I found this oped by Maureen Dowd really good. I’m not usually a fan of hers, but this column is straight up, no cynicism., no silly curve balls. She is obviously impressed with the new congresswomen to be. And she should be as should the leadership of the Democratic Party. .
This a big deal. The challenge now is to govern, which is a thousand times more difficult than winning an election. The left has had some success at governing, sometimes notable in fact. But we have had our share of failed experiences too. And that’s putting it nicely in some cases. Anyway, Obrador’s landslide will reverberate northward as well as southward And it comes at a time when the right in Latin American thought the wind was at its back.
It seems to me that the divisions in the Democratic Party are being exaggerated by some friends and foes. Notwithstanding some differences on one issue or another, what is striking to me is the broad agreement on a range of issues. And the political/programmatic lean is in a progressive direction. Some tension in the party is actually a good thing and inevitable.
I saw someone on FB bellyaching that Debbie Wasserman Schultz in a reversal of her earlier immigration positions is now speaking out against family separations at the border.
I think that such a reaction to Schultz is silly at best. A mature left allows people to change, even welcomes it; a left on the margins is content to posture and upbraid people with less progressive views, even in instances when they shift politically in a progressive direction. Too little, too late, I guess, such people think? Or never forgive, never forget? Or is it simply a small circle mentality?
In a fact based world, Trumpian policies would collapse on their face, or actually never get a hearing.


