Ocasio-Cortez Takes Democratic Senator to Task on Twitter
Echoing what has become a go-to talking point among prominent Democrats in the aftermath of democratic socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s landslide victory over New York Rep. Joe Crowley in last week’s primary election, Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) asserted without evidence on Sunday that candidates can’t “go too far to the left and still win the Midwest.”
Duckworth’s claim that Ocasio-Cortez’s bold agenda of Medicare for All, a federal jobs guarantee, and housing as a human right is “the future of the party in the Bronx” but not in wide swaths of the U.S. sparked swift backlash from progressives—including Ocasio-Cortez herself—who pointed to Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) victories in the Midwest during the 2016 Democratic presidential primaries as evidence that an ambitious left-wing agenda has broad appeal among the American electorate.
“With respect to the senator, strong, clear advocacy for working class Americans isn’t just for the Bronx,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote in response to Duckworth’s comments, highlighting Midwestern states that Sanders won in 2016—several of which Hillary Clinton went on to lose to President Donald Trump in the general election.
With respect to the Senator, strong, clear advocacy for working class Americans isn’t just for the Bronx.
Sen. Sanders won:
– Michigan
– Minnesota
– Kansas
– Nebraska
– Wisconsin
– Indiana
We then lost several of those states in the general. What’s the plan to prevent a repeat? https://t.co/99K08qr7SH
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@Ocasio2018) July 1, 2018
Briahna Gray, senior politics editor at The Intercept, argued that efforts by Duckworth, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and other high-ranking Democrats to downplay the popularity of Ocasio-Cortez’s platform is motivated by a desire to preserve “the party’s failing strategies, and the strategists paid to enact them, for another election cycle.”
But, Gray writes, Ocasio-Cortez’s unwavering embrace of democratic socialism in the face of hand-wringing and criticism from old-guard Democrats is the primary reason she has been able to “articulate a holistic progressive vision for America,” which “the Democratic Party has long failed to do.”
In response to Duckworth’s warning against embracing policies that are “too far to the left,” Gray tweeted a graphic that echoed Ocasio-Cortez’s point about the broad appeal of Sanders’ agenda in the Midwest.
Tammy Duckworth: I don’t think Dems can win the midwest with leftist policy.
Bernie Sanders in 2016:
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