For John, BLUF: The author sees the current problems of the Democratic Party as a collective problem of the Democratic Natinoal Committee, reflecting on the broad leadership of the party, which seems to have adopted "go along to get along". Nothing to see here; just move along.
Here is the sub-headline:
The loyalty of millions of voters is being sorely tested by the failure of the Democratic National Committee to hold the president to his implicit campaign pledge to serve one term
From The Boston Globe, by Columnist Larry Edelman, 1 July 2024.
Here is the lede plus four:
If the Democratic Party were a publicly traded company, the mishandling of the presidential nomination process by its board of directors — the Democratic National Committee — would likely have sparked a revolt by investors. Here’s how an activist investor might respond.This is a view, and one worth considering.To: Jaime Harrison, chair, Democratic National Committee
Re: Thanks for nothingA lifelong Democrat, I’ve voted for each and every one of our party’s presidential nominees since 1980 — sometimes enthusiastically, other times not. I think I’ve pulled the lever for exactly one Republican in an election at any level: Bill Weld, for governor of Massachusetts. And he might as well have been one of us. (Even the Globe endorsed him in 1990.)
But my loyalty — and the loyalty of millions of Democrats like me — is being sorely tested by the failure of you and the rest of the DNC leadership to hold President Biden to his implicit campaign pledge to serve one term.
I am a Registered Republican, but even I see the present problems within the Democrstic Party as not being good for our Democracy. We do not need for the Democratic Party to implode, and then perhaps fragment, While I don't expect the Democratic Party to emerge as the Party of my youth, I do hope it emerges as a party capable of winning elections, not as the representative of some angry minority that fails to reflect the values of the average American.
Regards — Cliff
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