NY Times contributing
writer Tom Edsall has a new column worth reading this Thanksgiving morning, examining the recent mid-term election results and the
changing demographics that will impact presidential politics in 2016. In looking at the future of the Democratic
Party he concludes: “Unless the
Democrats develop a coherent, comprehensive strategy for the have-nots, it
won’t matter whether the party’s nominee is Clinton, Webb or anyone else.” http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/26/opinion/who-will-save-the-democratic-party-from-itself.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
Edsall quotes potential presidential
candidate Jim Webb on how poverty and lack of opportunity signal our having “drifted
to the fringes of the very inequality our Constitution was meant to prevent.” And while Edsall focused on the Democrats, the broader point is applicable to all Americans regardless of political party.
There is always a lot of commentary around Thanksgiving about counting our
blessings and remembering those less fortunate. Usually it’s in the form of an
appeal for increased charity. But Edsall’s
column is a kind of wake-up call that public policy must change to effectively
address poverty on the scale that it exists, and that if doesn’t, the “have-nots”
may at long last evolve from charitable cause to transformative political
force. For those of us with much to be
grateful for this holiday season, it’s another reminder that more charity,
though necessary and good, is not enough.
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