this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2024
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DNC policy discussion (self.politicaldiscussion)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by laverabe to c/politicaldiscussion
 

Who decides what policies the DNC chooses for their national platform? Obviously corporate donors effect the bottom line of the organization, but who are the power brokers internally at the DNC that make the decisions to create those policies that favor corporations over people?

This is their leadership team, but something tells me they're not the ones making the decisions to not advocate for Medicare for all, or other widely popular left wing policies.

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[–] JubilantJaguar 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Of course you're entitled to your view but I consider that an egregiously cynical take, not to mention a bit convoluted and with a hint of conspiracism. The fact remains that the Republicans are offering more money to them, up front, now, so the simplest explanation is that they are motivated by higher ideals than just money.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

It's an incredibly cynical take. I think it's accurate, though. Observe how the Democrats generally treat Bernie Sanders, or for that matter how they treated Dan Osborn. I don't think the idea that Washington mostly runs on money takes any kind of X-Files leap to take seriously.

I'm not trying to say we shouldn't support Democrats, especially because they are the only viable party that has some nuggets of actual care for the people embedded within them in a few random places. But I don't see any other explanation than the one I gave, in answer to OP's completely valid question about why they keep giving such lukewarm endorsement to such incredibly sensible and popular ideas.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

It comes across to me as much more realpolitik than needless cynicism. I also don't think there's any conspiracism in there, it's much more game theoretic, in the sense that we've reached an uncoordinated local optimum that's hard to break out of. There's not nearly as many smoke-filled back rooms where deals are made as people think, but there is a lot of shared interest in not rocking the boat among wealthy people.