Can Democrats and independents form a majority coalition?
Earlier this month I attended the 2017 People’s Summit in Chicago along with several thousand other progressive activists. The event was sponsored by a “who’s who” of left-leaning Democratic Party organizations connected with Bernie Sanders, who was the keynote at the event.
Here’s my take on what went down.
There were really two conversations going on. From the stage, an array of leaders articulated ideals that spoke to many in the room and pointed to the headway that the progressive movement is making in shifting the Democratic Party to the left. Most maintained that if the movement stays its course, it could successfully turn the party into a vehicle for progressive change.
The other conversation took place on the floor and in the massive halls of McCormick Place. There a different sentiment emerged. Equipped with a 20-question survey, I – along with five independent voter activists from the Independent Voting network who had come from Ohio, Idaho, New York and Illinois – conducted one-on-one interviews.
Senator Sanders put it bluntly last month when he said, “The Democratic Party will not succeed unless it attracts many, many millions of independents.” So we made it our business to speak to hundreds of grassroots activists about this and to see if they shared the concerns that independent voters have about the political process. They do.
Our survey probed whether concern over the process by which the 2016 presidential elections were conducted had faded, whether the American people could directly engage the issue of political power, and if the Democratic Party could be a vehicle to effect empowerment for the American people, or if partisan interests would prevent it from doing so. In my opinion, the Democratic Party can’t call itself democratic unless it addresses the failure of our current political process.
Over 60 percent of People’s Summit survey takers identified as something other than Democrat or Republican, while a whopping 93 percent thought the
Democratic Party should open its presidential primaries to independent
voters in the 2020 election. In 2016, an estimated 26.3 million
independents were excluded from voting in the presidential primaries
because they lived in states with closed primaries.
Among
survey takers, 88 percent were not satisfied with the choice of
candidates in the general election and 89 percent thought the Democratic
Party was “out of touch” with the concerns of most people in the U.S.,
only slightly less than the 95 percent who thought Donald Trump was
similarly out of touch.
Of
those polled, 97 percent agreed with the statement that “the real
struggle for America is not between Democrats and Republicans but
between mainstream America and the ruling political elites.” In
addition, 95 percent felt that in order for the country to prosper and
for new coalitions and a new culture of politics to be created, it was
necessary to move beyond the traditional categories of “left, center and
right,” divisions the political parties play off of. When asked to
react to the statement, “As a progressive, I see the Democratic Party as
our only way forward,” 69 percent of respondents disagreed.
Over
75 percent wanted to see Sanders run for president in 2020, and 44
percent want to see him run as an independent. In response to a question
about whether ideology should stand in the way of building a broad
coalition, 74 percent of respondents said they want to see Sanders form a
third party that would join forces with other independents from the
left, center and right of the political spectrum. In response to the
statement, “No American should be required to join an organization of
any kind to be able to exercise their right to vote,” 97 percent agreed.
The
opportunity for Democrats to form a new majority coalition with
independent voters has been on the table for many years, and support for
Sanders from the grassroots and from independent voters pushed this
issue squarely on the table. It’s a new day in American politics and an
exciting time to be engaged in conversation with the base of the party
about the bridge-building that needs to take place.
Gwen Mandell is the director of National Outreach for Independent Voting (IndependentVoting.org) and resides in New York City.