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POLITICO's Off Message

Ben Jealous: ‘Americans are suffering under the weight of half-measures’

POLITICO's Off Message

POLITICO

News, Daily News, Politics

4.5637 Ratings

🗓️ 11 September 2018

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ben Jealous is a venture capitalist. Opponents call him a socialist. He says that’s the cost of wanting “people to be treated in a way that’s just.” Ben Jealous campaigned all over the country for Bernie Sanders, but he has a platinum American Express card in his wallet. He got his first campaign experience as a 14-year-old volunteer for Jesse Jackson in 1988, but the presidential candidate from that year he has since reconsidered is Steve Forbes, whose ideas about transforming schools into vocational training Jealous cites as a model for his own approach to education reform. He may be the lone liberal Democrat running this year who says he doesn’t want anything to do with socialism, but is for “Medicare for all” and free college tuition. Jealous is the first major player to come directly off Sanders’ 2016 campaign and have done this well. He’s the first leader of a civil rights organization—from 2008-2013, he was president of the NAACP—to ever be even this close to winning a statewide office. He’s a test case to see if someone with his kind of politics can win something more than a primary, even in a heavily Democratic state. But first, he’ll have to get past Republicans who insist that he’s a socialist—and he’ll have to overcome the clear anger that attack stirs up in him, despite his public statements that he takes their label as a badge of honor. “It’s unfortunate if we get to a place where we believe that you have to be a socialist to simply want people to be treated in a way that’s just. I would not like to live in that country,” Jealous says. POLITICO's Off Message podcast is hosted by Isaac Dovere and is part of the Panoply network. Produced by Zack Stanton. Executive Producer is Dave Shaw. Theme music by Podington Bear. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Off Message. I'm Isaac Dover.

0:04.3

Dover. Do you know what we're talking about anymore when we say socialism?

0:06.9

I think, you know, it's, um, it clearly is a name that Republicans like to call people.

0:14.9

They called FDR communist. They called Martin Luther King of communist.

0:20.5

They called Bill Clinton a socialist,

0:22.5

for suggesting that we have a national health care system. They called Barack Obama socialists

0:28.7

for essentially the same. Yeah. And now they're calling me one. In that context, I take as a compliment,

0:35.8

I think that it's unfortunate. If we get to a place

0:40.8

where we believe that you have to be a socialist, they simply want people to be treated in a way

0:45.4

that's just. I would not like to live in that country. Today's guest, Ben Jalous, the Democratic

0:50.8

candidate for governor in Maryland this year, a prominent Bernie Sanders supporter,

0:54.8

and one of the candidates Sanders has been most prominently behind this year.

0:58.6

He's also a former head of the NAACP.

1:01.5

Now, we've been off for a few weeks, but I'm really glad to get back rolling with him

1:04.6

as we head into this final stretch before the midterms.

1:08.2

Jealous, according to the public polls, at least, is pretty far behind,

1:11.5

which is saying something for Maryland, one of the most democratic states in the country.

1:15.6

There's only been one Republican governor between Spiro Agno and the current one, and that guy,

1:19.7

his name is Bob Erlich, was elected in the 2002 Republican wave and was turned out after one

1:25.1

term. The current governor, Larry Hogan, is no Agnew or Erlich.

1:29.4

Since being elected in 2014, he has solidified his hold on the state as one of the most popular governors in the country,

1:35.7

and though he's a Republican, has distanced himself almost completely from Donald Trump.

...

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