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Reply to "Sanders is the real feminist in this race"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] Sigh... once again... that was his proposal in 2011. He is now running for president and is creating a childcare program which would benefit the entire country. I posted that piece of legislation only to show that he has, in fact, introduced childcare legislation. [/quote] The point that other posters are making is that legislation is the "start" of leading an effort, but it's only potentially the start. Very often, as I know from being a Hill staffer who crafted and introduced "platform legislation", a bill is crafted and introduced for no other reason than for a Congress member to be able to show they've done something on an issue. The real effort and leadership comes from negotiating with the relevant committee leadership to get the bill taken under consideration and bringing other members on board to vote it out of committee and then onto the floor (these steps are based on House rules, I know the Senate works a little differently, but I think the process is similar). Anyone can introduce a Bill, but from first-hand experience it's a lot of work to make the other stuff happen. Again, though, I don't think anyone (well, not most people) would say Sanders is insincere on the issues. I suspect he very much does care about affordable chilcare and early childhood education...and maybe his ideas are better than HRC's, withholding judgment on that one. But the reality is that being an effective leader, especially in the Executive Branch and especially as the head of the EB, requires building coalitions and compromising. Despite how many people hate and slander Clinton, she has been able to do that. And I think that's important. And I also did work in the Obama WH, so I know how many missed opportunities there were due to his not being able to do that (and also that his selection of Biden as VP was brilliant in that it gave him someone very close who did have that ability). If you disagree with the assessment that this is an important quality in a candidate for POTUS, it would be great to explain why...especially since there are some posters who vehemently argue the opposite, compromise is a huge liability.[/quote] I really appreciate when you post because you are talking about reality and not just making baseless statements. I respect your opinion even though I disagree on priorities.[b] I am not even going to argue because we mostly just disagree on who would get more done and that is a matter of opinion.[/b] [/quote] I don't think it's entirely about opinion. My point is that a willingness to compromise is a critical aspect of getting things done, especially in the Executive Branch (but even as a legislator). It concerns me that part of Sanders' appeal to so many people is exactly the fact that he doesn't do that...and I'm asking why that doesn't concern his supporters.[/quote]
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