2021: The Year Democrats Worked to Clean Up the Ruins

2021: The Year Democrats Worked to Clean Up the Ruins

Ben Wikler, Chair, Democratic Party of Wisconsin & Ron Malzer, La Crosse Country Democratic Party Board Member

We were less than one week into 2021 when a violent coup, launched by then-President Trump almost succeeded in getting to Vice President Trump and Speaker Pelosi, leaving a policer officer and four civilians dead, and more than 130 police officers injured. The Capitol was in ruins, as was America’s reputation in the world.

President Joe Biden and the Democrats restored sanity to government in Washington. A great deal was accomplished; much work lies ahead. Meanwhile, in Madison, a right-wing extremist Republican Party used fear and intimidation to strike back at those who conducted honest election oversight. Both Republican-controlled-via-gerrymandering houses of the Wisconsin legislature passed outrageous, big-fist-of-government legislation denying local and individual liberty, all of which was thankfully vetoed by Gov.  Tony Evers.

Here is 2022 in review:

January began with the insurrection. A day of horror. Heroism, too—remember Officer Eugene Goodman. And then Congress did its job. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris won. An inauguration to remember. A WisDems campaign to ensure that every Wisconsinite knew Ron Johnson had fanned the flames—with the first TV ads of the 2022 election cycle.

In February, Governor Evers unveiled the Badger Bounceback agenda; Biden made his presidency’s first official trip—to Wisconsin!—and Wisconsin Republicans like Mike Gallagher voted against impeaching Trump. We held him to account. If he’d been convicted, he would be ineligible to run today.

March: the American Rescue Plan! Stimulus checks. Vaccine support. Child tax credits. Huge.

April: The GOP’s divisive tactics on education failed, and a massive surge in voter turnout—powered by a wave of grassroots energy—elected Dr. Jill Underly to Superintendent of Public Schools! What’s more, Governor Evers announced $420 million for small businesses.

May: Kamala Harris visited Wisconsin, and Governer Evers awarded $100 million in stimulus funds to rural broadband, part of his drive to connect 300,000 homes and businesses.

June: Governor Evers announced his reelection bid at the virtual WisDems virtual state convention—also featuring President Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, and Jaime Harrison! Later that month, Joe Biden visited Western Wisconsin, Ron Johnson earned boos at the 50th Juneteenth celebration in Milwaukee.

July: the expanded Child Tax Credit started flowing, and we made sure Wisconsin knew it. We hit the doors. Governor Evers signed a bipartisan budget, restoring 2/3 funding to schools.

August: Governor Evers vetoed a half-dozen voter suppression bills. The WisDems Rural Caucus and team launched Rural PowerUp trainings across the state. ProPublica ran an expose showing how Ron Johnson ripped off America to give himself and his biggest donors a giant tax giveaway. And we publicized it with a viral video.

September: Radical Rebecca Kleefisch launched her campaign, and we launched a special website just for her: radicalrebecca.com. Soon, she was talking about the website on the campaign trail. And we celebrated the 20th anniversary of Voces de la Frontera.

October brought a WisDems tour with stops at Chippewa Falls, Eau Claire, Merrill, Rhinelander, Wausau, the Oneida reservation, Green Bay, Milwaukee, and Madison; three AAPI roundtables; and conversations and listening sessions with rural and urban Dems alike.

November: Rebecca Kleefisch’s fear-mongering attempt to bolster school board recalls in Mequon-Thiensville fell flat. And the WisDems mega #1Year2Win weekend of action soared. Governor Evers and dozens of other elected leaders joined 1000 members, activists, staff, and partners in reaching out to more than 100,000 voters all over Wisconsin. We beat our goals—and our records! Watch the recap video. Oh—and then we passed the historic bipartisan infrastructure bill into law, despite “no” votes from every Wisconsin Republican. A huge month. But also a month when we contented with tragedy—the Waukesha massacre, the Rittenhouse verdict, the ongoing scourge of COVID.

And now we’re here in December. Republicans are bent on dismantling our democracy, from renewed gerrymandering to McCarthyite witch-hunt investigations and threats of jailing mayors and election commissioners for helping people vote. We’ve got Governor Evers—the “sea wall” for democracy”—standing firm.

We have 1001 reasons to be motivated to turn out a large blue vote in 2022. Let’s do it.

 

 

President Biden: The Work of Completing Build Back Better Resumes in January

President Biden: The Work of Completing Build Back Better Resumes in January

Excerpts from a White House Release

December 19, 2021

“Senator Manchin’s comments this morning on FOX are at odds with his discussions this week with the President, with White House staff, and with his own public utterances. Weeks ago, Senator Manchin committed to the President, at his home in Wilmington, to support the Build Back Better framework that the President then subsequently announced. Senator Manchin pledged repeatedly to negotiate on finalizing that framework “in good faith.”

On Tuesday of this week, Senator Manchin came to the White House and submitted—to the President, in person, directly—a written outline for a Build Back Better bill that was the same size and scope as the President’s framework, and covered many of the same priorities. While that framework was missing key priorities, we believed it could lead to a compromise acceptable to all. Senator Manchin promised to continue conversations in the days ahead, and to work with us to reach that common ground. 

Build Back Better lowers costs that families pay. It will reduce what families pay for childcare. It will reduce what they pay for prescription drugs. It will lower health care premiums. And it puts a tax cut in the pockets of families with kids. If someone is concerned about the impact that higher prices are having on families, this bill gives them a break.

Just as Senator Manchin reversed his position on Build Back Better this morning, we will continue to press him to see if he will reverse his position yet again, to honor his prior commitments and be true to his word.

In the meantime, Senator Manchin will have to explain to those families paying $1,000 a month for insulin why they need to keep paying that, instead of $35 for that vital medicine. He will have to explain to the nearly two million women who would get the affordable day care they need to return to work why he opposes a plan to get them the help they need. Maybe Senator Manchin can explain to the millions of children who have been lifted out of poverty, in part due to the Child Tax Credit, why he wants to end a program that is helping achieve this milestone—we cannot.

We are proud of what we have gotten done in 2021: the American Rescue Plan, the fastest decrease in unemployment in U.S. history, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, over 200 million Americans vaccinated, schools reopened, the fastest rollout of vaccines to children anywhere in the world, and historic appointments to the Federal judiciary.

But we will not relent in the fight to help Americans with their childcare, healthcare, prescription drug costs, and eldercare—and to combat climate change. The fight for Build Back Better is too important to give up. We will find a way to move forward next year. 

This Is What the GOP Assault on Democracy Looks Like by Ben Wikler, Chair, Democratic Party of Wisconsin 

This Is What the GOP Assault on Democracy Looks Like by Ben Wikler, Chair, Democratic Party of Wisconsin

Think about a horror movie that takes place in three rooms.

The first room: the chambers of the United States Supreme Court. The Court—including three justices appointed by Donald Trump, following Mitch McConnell’s changing of filibuster rules—heard oral arguments in a case that gives the conservative majority a chance to overturn Roe v. Wade.

As Justice Sotomayor asked, “When does the life of a woman and putting her at risk enter the calculus?”

The second room: the hearing of the Wisconsin Assembly Committee on Campaigns and Elections. Michael Gableman, running the obscenely partisan taxpayer-funded “probe,” grew enraged when Rep. Mark Spreitzer points out that Gableman hired an “investigator” who sued to overturn the 2020 elections. “Shame on you!” shouted Gableman.

“Shame on you” Spreitzer replied. “Why have you hired Mr. Heuer who tried to overturn the will of the people of Wisconsin?”.

Gableman went on to threaten jail time for mayors who don’t cooperate with his sham investigation.

And now a third room: in the Capitol, joined by women leaders including health care workers from throughout Wisconsin, Governor Evers vetoed five Republican bills that would roll back reproductive health care rights in our state.

The Governor was unequivocal: “I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again today: as long as I’m governor, I will veto any legislation that turns back the clock on reproductive rights in this state — and that’s a promise.”

Rebecca Kleefisch has vowed, if elected Governor, to sign those bills, has cheered on the most extreme restrictions on reproductive rights in the country, and has ramped up her attack on our democracy. Republicans are working to tear our democracy apart in order to impose a radical and extreme agenda—nationally and here in Wisconsin. Governor Evers stands in their way.

Let’s stand with him, and with all of the women and people of all genders working to ensure that freedom—including two of the fundamental freedoms, freedom over own bodies and freedom of self-government—survives and thrives in the state we love.

They want to lock the doors on us. But all of us are needed in the rooms where decisions are made. That’s what democracy is all about.

Democrats in 2020 won the Wisconsin Presidential vote, and every statewide office on the ballot: Governor & Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, and Treasurer. We plan on turning out everyone possible in 2022; right-wing GOP extremists cannot win elections when mainstream voters are actively voting.

The La Crosse County Democratic Party stands ready to make sure that everyone who wants to register or vote in 2022 can do so, no matter what the obstacles.

To join in the fight, please click on the “Donate” or “Volunteer” tab in this website. 

Ron Malzer: 2021: The year of massive denial

Ron Malzer: 2021: The year of massive denial

As printed in the La Crosse Tribune, linked here:  https://lacrossetribune.com/opinion/columnists/ron-malzer-2021-the-year-of-massive-denial/article_b0da0a30-aa30-586d-ad1b-f83f6235b34c.html

With 2021 drawing to a close, we’ve endured a year that has dealt us enormous challenges: the global pandemic; climate change; the frontal attack on democracy; and ongoing racial injustice. Sadly, for each, we have done far too little problem-solving, and used denial far too often.

The COVID facts are daunting but clear: 1) COVID-19 has killed more than 750,000 Americans; 2) death rates among us are currently 12 times higher for the unvaccinated; and 3) masking and social distancing are risk reducers.

COVID denial in 2021 was rampant. Advocacy for an animal deworming agent, one with no track record as a disease preventive, was embraced by science deniers. A Senate hearing was conducted by Sen. Ron Johnson last December to promote the use of ivermectin. In April, he followed this by calling for limiting the distribution of the proven vaccines, testily asking us all, “What do you care if your neighbor has had one (a vaccine) or not?”

In March, Idaho’s lieutenant governor, skeptical that we have a pandemic, addressed mask-burning ralliers at their state Capitol. Aaron Rodgers also swallowed the Kool-Aid of COVID denial. Having chosen the deworming agent over the proven vaccines, he deceived us about his vaccination status.

The first week of January brought the nation’s first-ever attempt to install a president by a violent coup. We cling to denial about what happened at our long-term peril. The devastating Capitol attack was launched by a sitting president immersed in his own denial. With his ego battered by a seven-million-vote defeat, he insisted, denial flaring wildly, that he was the one who won the presidential election.

January then saw a bloc of 12 senators, including Johnson, calling on their fellow senators to break their oath of office and “de-certify” (nullify) the electoral count from swing states, and thereby award a second term to the man who had lost the election.

On January 6, the president ordered his supporters to take an illegal, unpermitted march to the Capitol, and to “fight like hell.” Insurrectionists invaded, menacingly chanting the names of Vice-President Mike Pence and House Speaker  Nancy Pelosi, killing a police officer on their way down the Capitol halls. Johnson again employed massive denial, attributing the insurrection to “plainclothes militants, agent provocateurs, fake Trump protesters, and [a] disciplined uniformed column of attackers.”

Later, Johnson offered an updated denial-based fantasy, this one blatantly denying what we had all seen and heard. He asked us to refrain from judging the violent insurrection too harshly because the mob’s majority, he maintained, displayed a “jovial, friendly, earnest demeanor.”

Sadly, climate change denial is also widespread, threatening to enable destruction of the health of our world. Mountains of data, and our own eyes, tell us that polar ice caps are melting, and that we are being pounded with ever more frequent and severe storms. The scientific community is loudly calling out the alarm: The risk is enormous. The clock is ticking. Reduce fossil fuel emissions by 50%, and do it by 2030.

Yet Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, with all 50 Republicans senators along for the ride, declared that nothing was needed to speed up our snail’s pace transition away from fossil fuels. Johnson did his Senate colleagues one better, arguing incredibly that there was simply no problem. “Climate change is bulls—-”, he was caught telling supporters.

In late September, the Wisconsin State Assembly joined the denial parade. In a party-line vote, legislation passed aimed at reversing the long-overdue reckoning on race. In-depth teaching about the multi-century history of “Indian” removals, destruction of Native culture, chattel slavery, Jim Crow laws, and lynchings would all have become subject to attack.

Sociologist and human rights abuse documenter Stanley Cohen literally wrote the book on denial, individual and societal. In his “States of Denial,” he warns of the corroding effects of prolonged denial, including this tragic outcome: complete moral indifference.

There is a severe price to be paid when we can look the other way as a global pandemic kills people by the millions; as killings occur during the invasion of the US Capitol or at a neo-Nazi rally; when children are forcibly separated from their parents; and when outrageous falsehoods are promoted because they advance an agenda. With denial piled on top of denial, society loses the ability to hold anyone morally accountable for their words or deeds, no matter how horrific.

Aggressive denial employed by some is breaking apart the bonds connecting us all.

As Americans, we value personal choice, and personal responsibility. We can choose the comfort of denial, or, the more difficult but essential path of facing the facts, and dealing with them. In the coming year, may we do less denying, and more truth-telling.

Ron Malzer is a retired psychologist and freelance writer.