MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Since the election of President Trump, certain conflicts have been inevitable for a Democratic Party asking itself how to win again: liberal or moderate candidates? Populist or pragmatist? Establishment or insurgent? But in the race between Mr. Cordray and Mr. Kucinich — one of the year’s most closely watched Democratic primaries — a more basic tension has consumed the collective left: Who has the truest claim to progressivism in 2018, when both candidates can credibly grab at the label? Is it better to be liberal on guns (Mr. Kucinich) or the bane of the banks (Mr. Cordray)? To be a fire-breather or a bit of a square?
Elizabeth Warren is backing Cordray, and though Sanders has called Kucinich "an old friend", he's not endorsed him. Bur "Our Revolution", led by Nina Turner, has.
Comments
love the character descriptions by Flegenheimer at the start, guy's clearly talented at that.
As to the political potential here, though, this guy's comment on the article strikes like a slap in the face as spot on in that all those subtle liberal/lefty differences add up to a big nothing burger in Ohio:
Though I think he's wrong that it also equates to a two-term Trump.
by artappraiser on Mon, 04/30/2018 - 1:09pm
Well, somebody's got to win the Dem nomination first, then we'll see. And liberal/lefty differences matter nowadays, so maybe Ohio's primary is just an interesting piece of the larger upcoming (upscale?) question.
by barefooted on Mon, 04/30/2018 - 1:18pm