AOC: 'In any other country, Joe Biden and I would not be in the same party'

Authored by politico.com and submitted by wonderingsocrates
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A spokesperson for the Biden campaign did not immediately return a request for comment.

The remarks by Ocasio-Cortez represent a fresh repudiation of Biden, who spent decades in the Senate before serving as vice president. He is widely seen as the standard-bearer in the 2020 race for moderate Democrats and has voiced opposition to progressive legislation championed by Ocasio-Cortez and her allies.

The congresswoman — who has endorsed Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in the party’s nominating contest — previously launched what was widely viewed as a thinly veiled attack against Biden’s climate change proposals at an event in Washington in May.

“I will be damned if the same politicians who refused to act then are going to try to come back today and say we need to find a middle-of-the-road approach to save our lives. That is too much for me,” Ocasio-Cortez said, after Reuters had reported that Biden was crafting a “middle ground approach” to combating the global threat.

For his part, Biden has praised Ocasio-Cortez and other members of the left-leaning “squad” of freshman congresswomen as “brilliant” and “really smart,” but warned their political ideology was not representative of most elected Democrats.

“They are the exception rather than the rule,” he told MSNBC in July. “If you listen to the guys and women in your business, they say, ‘That’s the majority of people who got elected.’ We need that kind of energy, but that’s not the majority of Democrats who got elected last time.”

Ocasio-Cortez also offered criticism in Monday’s story for congressional Democrats, accusing her party’s lawmakers of too often working to appease the interests of their most conservative members. She has frequently broken with House Democratic leadership since assuming office in January 2019.

“For so long, when I first got in, people were like, ‘Oh, are you going to basically be a tea party of the left?’ And what people don’t realize is that there is a tea party of the left, but it’s on the right edges, the most conservative parts of the Democratic Party,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

“So the Democratic Party has a role to play in this problem, and it’s like we’re not allowed to talk about it. We’re not allowed to talk about anything wrong the Democratic Party does,” she continued. “I think I have created more room for dissent, and we’re learning to stretch our wings a little bit on the left.”

Ocasio-Cortez said the Congressional Progressive Caucus, of which she is a member, should expel lawmakers without adequate liberal bona fides, charging that “they let anybody who the cat dragged in call themselves a progressive. There’s no standard.”

The broader Democratic Party, as well, “can be too big of a tent,” she said.

Wilhelm-Herzog on January 6th, 2020 at 16:14 UTC »

The American 2 party system is outdated and flawed as hell

very_loud_icecream on January 6th, 2020 at 15:45 UTC »

This is one of the big reasons why we need Ranked Choice Voting.

For those unaware of what electoral reforms such as RCV are and why they are needed, CGP Grey has some great videos on these topics in his series Politics in the Animal Kingdom:

The Problems with First Past the Post Voting Explained (6.5 minutes) Instant Runoff Voting (4.5 minutes) Single Transferable Vote (7 minutes) Mixed-Member Proportional Representation (4.5 minutes)

The reforms presented here could significantly strengthen our democracy because they would ensure that your vote matters, that you don't have to give in to lesser-of-the-two-evils voting, and that you could genuinely make a difference in government even if you live in a safe/gerrymandered district.

eurocomments247 on January 6th, 2020 at 14:51 UTC »

In Denmark we have 5 left-wing and 5 right-wing parties in Parliament. The governing party has around 25% of the mandates. Cooperation and compromise is the name of the game. Works fine.

Edit: thanks for all the replies, many more than I can follow up on! My intention was not to compare the two countries as such, simply to point out that proportional representation, and more parties, usually leads to smoother governance. There are some counter-examples, but just remember that proportional representation is the preferred system for dozens of well-functioning countries around the globe.

Also, thank you for the silver!