4.8 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 27 December 2024
⏱️ 26 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Originally aired November 15, 2024
In the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s victory, Democrats and those on the left are grappling with what comes next.
On The Intercept Briefing podcast this week, columnist Natasha Lennard critiques the Democratic Party. “You can’t be both at once: You can’t be the party of Wall Street, and you can’t be the party of the working class,” Lennard says. By acquiescing to Silicon Valley and Wall Street, the Democrats failed again “to offer a robust politics that serves the working class."
Facing a second Trump term, Lennard says the way forward is a politics of everyday life and radical action that focuses on empowering grassroots movements and labor organizations. “When we look at what people can [do] — involving people at a local level, building community so that it is truly kind of a form of life to be in this politics, rather than just a donation, rather than just a vote, rather than just canvassing even.”
In conversation with Jessica Washington and Jordan Uhl, Lennard emphasizes the importance and resilience of the working class. "Nurses unions, food workers unions. Most of the working class in this country are women. And it is a profoundly multi-racial working class. And we have a working class of care workers. And a service economy. And an increasingly growing care economy," she says. "That needs investing in. That needs support. That needs building."
To hear more about the future of progressive politics, listen to this week's episode of The Intercept Briefing.
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0:00.0 | The Intercept isn't afraid to make powerful enemies, and we never back down. |
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0:11.2 | fearless reporting has never been more essential. |
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0:40.4 | Together, we can defend the truth and hold the powerful accountable. |
0:49.9 | And in America, the evil anti-Semitism is rampaging all throughout our cities, the Democrat Party, our left-wing media institutions, a certain candidate for the president of the United States, which is hard to believe in our colleges and universities there going loco. |
1:11.2 | Welcome to the Intercept Briefing, a new podcast from our newsroom. |
1:14.6 | I'm Jessica Washington. |
1:16.0 | And I'm Jordan Yule. We're your host this week. |
1:18.5 | And we will continue to fight until the university divest. |
1:25.8 | Over the past year, a powerful protest movement erupted on college campuses nationwide, opposing Israel's assault on Gaza. |
1:35.8 | But as the presidential election drew closer, attention pivoted to the horse race, effectively drowning out grassroots activism and calls for justice. |
1:43.4 | At the very end, we find a tie |
1:45.5 | nationally, 49% for Harris, 49% for Trump. It's across each and every one of the battleground states, |
1:51.7 | one after another is effectively even. Pennsylvania, dead heat tie. This is a breaking alert that |
1:58.4 | has just moved on the AP wire. The Associated Press has called the presidency for Republican Donald Trump. |
2:04.6 | The day after Donald Trump secured a second term, eight years after his first, |
2:09.3 | our guest wrote, |
2:10.6 | Whatever wins were made by organized labor throughout Biden's tenure, |
2:15.0 | and these were notable, |
... |
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