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Edited on Tue Sep-27-05 08:50 AM by Lydia Leftcoast
And if I were Howard Dean, I would put all the Congressional and Senate Dems in small groups in conference rooms and make them answer just such a question. "Pretend that a moderate, reasonable Republican is in the White House. What positions should the Democratic Party run on if it has no obvious target to attack?"
Then they would have a massive meeting in which they looked at which points recurred in the most groups and refined them and made them into campaign talking points that every Dem candidate across the nation, from dogcatcher on up, would use.
Personally, I would look at the needs that are not currently being met in this country and make bold proposals to meet them, a 21st-century New Deal:
1) Universal health care, taking the best from the various models already up and running around the world
2) Affordable housing: Build housing and put people into it on a low-interest, fairly-financed "rent to own" basis. In other words, they acquire equity wiith each payment, perhaps, dare I be so bold? on Section 8-type financial arrangements, where they pay only a certain percentage of their income. (This would have the added benefit of raising employment, see #4)
3) Alternatives to the automobile and airplane: Retrofit this country, beginning with the largest cities, so that no one is FORCED to drive for lack of alternatives. This includes both public transit and high-speed intercity rail (so that we can catch up with Korea, Taiwan, China, and Thailand). People may still choose to drive, but don't make it compulsory. With the coming oil shortages, the cities with the best public transit and pedestrian/bicycle facilities will be ahead.
4) Attention to climate change in general, with a crash program to find alternatives for the various uses of petroleum products, especially plastics, and emergency measures to help regions that are affected by flooding, drought, or other side effects of global environmental trends.
5) Rebuild America: We have had warnings about "crumbling infrastructrure" since the 1970s, and our water mains, sewers, roads, and bridges are in need of repair and replacement. Put people to work by doing this.
6) Make it illegal for employers to hire permanent replacements for strikers. If you can lose your job for striking, there is de facto, no right to strike.
7) Place confiscatory fines on employers who hire illegal immigrants, the equivalent of a year's earnings. If that causes them to go out of business, too bad. They may find that the alternative of having to pay legal residents legal wages doesn't look so bad under those circumstances.
8) Equalize school funding across the nation. Every school district should have a per-pupil budget equivalent to that of its state's richest district, with mandated teacher-student ratios, mandated subject offerings (every high school student should be able to choose from a wide range of college prep and vocational courses), AND--here's the revolutionary idea--a strict upper limit on the number of administrators per teacher and per student. Use standardized tests for internal assessment purposes only. School buildings should be included in the rebuilding program described under #5.
9) Keep Social Security solvent by removing the cap on FICA assessments and give the poor true tax relief by making the first $10,000 of income exempt. Really put SS in a lockbox, so that no administration can raid it for other purposes.
10) Get out of Iraq and pledge no more invasions of countries that are merely pissing the elites off, as opposed to trying to conquer the world or massacre their own populations. In all cases, gain the genuine cooperation of allies before acting.
11. Cut the Pentagon budget to remove all "legacy" programs from the Cold War, weapons systems such as Star Wars, black ops, and all wasteful no-bid contracts. Tell the generals that their budget will be frozen until they find and recover the $3 trillion that is unaccounted for over the past 25 years.
12. Discourage overseas outsourcing by giving preference to potential government contractors who have the highest percentage of their workforce in the U.S. Companies whose manufacturing workforce is entirely overseas will not be allowed to bid unless NO companies in that industry have U.S. manufacturing facilities.
13. With people feeling economically secure, they will be less likely to channel their anger and anxiety into racism, sexism, and homophobia, so legislative efforts in this area will be less likely to turn into wedge issues. Everyone will be too contented to need scapegoats or to worry about someone else's private life.
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