Elizabeth Warren calls on Democrats to continue to fight. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Elizabeth Warren: Time to Work on America’s Agenda
12 November 14
readersupportednews.org
here
have been terrible, horrible, no good, very bad Election Days for
Democrats before — and Republicans have had a few of those, too. Such
days are always followed by plenty of pronouncements about what just
changed and what’s going to be different going forward.
But for all the talk of change in Washington and in
states where one party is taking over from another, one thing has not
changed: The stock market and gross domestic product keep going up, while families are getting squeezed hard by an economy that isn’t working for them.
The solution to this isn’t a basket of quickly passed
laws designed to prove Congress can do something — anything. The
solution isn’t for the president to cut deals — any deals — just to show
he can do business. The solution requires an honest recognition of the
kind of changes needed if families are going to get a shot at building a
secure future.
It’s not about big government or small government.
It’s not the size of government that worries people; rather it’s
deep-down concern over who government works for. People are ready to
work, ready to do their part, ready to fight for their futures and their
kids’ futures, but they see a government that bows and scrapes for big
corporations, big banks, big oil companies and big political donors —
and they know this government does not work for them.
The American people want a fighting chance to build
better lives for their families. They want a government that will stand
up to the big banks when they break the law. A government that helps out
students who are getting crushed by debt. A government that will
protect and expand Social Security for our seniors and raise the minimum
wage.
Americans understand that building a prosperous future
isn’t free. They want us to invest carefully and prudently, sharply
aware that Congress spends the people’s money. They want us to make
investments that will pay off in their lives, investments in the roads
and power grids that make it easier for businesses to create good jobs
here in America, investments in medical and scientific research that
spur new discoveries and economic growth, and investments in educating
our children so they can build a future for themselves and their
children.
Before leaders in Congress and the president get
caught up in proving they can pass some new laws, everyone should take a
skeptical look at whom those new laws will serve. At this very minute,
lobbyists and lawyers are lining up by the thousands to push for new
laws — laws that will help their rich and powerful clients get richer
and more powerful. Hoping to catch a wave of dealmaking, these lobbyists
and lawyers — and their well-heeled clients — are looking for the
chance to rig the game just a little more.
But the lobbyists’ agenda is not America’s agenda.
Americans are deeply suspicious of trade deals negotiated in secret,
with chief executives invited into the room while the workers whose jobs
are on the line are locked outside. They have been burned enough times
on tax deals that carefully protect the tender fannies of billionaires
and big oil and other big political donors, while working families just
get hammered. They are appalled by Wall Street banks that got taxpayer
bailouts and now whine that the laws are too tough, even as they rake in
billions in profits. If cutting deals means helping big corporations,
Wall Street banks and the already-powerful, that isn’t a victory for the
American people — it’s just another round of the same old rigged game.
Yes, we need action. But action must be focused in the
right place: on ending tax laws riddled with loopholes that favor giant
corporations, on breaking up the financial institutions that continue
to threaten our economy, and on giving people struggling with
high-interest student loans the same chance to refinance their debt that
every Wall Street corporation enjoys. There’s no shortage of work that
Congress can do, but the agenda shouldn’t be drawn up by a bunch of
corporate lobbyists and lawyers.
Change is hard, especially when the playing field is
already tilted so far in favor of those with money and influence. But
this government belongs to the American people, and it’s time to work on
America’s agenda. America is ready — and Congress should be ready, too.
No comments:
Post a Comment