is tours of our New York-area facilities. Right now, this crisis is in our own backyard, and we have toured the Roosevelt Hotel, and I think it’s been very important for us to — especially to my constituents, who are demanding accountability on this — to look at that front line that is right here in New York City.

I want to get to New York, but we’re two and a half years into this administration, the crisis has been burgeoning, and you have been a self-declared and widely viewed leader on this issue.
Yes, yes. Well, I mean, again, I think that this is something that we have been working on. But when this crisis is right here in our own backyard, I have absolutely prioritized having that visitation presence. And I also think that there’s a very, very, very dangerous understanding of the frontline of our migration crisis being just our border. And if we only think of the immigration crisis as a border issue and only understand our border as a southern border and not John F. Kennedy Airport, that constitutes a lack of imagination when it comes to immigration.

But under the Trump administration, you did make the southern border an issue.
Yes. And again, I will be visiting the border.

Let me ask you this: 100,000 migrants, as you have pointed to, have come to New York City, which your district is a part of. The city estimates it will spend $5 billion on caring for new arrivals this year. Some of this crisis is because migrants are being bused to New York by certain governors, but it’s a real crisis, and a lot of New Yorkers don’t like it. Sixty-two percent of registered voters in New York City, one poll found, support relocating migrants to other parts of the state. You’ve said New Yorkers would welcome migrants, but they’re actually protesting. Have you misread your constituents’ feelings about this?
I don’t think so. I think that we’re still willing, but what we need is partnership from the federal government. And I have not been shy around criticism of how the Biden administration has handled this issue. New York City is the front line on this, and we have regularly asked the administration for many, many different avenues of relief.

I think the issue that New Yorkers have is not that there are immigrants coming to New York City, but that immigrants are being prevented from sustaining and supporting themselves. We have New Yorkers, and we have New York businesses, that want to receive migrants and want to employ migrants. And that includes across the state. We have a robust agricultural sector that wants to hire migrants — they have said this repeatedly. A hospitality sector that wants to do the same. And the Biden administration’s refusal to open up work authorizations or extend temporary protective status really prevents us from doing what we do best, which is allowing and creating an environment where immigrants from all over the world can create a livelihood here.

Don’t you think, though, that this is having an impact on the way the Democrats are viewed and their ability to argue that they’re good stewards of governance? I mean, you have the mayor of New York City, a Democrat, fighting with the governor of New York, also a Democrat, and blaming the federal government, led by a Democrat.
Well, Mayor Adams and I certainly have had our differences in the past, and perhaps present, in terms of how we handle this issue. But I do believe that this adds to the pressure. This is absolutely a message that we have communicated to the president, that we must handle this issue when it comes to work authorizations, when it comes to temporary protective status, because it is absolutely having an impact.

Would you like someone to run against Mayor Adams in 2025?
Well, I was elected in a primary election against a very established Democrat. I believe that primaries are healthy for the party. I believe that primary elections are part of what keep us a robust and accountable party. So I certainly think that an election without any choice would be something that many New Yorkers would feel kind of uncertain about.

That sounds like a yes — you’d like someone to run.
It’s important for us to have choices, and I say this as a person who has had elements of our party mount primary challenges against me, and I don’t take it personally.

Do you feel more comfortable in the Democratic Party now? The way you described it initially was fraught. They rejected you, and you were definitely trying to change the party. You have said you’ve pushed the party leftward. Many would agree. So is it OK to be a regular Democrat now?
The activist in me always seeks to agitate for more. I think despite there being progress, many people are still woefully underserved in this country. But the Democratic Party has changed dramatically in the last five years. Even if you just look at the numbers, I believe it’s something around 50 percent of House Democrats have been elected since 2018. And so what is considered center and moderate now is dramatically different than what it was five years ago.

We started this conversation talking about how you entered politics at a particular moment, and not a good one. And you acknowledged that your tenure has been tumultuous, with attacks on democracy and on your own person. Do you like your job?

I certainly think I like it a lot more than I used to. There have been times where this work has been extremely challenging, and I didn’t know if I would survive in this position. But I see myself as having a very great responsibility, because at the end of the day, the representation of working-class people in our Congress is still extremely low. Women still only constitute 27 percent of our Congress. People of color, Latinas — there have only been, I don’t know, two to three dozen Latinas that have been elected in the history of the United States. And so I’m motivated by an extraordinary sense of responsibility, not just for representation, but to deliver on policy.

At 33 years old, first winning my election at 28 — this has taken a large degree of learning. I’m also very hard on myself, and I have to sometimes put into perspective that I am comparing myself to the skill set and performance of people 20, 30, 40 years my senior. But again, it’s something that is very important, and I maintain that one of my responsibilities is to hold the door open for those who are to come.
 
I have to sadly agree with this criticism:
F8FyUXXWkAAHqxm



 
On the surface, it is kind of wild that AOC gave over a quarter million to the same Democratic establishment that she once fought against.













 
Under 40 years old stop bitching about left capitulation and fucking vote. You want more left, progressive policies, you need more elected officials. Complaints don't win elections, votes do.
 
Under 40 years old stop bitching about left capitulation and fucking vote. You want more left, progressive policies, you need more elected officials. Complaints don't win elections, votes do.
I think the people disappointed in her would argue that the DCCC— the heart of the establishment— will work against people like her becoming elected officials, like they did when she ran.

In this case, the fact that it is earmarked is an important detail that many are missing.
 
That acting ho put all her eggs in the

Immigrant basket..

She lost that bet!!

Bad for immigrants good for US tax payers

They promised essential workers the world..

Only to fuck them over for immigrant freebies..

They forgot about essential workers...

We won't forget about empty democratic promises come vote season.
 
Back
Top