To obstruct or not? It’s the question churning inside the Democratic Party after its historic Senate losses a week ago. Add to that a secondary one: Just how much legitimate, ideological resistance to Republican proposals will voters tolerate?
“The reason for Democrats to filibuster isn’t obstruction for its own sake. It’s to stick up for millions of everyday people who will be harmed by right-wing politics,” said Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. His sinking fear is that Democrats will play it too safe and lose anyway. “Is the theory about winning in 2016 that passing Republican bills that hurt Americans will do it?”
While progressive activists praised Democrats’ move to elevate Warren, they are fretting over how the leadership will respond when faced with Republican legislation they oppose on taxes, health care, Social Security and the environment. “The reason voters didn’t vote was because Democrats didn’t stand for a big, bold, populist agenda like the one Elizabeth Warren is pushing Democrats to adopt,” Green said.
“There is some tension,” he added. “The large majority of the Democratic caucus agrees we need to fight but there are certainly some that crazily believe voters want Washington to pass something—anything—even if it means cutting Social Security for Grandma.”