Platner’s collapse doesn’t mean we should reject outsiders in politics | Bhaskar Sunkara
The Guardian – US News
theguardian.com
Summary
We don’t need fewer amateurs running for office. We need far more of them, recruited seriously G raham Platner is out of the Maine Senate race , burdened by controversies that include a troubling rape accusation , which he denies. His departure is no doubt a good thing that will make it easier for Democrats to win back the Senate. But progressives should pay attention to the discussion around Platner. His collapse is being turned into something larger, supposed proof that people from outside politics have no business being in it. “Say what you will, but the establishment vets candidates,” the Center for American Progress president, Neera Tanden, wrote as the allegations broke. The Atlantic mocked the “beer test” that elevated Platner and noted that the movement behind him prized “an intensity of commitment” over “a mastery of policy detail”. The implicit message is that governing is a job for professionals, and that the amateurs should sit back down. Fewer than one in 50 members of Congress came up in a working-class job. You can hear the same thing from Dan Osborn, a trade unionist and industrial mechanic who first ran as an independent Senate candidate in deep-red Nebraska, where he outran Kamala Harris by 14 percentage points in 2024. “The Senate is a country club of millionaires that work for billionaires,” he told his crowds. During the New Deal, the CIO union federation started the country’s first political action committee to get workers into Congress.
From the source
We don’t need fewer amateurs running for office. We need far more of them, recruited seriously Graham Platner is out of the Maine Senate race , burdened by controversies that include a troubling rape accusation , which he denies. His departure is no doubt a good thing that will make it easier for Democrats to win back the Senate. But progressives should pay attention to the discussion around Platner. His collapse is being turned into something larger, supposed proof that people from outside politics have no business being in it. Continue reading...
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Published by The Guardian – US News on theguardian.com


