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I had to look up the phrase "Brahmin left" as I'd never heard it before. It was apparently coined by an economist, Thomas Piketty, in a paper on wealth inequality. In it, among other ideas, he used this phrase to describe a shift in voting patterns where highly educated people, who used to vote more to the right, were now voting more left in western societies. It seems an odd choice to me as Brahmin is the name of the highest ranking caste in India's caste structure. That basically included the wealthy and the powerful and to me doesn't conjure up associations with high education. The American Enterprise Institute, a right leaning think tank, says the phrase characterizes "Western left parties increasingly bereft of working-class voters and increasingly dominated by highly educated voters and elites."
I gather that the phrase has been adopted by Republicans as a slur against the left in their efforts to characterize themselves as the party of workers.
There is no party of workers. If there were, we would have single payer health care, mandatory 2-4 weeks paid vacation per year, mandatory paid sick leave, parental leave, 25$ minimum wage, among other benefits.
We do not have a workers party
We don't have a dedicated workers party but we do have an anti-workers party. One party has worked towards all of those things you listed in some shape or form.
Sounds like the term I've heard a lot: "Champagne socialist".