Aug. 9, 2018
Excerpt:
On Tuesday, Rashida Tlaib, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, won her primary in Michigan, and she is now overwhelmingly likely to become the first Muslim woman in Congress. In a referendum, people in Missouri voted 2 to 1 to overturn an anti-union right to work law passed by the Republican legislature. In an upset, Wesley Bell, a progressive city councilman from Ferguson, Mo., effectively ousted the longtime St. Louis County prosecutor, whom many civil rights activists say mishandled the investigation into the police shooting of Michael Brown, the African-American teenager whose 2014 killing set off riots.
So it was strange to see headlines in the following days arguing that the left wing of the Democratic Party had hit a wall. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezs movement failed to deliver any stunners Tuesday night, said CNN. Down Goes Socialism, announced Politico Magazine, despite the fact that Tlaibs victory doubles the D.S.A.s likely representation in Congress. Socialist torchbearers flame out in key races, despite blitz by Bernie Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez, said a Fox News headline.
In part, this spin might just be the inevitable backlash to Ocasio-Cortezs sudden celebrity. Her primary victory was thrilling and hard-earned, and shes a charismatic and rousing spokeswoman for her values. But her overnight anointment as the new face of the Democratic Party has created absurdly outsize expectations of her power as kingmaker.
In truth, theres nothing surprising about left-wing candidates losing their primaries. The happy surprise is how many are winning. Unsexy as it sounds, the real story of progressive politics right now is the steady accumulation of victories some small, some major thanks to a welcome and unaccustomed outbreak of left-wing pragmatism.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/09/opinion/columnists/left-sanders-ocasio-cortez-primaries.html