Bernie Sanders Rips Democrats on Election Loss
Sen. Bernie Sanders is blaming the Democratic Party after Vice President Kamala Harris lost to now President-elect Donald Trump and Republicans gained control of the Senate.
In a statement shared on social media Wednesday — see below — the U.S. senator from Vermont said party leadership must have “serious political discussions” about Latino and Black workers voting for Republican candidates.
“It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them,” Sanders wrote. “While the Democratic leadership defends the status quo, the American people are angry and want change. And they’re right.”
Sanders, 83, highlighted several issues he believes the nation has failed to address under the Biden-Harris Administration, from wealth inequality and a worsening standard of living to high prescription drug prices and the lack of guaranteed medical leave.
2024 election: America needs to admit it’s not ‘better than this’
By Rex Huppke
We are a country that just elected – that just willfully chose – one of the most cruel, unscrupulous and transparently self-serving political figures in modern history to be president. Again.
I never want to hear the words “America is better than this” again. I never want to be told about America’s better angels.
I want honesty. I want an admission of exactly who we are as a country, and let’s be damn clear about that definition: We are a country that just elected – that just willfully chose – one of the most cruel, unscrupulous and transparently self-serving political figures in modern history to be president. Again.
Thinking of Jackson and What We Should Do Next
by Ernie McCray
That poor excuse
for a human being
is going to the White House again.
And I was thinking about him
as I played
with Jackson,
my youngest grandson,
the other day
because at the same time
my mind was also
buzzing frantically
The Election Aftermath
By Mat Wahlstrom
Hunter S. Thompson famously raged at the impending outcome of the 1972 Presidential Election, where another crook looked to beat the better man. With a true patriot’s love of country, he lamented:
The tragedy of all this is that George McGovern, for all his mistakes and all his imprecise talk about ‘new politics’ and ‘honesty in government,’ is one of the few men who’ve run for President of the United States in this century who really understands what a fantastic monument to all the best instincts of the human race this country might have been, if we could have kept it out of the hands of greedy little hustlers like Richard Nixon.
But unlike back then, people could still believe that the system worked and could be counted on to ensure wrongs would eventually be righted. Now, I don’t see how there can be a Watergate
All Politics Is Local
By Kate Callen
Last night, when presidential election returns started going horribly wrong, my sister said to me, “Don’t try to spin this. You always do that.”
Guilty as charged. When life ruptures, I look to Stoicism, to the belief that while we can’t control our fate, we can control our reactions to it. But this moment is too searing for that balm. The shock needs to wear off. That will take time.
What to do as we struggle to breathe again? Right now, it might help to turn away from the national conflagration and look closer to home at some encouraging local election results.
Here are local trends that augur well this Wednesday morning:
A Fifth of the American People Just Voted in ‘Democratic Fascism’
A fifth of the American people just voted in what I’m calling “democratic fascism.”
At last count, Trump had a little over 71 million votes. It will nudge up slightly. And there’s 337.4 million people living in the U.S. right now according to the Census Bureau.
So, doing a little math, roughly 20 to 21% of the people, a little over half of the electorate, voted in democratic fascism.
Democratic fascism is a fascism that is democratically voted in. And then it’s fascism for those who didn’t vote for it — and it would also be fascism for many of those that did vote for it.
‘These are the times that try men — and women’s souls … but he or she that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.’
“These are the times that try men’s souls; the summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.”
Thomas Paine, “The American Crisis” 1776
California: Return of the Resistance State
What another Trump presidency will mean for California
by Alexei Koseff / CalMatters / November 5, 2024
Former President Donald Trump won a second term after four years out of the White House, likely thrusting California back into leading the resistance against him.
The Associated Press made its call at 3 a.m., declaring that the Republican defeated Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, who would have become the first woman president and the most powerful Californian in four decades.
Instead, Californians now face a repeat of Trump’s first term from 2017 to 2021 — another four years of governance consumed by combative showdowns between the state’s Democratic leadership and Washington, D.C., possibly distracting from or even setting back progress on addressing California’s own problems.
Robert Reich: ‘Peaceful Resistance to Trump Must Start Now’
I still have faith in America. But we must mobilize to protect those at risk if Trump achieves his worst impulses
By Robert Reich / Guardian UK – RSN/ Nov. 6, 2024
I won’t try to hide it. I’m heartbroken. Heartbroken and scared, to tell you the truth. I’m sure many of you are, too. Donald Trump has decisively won the presidency, the Senate, and possibly the House of Representatives and the popular vote, too.
I still have faith in America. But right now, that’s little comfort to the people who are most at risk.
Millions of people must now live in fear of being swept up by Trump’s cruel mass deportation plan – documented immigrants, as he has threatened before, as well as undocumented, and millions of American citizens with undocumented parents or spouses.
It Was a Good Night for San Diego’s Incumbents
Election eve was a good night for San Diego’s incumbents, as they all won. Gloria, Lawson-Remer, Elo-Rivera, Whitburn — and even Ferbert if you consider her office an incumbency.
This trend also extended to the state and House races. Here are the results so far for the County with 49.2% of votes counted.









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