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Long Beach Launches Guaranteed Income Program

LONG BEACH— The City of Long Beach July 7, announced its guaranteed income pilot program to help 500 single parents in the city who are living in poverty and struggling to meet basic needs.

Direct payments will focus on the 90813 Zip Code which is the highest concentrated area of family poverty in Long Beach and has a median household income 25% lower than any other zip code in the city. The pilot program will provide up to 500 participants with $500 per month for 12 months.

Participants will be single-parent households, mostly consisting of single mothers, with incomes below the poverty line. The application will consider household income and hardships created by the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to providing direct payments, each parent will receive free child care, transportation support, workforce training and access to resources to support digital inclusion like cell phones and internet connection.

The city is working with the Office of Economic Research at California State University, Long Beach which provided analysis and recommendations to help develop this initiative. The office will be studying the effects of the pilot program on families and communities to help lift people out of poverty — in Long Beach and around the country.

The Long Beach Economic Development Department will begin accepting applications in the coming months and expects to begin distributing funds to residents by the end of this year.

Anatomy of an insurrection: How military veterans and other rioters carried out the Jan. 6 assault on democracy

Jordan Green, Staff Reporter for Raw Story July 16

www.rawstory.com/capitol-insurrection-timeline

More than six months after the storming of the US Capitol, more than 550 people have been arrested, with an estimated 800 people surging into the building during the hours-long assault. Members of the Oath Keepers, a loosely organized right-wing paramilitary, and Proud Boys street fighters galvanized by then-President Trump’s call to “stand back and stand by” have been indicted on conspiracy to disrupt Congress, which delayed the certification of Joe Biden as president by almost six hours.

“Every single person charged, at the very least, contributed to the inability of Congress to carry out the certification of our presidential election,” prosecutors wrote in a memorandum filed with the court on Tuesday.

The slow-moving tedium of prosecutorial legal machinery and the GOP campaign to deflect responsibility can make it easy to lose sight of the big picture of what transpired on Jan. 6. But based on an aggregate review of individuals cases, along with other sources, a Raw Story analysis of the critical events in the Jan. 6 siege reveals a striking degree of coordination, sustained and intentional violence, planning and preparation, and determined effort to disable the United States’ critical governance apparatus by participants, including many with recent military experience.

Read more at https://www.rawstory.com/capitol-insurrection-timeline/

Long Beach BRIEFS: Library Offers Ancestry Resources, Reward For Desecration Of MLK Statue and FY Budget

LONG BEACH — The Long Beach Public Library will be showcasing a different digital resource each month via tits website and social media pages. July kicks it off with Ancestry Library Edition, a resource that can be used to gather information about one’s genealogy and family history.

The easy-to-use Ancestry Library Edition is stocked with billions of records, such as Census data, city directories, cemeteries, wills, probate, immigration information and more to help an individual learn about their roots. In addition to this resource, LBPL also offers digitized newspaper archives that can be especially useful for family historians.

LBPL card holders can access Ancestry Library Edition on-site at any of the open library locations, or log in from a personal device through the Library’s website. Remote access to the tool will remain available through December 31, 2021. All Digital Library resources are available to LBPL card holders free of charge.

Details: 562-570-7500; lbpl.org

 

Anti-Defamation League Donates Funds To Find Those Responsible For Desecrating MLK Statue

LONG BEACH — Long Beach City Council July16, unanimously approved to apply a $5,000 reward for information leading to the identification and conviction of the individuals responsible for the desecration of Martin Luther King Jr statue on July 2. The Anti-Defamation League donated an additional $3,000 to make the total reward $8,000.

Anyone with information about the statue desecration is encouraged to immediately contact the LBPD Violent Crimes Detail at 562-570-7250, or lacrimestoppers.org.

 

Long Beach Unveils Proposed Fiscal Year 2022 Budget

LONG BEACH — The City of Long Beach July 16, unveiled its Proposed Fiscal Year 2022 (FY 22) Budget. The Proposed FY 22 Budget is $3 billion and continues the tradition of providing a diverse array of services addressing the City Council’s priorities while emphasizing good financial management and policies. The Proposed FY 22 Budget maintains these services at the FY 21 level

Details: www.longbeach.gov/-proposed-fiscal-year-2022-budget/

L.A. Caregivers Protest Demands Investment in Essential Workforce

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Los Angeles, CA — On July 13, California’s largest union, SEIU Local 2015, representing more than 400,000 long term caregivers staged two simultaneous, live “Care is Essential” rallies July 13 in Los Angeles and Oakland demanding that the American Jobs Plan include $400 billion investment in homecare services and a $20 minimum wage. The SEIU and its partnered coalition included union carpenters, United Domestic workers, CARECEN, CHIRLA held simultaneous “Care is Essential” rallies in Los Angeles and Oakland. More than 2,000 workers turned out for the Los Angeles rally.

This nationwide day of action, united thousands of care workers, care consumers, advocates and partners to demand greater federal, state and local investment in America’s care infrastructure to improve care, better working conditions and build a pathway to a $20 hourly wage for caregivers and the middle class.

Nearly 200,000 Los Angeles County and Alameda County homecare workers are preparing to negotiate their first post-pandemic contract. Home care is also the nation’s fastest-growing job sector, as roughly 10,000 Americans turn 65 each day. The U.S. will need to fill an estimated 4.7 million home care jobs, including over one million new jobs, by 2028.

This workforce – predominantly made up of Black, Latina, Asian, and immigrant women – have historically been left behind in access to basic worker’s rights.

“This workforce is the backbone of this country,” said SEIU local 2015 President April Verrett.“The contributions they make to our communities in need are vital and oftentimes these workers are in need themselves with the poverty level wages they are given. The neglect our homecare workers face every day is relentless and it stops here. We need to reflect the impact these workers have on this country in the way they are compensated and invested in.”

Los Angeles and Oakland were two of 24 cities nationwide to take to the streets demanding good unions, living-wage jobs and a down payment to expand access across the care system.

Child Tax Credit Monthly Payments Start Today

Los Angeles County families who have not yet signed up for Child Tax Credit benefits are encouraged to sign up, as payments will begin to be directly deposited into bank accounts today.

  • In California’s 44th Congressional District, 52,000 households, covering 94.3 percent of all children, could get up to $300 per month per child from July-December 2021 — and could get even more after families file their taxes next year.
  • In California’s 44th Congressional District, 192,900 children could benefit from these payments.
  • Nearly all families should get their monthly payments automatically, beginning July 15 with no further action required.
  • Families who did not file a tax return for 2019 or 2020 and who did not use the IRS Non-filers tool last year to sign up for the Economic Impact Payments should go online and use the IRS Child Tax Credit Non-filer Sign-up Tool to sign up today.

Major Tax Relief for Nearly All Working Families:

The American Rescue Plan expanded the Child Tax Credit to up to $3,600 per child for children ages 0 to 5 and $3,000 per child for children ages 6 to 17.

The American Rescue Plan also authorized advance monthly payments of the Child Tax Credit through December 2021. Beginning in July and running through December, qualifying families can get up to:

  • $300 a month per child for children ages 0 to 5.
  • $250 a month per child for children ages 6 to 17.

Families will get their remaining expanded Child Tax Credit when they file their 2021 tax return.

Families will qualify for a full credit if their income is below $75,000 for single filers, $112,000 for people filing as head of household, or $150,000 for people who are married and filing jointly.

The child must have a Social Security Number, but the parents claiming the deduction can use either a Social Security Number or an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN).

 

Bernie Sanders Has Bonded with President Biden. Is That Good?

So far, most of the Biden presidency has been predictable. Its foreign policy includes bloated Pentagon spending and timeworn declarations that the United States should again “lead the world” and “sit at the head of the table.” Many corporate influence peddlers have settled into jobs in upper reaches of the executive branch. The new administration has taken only baby steps toward student debt relief or progressive taxation. On health care, the White House keeps protecting the interests of insurance companies while rebuffing public opinion that favors Medicare for All.

And yet — Joe Biden is no longer on the narrow corporate road that he traveled during five decades in politics.

President Biden’s recent moves to curtail monopolies have stunned many observers who — extrapolating from his 36-year record in the Senate — logically assumed he would do little to challenge corporate power. Overall, Biden has moved leftward on economic policies, while Sen. Bernie Sanders — who says that “the Biden of today is not what I or others would have expected” decades ago — has gained major clout that extends into the Oval Office.

This month has seen a spate of news stories about Sanders’ new political leverage, not only as chair of the Senate Budget Committee but also due to his close working relationship with Biden. Under the headline “Vermont’s Longtime Outsider Has Become a Trusted Voice in the Biden White House,” CNN summed up: “The Biden-Sanders connection is not a love story; it’s more a marriage of convenience. But as Biden pushes an unprecedented progressive White House agenda, it’s crucial.” Sanders told the network that Biden “wants to be a champion of working families, and I admire that and respect that.”

But if Biden is pushing “an unprecedented progressive White House agenda,” it’s a high jump over a low bar. Leaving aside President Lyndon Johnson’s short-lived Great Society program that was smothered by Vietnam War spending, no White House agendas since the 1940s really merit the term “progressive.” And the current president hardly passes as “a champion of working families” unless he’s graded on an unduly lenient curve.

One danger of Bernie’s tight political embrace of Biden is that “progressive” standards will be redefined downward. Another danger is that Biden’s international policies and conformity to militarism will be further swept off the table of public debate.

For instance, targeting Venezuela, Iran, Cuba and other disfavored nations, Biden continues to impose sanctions that are killing many thousands of people each month, with children especially vulnerable. A truly progressive president would not do such a thing.

Meanwhile — despite strong efforts by Sanders, some other lawmakers and many human-rights activists — Biden is still abetting Saudi Arabia’s warfare in Yemen that continues to cause the world’s worst humanitarian disaster. “While he is a welcome change from the incompetence, venality, and cruelty of the Trump administration,” epidemiologist Aisha Jumaan and attorney Charles Pierson wrote days ago, “Biden has continued the Obama and Trump administrations’ support for the Saudi-led war on Yemen.” A truly progressive president would not do such a thing.

And then there’s the enormous U.S. military budget, already bloated during the Trump years, which Biden has opted to raise. A truly progressive president would not do such a thing.

There is political and moral peril ahead to the extent that Bernie Sanders — or others who oppose such policies — feel compelled to tamp down denunciations of them in hopes of reaping progressive results by bonding, and not polarizing, with Biden.

In the aftermath of his two presidential campaigns that achieved huge political paradigm shifts, Sanders is now in a unique position. “Sanders already influenced a leftward shift in the Democratic Party through his time on the campaign trail in 2016 and 2020,” Bloomberg News reported last week. “Biden has embraced a series of progressive priorities, including an expanded child tax credit and subsidies for clean energy, and made an attempt at increasing the national minimum wage earlier this year.”

Sanders routinely combines his zeal for the art of the morally imperative with the art of the possible. So, four months ago, he helped push the American Rescue Plan through the Senate and onto Biden’s desk for signing. It resulted in upwards of 160 million direct cash payments to individuals, but did not boost the minimum wage. Sanders commented: “Was it everything we wanted? No. Was it a major step for the working class of this country? You bet it was.”

His approach has been similar this week in the midst of negotiations for a multi trillion-dollar budget plan. After a private White House meeting with Biden that Sanders called a “very good discussion,” the senator told reporters: “He knows and I know that we’re seeing an economy where the very, very rich are getting richer while working families are struggling.”

For genuine progressives, the Sanders-Biden bond is positive to the extent that it helps sway the president’s policies leftward — but negative to the extent that it restrains Sanders, and others in his extended orbit, from publicly confronting Biden about policies that are antithetical to the values that the Bernie 2020 presidential campaign embodied. Today, Sanders’ role is appreciably and necessarily different than the needed roles of grassroots movements that have inspired and been inspired by him.

Progressives cannot and should not be satisfied with the policies of the Biden presidency. Yet breakthrough achievements should not be denied.

At the end of last week, Public Citizen’s president Robert Weissman sent out a mass email hailing big news about Biden’s executive order on monopolies. Noting that Biden “tasked agencies throughout his administration with helping to level the playing field for consumers, workers, and small businesses,” Weissman declared: “Joe Biden just took the most significant action any president has taken in generations to confront the menace of corporate monopolies.”

An exaggeration? Hyperbolic? I wondered. So, I asked a leading progressive economist, Dean Baker.

“I think the enthusiasm is warranted,” Baker replied. “Biden laid out pretty much everything that he could do in terms of executive action. In many cases, everything will depend on the implementation, and also what the courts will buy.” The executive order’s provisions will be legally contested. “But some of these items are a really big deal. In the case of imported prescription drugs, you could easily be talking about [saving] $100 billion a year and if they push hard, possibly as much as $200 billion a year. That comes to more than $600 per person every year.”

Baker added that Biden’s recent appointment of Lina Kahn to be the chair of the Federal Trade Commission “was a really big deal — she is probably the foremost progressive antitrust scholar in the country.”

Overall, what the Biden administration is doing runs the gamut from very good to very awful. Meanwhile, Bernie Sanders — an extraordinary politician who has always worked in tandem with progressive movements — has landed in an exceptional position to shape history. He recently told an interviewer, “As somebody who wrote a book called ‘Outsider in the House,’ yes, it is a strange experience to be having that kind of influence that we have now.”

As Bernie Sanders continues to navigate that “strange experience,” one of the realms where he excels is public communication. It was aptly summarized a few days ago by Nathan J. Robinson, who wrote that Sanders “is always on message, always trying to make sure the press has to talk about what he wants them to talk about…. Bernie has his flaws and made serious mistakes in both of his presidential campaigns, but he is very good at politics despite his marginal position. If he goes on a talk show, he will be discussing wealth inequality or the future of democracy… Staying relentlessly on message — and thinking about what topics we want to spend our finite resources and time talking about — is critical to having an effective, persuasive left.”

An effective, persuasive left cannot be sustained by any leader, no matter how inspiring or brilliant. With the future at stake, what’s ultimately possible — as the Bernie 2020 motto insisted — is not about him, it’s about us.

___________________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.

Gov. Newsom Launches Clean California Day of Action and Historic Bill To Expand California’s Broadband Fiber Infrastructure

Gov. Newsom Launches Clean California Day of Action Across the State

Sacramento – Gov.Gavin Newsom July 7, launched a statewide day of action highlighting his $1.1 billion initiative, in partnership with local governments, to revitalize California’s streets and public spaces through litter abatement and local beautification projects.

Clean California compliments the Governor’s multi-pronged approach to tackling the homelessness crisis with record investments and innovative solutions. The Governor is proposing a $12 billion investment in proven solutions, including the expansion of Homekey, paired with strategies to ensure accountability and transparency in spending.

Clean California will substantially expand state and local litter abatement efforts and generate an estimated 10,000 to 11,000 jobs over three years, including for people exiting homelessness, at-risk youth, veterans, those reentering society from incarceration, local artists and students.

The statewide program includes potential projects in all 58 counties, with nearly a third of the funds being directly invested into cities, counties, tribes and transit agencies to clean and enhance local streets and public spaces. Caltrans will award $296 million in matching grants to fund impactful projects on local streets and roads, tribal lands, parks, pathways and transit centers in underserved, rural and urban communities. The department is developing a needs-based formula that will provide additional support to underserved communities, with a goal of funding more than 100 local projects a year.

The initiative also includes funding for a public education campaign to foster a sense of shared responsibility for litter prevention to help protect our waterways, natural resources, public safety and health.

 

Gov. Newsom, Legislative Leaders Announce Historic Broadband Budget Bill

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom, Senate President pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) July 12, announced an agreement on a broadband trailer bill, AB/SB 156, to expand the state’s broadband fiber infrastructure and increase internet connectivity for families and businesses.

The legislation includes:

More vital accountability and legislative oversight.

Creating a ‘broadband czar’ and nine-member council within the California Department of Technology.

Hiring a third-party to build and maintain the ‘middle-mile network’ – high-capacity fiber lines that carry large amounts of data at higher speeds over longer distances between local networks.

Investing $3.25 billion to target that middle mile and build the broadband lines.

Providing $2 billion for ‘last-mile’ infrastructure lines that will connect consumers’ homes and businesses with local networks ($1 billion for rural communities; $1 billion for urban communities).

Details: www.leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/AB/SB 156.

Public Health Reopens Dockweiler State Beach and El Segundo Beach

 

EL SEGUNDO – In an update from the Dockweiler Beach and surrounding area closures from a sewage spill, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health or Public Health has reopened the following swim areas that were closed due to sewage discharge from the City of Los Angeles Hyperion Water Reclamation Plant, after results from the ocean water samples collected over the last two days met State standards for acceptable water quality:

Beach # 110 – Dockweiler State Beach at Water Way Extension

Beach # 111 – Dockweiler State Beach at Hyperion Plant

Beach # 112 A – El Segundo Beach

Beach # 112 B – Grand Ave. Storm Drain

Following the spill, Public Health collects water samples to determine bacteria levels. Public Health collected multiple ocean water samples for two consecutive days to determine if the water quality met State standards in the affected and nearby areas. In an abundance of caution, Public Health will continue to sample affected beaches through Thursday.

Hyperion Water Reclamation Plant discharged 17 million gallons of untreated sewage through their one and five-mile outlets which prompted the beach closures. Once Public Health was notified that the Hyperion Plant discharged sewage in the outlet pipes, Public Health posted closure signs at affected beaches and posted information online.

Public Health officials notified lifeguards to remove beach closure signs earlier this evening shortly after receiving the test results confirming the beaches were safe to reopen. The Beach Water Quality webpage is updated to reflect the reopening.

Details: 1-800-525-5662 and www.publichealth.lacounty.gov/beach

The original story is below.

Supervisor Hahn Wants Answers After Hyperion Sewage Spill

EL SEGUNDO—Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn is asking for answers after a “mechanical failure” at a LA City Sanitation facility discharged 17 million gallons of sewage into the ocean off the coast of Dockweiler Beach.

At the July 13 meeting of the LA County Board of Supervisors, Supervisor Hahn read-in a motion regarding the spill, seeking answers about the cause of the spill, the extent of the impacts, and, importantly, seeking a corrective action plan to ensure faster response, coordination, reporting, and communication about any future sewage discharges that may require timely beach closures to prevent public exposure.

The motion passed unanimously.

Supervisor Hahn’s motion read:

“On July 11, 2021, the Hyperion Reclamation Plant or the Plant discharged approximately 17 million gallons of untreated sewage through the one-mile outfall into the Santa Monica Bay off the coast of Dockweiler State Beach. Plant crews worked overnight to resolve the issue and the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health posted “Beach Closure” signs in the area around Dockweiler State Beach. However, many beach goers and local residents were not aware of the closure and it was not clear which areas of the ocean water were impacted until health officials issued a news release later in the evening of July 12, 2021.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Environmental Health Division or Public Health is responsible for monitoring ocean water quality and is charged with taking appropriate action when untreated sewage enters an area where public health may be jeopardized. If beaches become contaminated due to untreated sewage, Public Health’s reporting protocol requires the department to immediately post “Beach Closure” signs and issue a public advisory explaining the reason for any beach closures. Effective monitoring and public notification of ocean water quality requires open communication and situational awareness of the sewage discharge incident among all coordinating agencies within Los Angeles County, as well as the Sanitation Districts and sewage treatment facilities.

During a sewage discharge event where public health may be jeopardized, it is imperative that Public Health immediately notify the general public of health risks and swiftly coordinate with partner agencies to ensure health protective action is taken. Immediate notification should be defined as 15 minutes from the time that Public Health is aware of a serious adverse event that poses a public health risk. With appropriate coordination and communication among agencies within Los Angeles County, we can protect the ocean water quality and the public health of Los Angeles County residents.

Supervisor Hahn moved that the Board of Supervisors directs the chief executive officer, in concert with the County Fire Department, Department of Beaches and Harbors, Department of Public Works, Department of Public Health, and in consultation with Los Angeles City Sanitation and Environment, to report back within 7 days on the following:

  1. Any and all issues, including but not limited to, the cause and extent of impacts related to the sewage spill and/or discharge that occurred the evening of July 11th off the coast of Dockweiler State Beach;
  2. All necessary steps to protect the health and safety of Los Angeles County residents and provide timely public notification of environmental hazards, including but not limited to, dissemination of information, signage, and closures;
  3. A corrective action plan that would result in faster response, coordination, reporting and communication about future sewage discharges that may require timely beach closures to prevent public exposure.

Supervisors to Reconsider Current Ban on Commercial Cannabis in Unincorporated LA County

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors July 13, voted to support a proposal by Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn to reconsider the current ban on commercial cannabis production and distribution in unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County.

Shortly after the passage of Proposition 64, the “Adult Use of Marijuana Act,” the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors enacted a ban on the commercial production and distribution of cannabis in unincorporated areas of the county. The ban was intended to be temporary until the County could develop and establish proper regulations. The board established the Office of Cannabis Management which convened a working group on cannabis regulation to develop recommendations for the board to consider. After conducting community outreach and eight public convenings, the working group presented a report to the Board of Supervisors with 64 recommendations.

However, in June 2018, the Board of Supervisors chose to accept the report but not take any action to remove the cannabis ban. At the time, Supervisor Hahn said the intention was not to rush the issue and felt there were too many unanswered questions and uncertainties.

In the three years since then, much has changed and evolved in the area of cannabis legalization. Multiple additional states have legalized recreational cannabis and the county’s two largest cities, Los Angeles and Long Beach, are now allowing commercial cannabis.

The Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to support a motion authored by Supervisor Hahn and coauthored by Supervisor Hilda Solis that directs the Office of Cannabis Management and other relevant county departments to revisit the regulation recommendations report and report back to the board with updated recommendations for cannabis retail, manufacturing, distribution, growth, testing, regulation, and enforcement in Los Angeles County in 120 days.

Details: www.file.lacounty.gov/motion-on-commercial cannabis

In 18 Months, Republicans Are Very Likely to Control Congress. Being in Denial Makes It Worse.

Since the Civil War, midterm elections have enabled the president’s party to gain ground in the House of Representatives only three times, and those were in single digits. The last few midterms have been typical: In 2006, with Republican George W. Bush in the White House, his party lost 31 House seats. Under Democrat Barack Obama, his party lost 63 seats in 2010 and then 13 seats in 2014. Under Donald Trump, in 2018, Republicans lost 41 seats. Overall, since World War II, losses have averaged 27 seats in the House.

Next year, if Republicans gain just five House seats, Rep. Kevin McCarthy or some other right-wing ideologue will become the House speaker, giving the GOP control over all committees and legislation. In the Senate, where the historic midterm pattern has been similar, a Republican gain of just one seat will reinstall Mitch McConnell as Senate majority leader.

To prevent such disastrous results, Democrats would need to replicate what happened the last time the president’s party didn’t lose House or Senate seats in a midterm election — two years after Bush entered the White House. The odds are steeply against it, as elections analyst Nathaniel Rakich points out: “Bush was very popular in 2002 in the aftermath of 9/11. According to a retrospective FiveThirtyEight average of polls at the time, he had a 62 % approval rating and 29 % disapproval rating on Election Day 2002. And in this era of polarization where presidential approval ratings are stuck in a very narrow band it’s hard to imagine (President) Biden ever reaching that level of popularity.”

It’s not just history that foreshadows a return to Capitol power for the likes of McCarthy and McConnell. All year, Republican officeholders have been methodically doing all they can to asphyxiate democracy. And they can do a lot more.

With new census data, the once-in-a-decade chance to redistrict means that Republican-dominated state legislatures can do maximal gerrymandering. “Because Democrats fell short of their 2020 expectations in state legislative races,” FiveThirtyEight politics reporter Alex Samuels says, “Republicans have the opportunity to redraw congressional maps that are much more clearly in their favor.” All this year, awaiting census figures to manipulate, Republican legislatures have been enacting outrageous new voter-suppression laws, many of the sort recently greenlighted by the Supreme Court and calculated to destroy voting rights.

In the face of impending election disasters in 2022 and beyond, denial might be a natural coping mechanism, but it only makes matters worse. Reality should now spur a sustained all-out effort in courts, legislatures, Congress and public venues to safeguard as many democratic processes as possible for next year’s elections, while organizing against the dozens of major voter-suppression tactics of recent years.

At the same time, truly bold political actions culminating in landmark legislation to improve the economic and social well-being of vast numbers of Americans will be essential to improve the slim chances that Biden’s presidency won’t lead to a Republican takeover of Congress midway through his term. Though largely drowned out by the din of mainstream punditry urging “bipartisan” approaches, many astute voices are urgently calling for measures that could transform political dynamics before the 2022 general elections.

* “We’ve got to go big, and take it to another level,” first-term Democratic Rep. Jamaal Bowman said in an email to supporters this week. “We’ve got to deliver and get this done for our communities. So why on earth are we wasting time trying to compromise with Republicans?” Bowman added: “If we do not fight for our communities and put them in the center of the work we do if we continue to prioritize the myth of ‘bipartisanship’ over the people we were elected to fight for and represent in Washington we will lose elections. If we want to maintain control and the opportunity to do great work beyond 2022, Democrats need to deliver in this very moment.”

* Nina Turner, who’s likely to become a member of Congress in November after a special election for a vacant seat in a northeast Ohio district, said recently: “When are we going to learn? Republicans plan for the long term. What can we do right now before the next election cycle and get it done and go big? Because power is fleeting. You’ve got to use it while you’ve got it.”

* Days ago, in a Washington Post column, The Nation’s editorial director Katrina vanden Heuvel posed “the critical question” as Congress reconvened after a holiday break: “Are Democrats ready to act?” She wrote: “While President Biden is selling the bipartisan infrastructure deal as a ‘generational investment,’ the real effort will come from using the budget reconciliation process to pass vitally needed public investments with Democratic votes only. For all the focus on Biden’s ability to work across the aisle, the true challenge is whether he and the congressional leadership can work with all Democrats. That test will do much to determine whether the party can retain or increase its majorities in the next election and whether the country will begin to address the cascading crises that it faces.”

What remains to be determined is whether such warnings will end up being the tragically prophetic voices of Cassandras or clarion calls for action that are heeded in time to prevent an unhinged Republican Party from taking control of Congress when 2023 begins.

___________________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.