The move would extend her 36-year House career and continue to freeze her would-be California successors in a long-standing holding pattern.

  • SpaceBar
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    1871 year ago

    As an unabashed liberal and Dem party voter: enough is enough. Let the future get started already.

      • PorkRoll
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        -71 year ago

        What exactly is a democratic socialist? I ask this as an anarchist.

            • @transmatrix@lemmy.world
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              71 year ago

              Socialism has a definition, not sure why I’d need to provide one. In general, I feel the government should serve the interests of the people. I support things like welfare for all, basic income, guaranteed housing, etc.

              • PorkRoll
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                -31 year ago

                I ask because you seem to have a very different definition of what socialism is from me because everything you’re describing is just social welfare. For example, I an Anarchist (syndicalist, if you want to get technical), could be considered a ‘socialist’ as my ideology would have governance under a federation of industrial unions. No president, no electroeal college, no leaderism. I ask again, what do you consider “socialism” to be?

                • That sounds like it would end up being a plutocracy within the first generation. Unions are great for workers, but they aren’t a magical solution for government.

          • PorkRoll
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            11 year ago

            I guess it is a bit of a loaded question, but it was done with the intent of just finding out what they define their ideology as.

            • @BigNote@lemm.ee
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              11 year ago

              That’s precisely my point. It’s a question that was asked in the furtherance of a specific and very obvious regime of intent. In that sense it was the epitome of intellectual dishonesty.

      • SpaceBar
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        1 year ago

        I’m not moving to California, but I do hope someone who already lives there will do that.

  • Hairyblue
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    1241 year ago

    She is too old to run again. Like Biden, Trump, many others passed retirement age. Let go of power and enjoy your retirement.

    • @hydrashok@sh.itjust.works
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      471 year ago

      Always nice when all my reps are backwards boomer jackasses that don’t make any attempt to represent me or my generation. I wish all congresspersons be forced to retire and prevented from reelection when they reach a certain age.

        • Meh, we don’t bother to run. We got kneecapped as far as us being leaders is concerned, being bookended by two much larger generations.

          I’m only even considering running for city council in 26 because several of my neighbors have suggested I do so independently of each other.

      • Buelldozer
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        181 year ago

        Always nice when all my reps are backwards boomer jackasses

        Nancy Peloso is older than a Boomer. She’s from the generation before that, the Silent Generation.

      • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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        101 year ago

        Imagine all the people,

        Living for today.

        Imagine your representatives,

        Voting for term limits to cut off their own money faucets.

        • @YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Term limits just give corporations more power because you’re limiting experience. Corporate funded Special Interest Groups will be writing all the laws if you impose term limits.

          • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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            81 year ago

            I’d argue the opposite. It’s a long known business rule that it costs way more to get new clients than it is to continue doing business with. The longer someone stays in office, the more likely it is they have a past relationship with someone trying to influence them. Oh and by the way, special interest groups already write laws.

              • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                This is an entirely different concept. Comparing politics to medicine is beyond nonsensical. People go into politics idealistic. The longer they spend in there, the more entrenched in the insider games they become. How many of our problems are borne from politicians protecting their own jobs over doing what’s right? How many of our problems are thanks to entrenched politicos who’ve lost touch with real life?

                It’s almost like the opposite is true of politics than any actual job: experience is almost a detriment. Because the “experience” you gain in that world is not how to more efficiently and justly serve your constituents. It’s to more expertly hobknob and fundraise and keep your job.

                • AFK BRB Chocolate
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                  01 year ago

                  The analogy has some merit in that politics is a job that takes experience and skill. Look at Biden - he’s working with a divided government but he’s still accomplished more than most presidents - more than Obama, our last Democratic president, by some margin - and much of it has been bipartisan. Whatever your feelings on him, he’s an experienced politician who knows how to work things through the houses.

              • @TowardsTheFuture@lemmy.zip
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                31 year ago

                First, I’d MUCH rather someone who knows how to use the newest technology to best serve me as new tech helps a LOT more than some old dude who can’t even keep a steady hand anymore. This isn’t like 18 year old vs 35 year old, She’s 83, we’re way past the “with experience”. Plus plenty of old ass doctors are very stuck in their ways and will mistreat shit.

              • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                You think politicians actually write legislation?

                Most don’t even read it…

                It’s written by staffers in their 20s, think tanks, or even just straight up by their donors. There might be a handful that actually write their own proposals.

                Their experience is working for decades in a corrupt system, and that counts for jack shit if we change the system.

          • @jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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            61 year ago

            That’s assuming both that parties don’t exist and that all newly elected politicians are newbies and there’s no rotation between different offices. In reality parties would keep institutional knowledge and people would bring personal experience from other offices around.

    • Random Dent
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      301 year ago

      Yeah she’s 83 years old and could be worth $170 million. I think a normal person at some point would just want to take it easy a live their life for a bit. IMO it’s kind of ghoulish to have all these 70+ year olds still power-tripping just for the sake of it.

      Like Strom Thurmond, who left the Senate in 2003 at 100 years old, and then pretty much died immediately afterwards.

      • Pretty sure most of these people would die immediately after retiring. Their thirst for power keeps their body working or something. That’s the only reasonable explanation of why in the flying fuck an 80 year old multimillionaire would choose to continue working.

        • AFK BRB Chocolate
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          31 year ago

          I have employees who are way past retirement age and could have retired financially ages ago, but they really like what they do and they worry they’d just get bored sitting at home.

          I’m nearing retirement, and I’m going to actually do it, but part of that is that I committed to my wife that I would and we’d go off and do stuff. Still, I honestly understand why some people don’t. I could easily live another 25 years, and my job really keeps my juices going. Some days I don’t want to get up and go to work, but the thought of never going in again is daunting.

    • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      Imagine being so rich you can go do whatever you want for the rest of your days, and choosing more work. Wtf?! What is wrong with these people? I’d be kicking it on a beach if I had their money and was retirement age

      • @littlewonder@lemmy.world
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        71 year ago

        You know what’s funny, George Washington, the OG, did. Wish they could follow his example since we’re all taught to masturbate our rock-hard patriotism to the founding fathers in school.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate
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      71 year ago

      With someone like Feinstein, I think the argument against them is that their age has reduced their ability to do their job effectively. Pelosi still seems pretty effective to me for what she tries to do. My issue with her is that she’s not very progressive. You could make an argument that that’s a function of age, but Bernie Sanders, who also seems effective but is for sure progressive, is 82.

      I’ve never had a problem with someone doing any job at any age as long as they are effective. I manage a software engineering team, and my best, sharpest developer - the one most everyone goes to for help - is around 80. He loves what he does and my whole team is better with him on it. I’ve known other people who declined at a much earlier age.

      So I hate setting an artificial age limit, but I wish we had some kind of test out performance measure that would force people out who can’t do the job.

    • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      How much is enough for these people? I have always told myself if I won the lottery, I could live comfortably on 10 million no problem for the rest of my days with my wife and kids. What causes these people to just want more and more instead of just chilling out and enjoying what they have already? Why would you want to run again at her age? Go enjoy retirement!

  • @some_guy
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    931 year ago

    I live in her district. I will attend campaign speeches yelling, “Let younger generations have a turn!”

    • @MrBusinessMan@lemm.ee
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      -291 year ago

      I also live in her district and will be voting for her again. Her incredible record of making high return investments shows good judgment that I just can’t argue with, even if she is more of a radical leftist than I’m normally comfortable with.

      • @Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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        361 year ago

        Her incredible record of making high return investments

        Just to be sure, we’re talking about her insider trading, right?

        • @chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          111 year ago

          He’s a parody account, talking as a Business man. The downvotes are either people who don’t get it, or don’t think it’s funny. Though I generally ignore not funny instead of downvoting it.

        • @MrBusinessMan@lemm.ee
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          -171 year ago

          She isn’t inside the companies so it isn’t insider trading. She’s only inside Congress and there aren’t any laws against having stocks while you’re in Congress

      • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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        141 year ago

        record of making high return investments shows her good judgement

        she is more of a radical leftist than I’m normally comfortable with

        Lmao what the fuck dude? She’s a neoliberal, which is absolutely not aligned with “radical leftism” (a label that she absolutely, categorically does not fit). And her investment success just shows that insider trading is an effective strategy, nothing more.

        • @MrBusinessMan@lemm.ee
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          -161 year ago

          I’ve seen her do some pretty radical leftist type stuff, she once did the outrageous Kaepernick kneel inside the Congress building

          • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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            91 year ago

            Ah. A culture warrior.

            I hope the coming years of inevitable demographic shift leading directly to decreasing power of the GOP and regressive boomers in general increases your blood pressure to medically concerning levels.

    • @Touching_Grass@lemmy.world
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      Why. I’m asking because blindly yelling is pretty stupid and ineffective. Almost counter productive as you look ineffective and by proxy whatever you’re yelling about would look childish

  • @CobblerScholar@lemmy.world
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    921 year ago

    Will these stubborn old fucks just retire and disappear into wine country or something? You are creating a world you won’t have to deal with the consequences of and the longer you hold onto power the less experience the next generation of leaders can attain and will ultimately weaken your party and has already weakened the country. Go. The. Fuck. Away. You. Old. Cunts.

  • @anon232@lemm.ee
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    871 year ago

    It’s time for nationwide term limits. You get to serve your term and do what you’d like, then give the reins over to the next person. Sick of all these fucking old ghouls who cling onto their positions of power like it’s a fucking philosophers stone for them.

    • @greenskye@lemm.ee
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      101 year ago

      I’d be ok with at least an age cap. No one can run after they’re 65. Leave governing to those who will be alive to see the impact of their policies.

      • @AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        The problem with an age cap is that us younger generations are going to be the first beneficiaries of life extension medicine. We’d need to remove/raise the age cap almost immediately.

        I fully expect some of my generation to break 120 and still be as spry as a 40 year old. We’ll be the outliers and guinea pigs, but I view the potential benefits as worth it.

          • Not for the tail end of Gen X. And the only reason you kids have a lower expectancy than we do is cause you guys got even fatter. I’m in good shape, and all of you kids that are in good shape have a higher life expectancy than me.

              • @AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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                I read a few studies that came to that conclusion a few years ago. I’d love to provide the source, but I have lost the ability to find anything remotely historical with any of the search engines in the last year or so.

                As far as the tech angle is concerned look up Kurzgesagt’s video on life extension tech, they have a few, but the one that discusses senescent cells is the most important. Senolyitc drugs have been on the market for a year or two now, so we have a way of preventing cancer, which is the current disease that takes out most people, with a side benefit of forcing new cell growth.

    • @nova_ad_vitum@lemmy.ca
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      281 year ago

      She has too much name recognition and not enough unfavorables for this approach to work. She shouldn’t run and if she wins she’ll be a lucky to be as coherent as McConnell by the end, but I don’t think a primary challenge will work against her. Hope I’m wrong.

      • @Astroturfed@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        I don’t think a lot of that name recognition is positive… As we’ve seen in the last few election cycles being a well known establishment candidate isn’t necessaroly a positive for a large block of voters.

    • @Iwasondigg@lemmy.one
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      171 year ago

      Could not agree more, and I’m going to start calling someone getting primary’d from the left as getting AOC’d.

  • @foggy@lemmy.world
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    571 year ago

    She did not oppose her ability to trade in the stock market despite enacting laws that helped enrich her estate.

    I am a very liberal person. She did a lot of good, but I absolutely would not want to see her keep her position.

    That and I’d rather see someone ~36 years old fill the seat than someone whose had it for 36 years.

    • @ImFresh3x@sh.itjust.works
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      -121 year ago

      There are zero politicians who don’t own stock. I really don’t understand why she’s held to some special standard on this specific issue

      • @RedAggroBest@lemmy.world
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        111 year ago

        Holding stock: not a problem

        Having your husband trade stock specifically to exploit ethics rules grey-areas: Problem.

        Hopefully now you understand why it’s a problem, and should note that she’s not alone on this, just a poster-senior for it.

  • @littlewonder@lemmy.world
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    561 year ago

    VOTE IN THE PRIMARIES Such a small amount of people decide who ends up on the ballot. And an overwhelming majority of incumbents get reelected due to primaries.

    Please please please vote! Even if you like the person in the lead, consider voting for someone who might not win but will send a message to the party that their policies need to be folded into the party platform, etc.

    • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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      161 year ago

      Voting can’t fix this, it’s systemic. The Democratic Party will not allow challengers source to their flow of money. A mass movement is required to clip their wings.

      • @Gray@lemmy.ca
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        151 year ago

        What you just said though contradicts itself. At the end of the day voting en masse for reform is “a mass movement”. Things won’t change when these politicians feel comfortable. Voting against them and being vocal about this as an issue will scare them. Voting absolutely works and all this rhetoric around “voting can’t fix this” is exactly how we end up with this bullshit. Boomers learned decades ago how effective voting can be at changing everything and they have consistently turned out and shaped society around their needs as a result. If young people could get this through their heads then shit would actually change. Especially since millennials and gen z now make up the majority of the voting age population in the US.

        • @jeffw@lemmy.worldOP
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          131 year ago

          People who say “just don’t vote” or advocate abstaining from elections as a method to end the Democrats are entitled and come from a place of privilege.

        • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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          -11 year ago

          History says otherwise. I admire the idealism, and wish you were right. But the capitalist will go fascist before they allow a threat to their power. Only a rev0luti0n will work.

          • @Gray@lemmy.ca
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            US history proves otherwise. Real change has been made in the labor sector without “revolution”. And on that front I will even concede that it took more than just voting to change labor laws. It took a concerted effort against the capitalist class itself with strikes and other resistance efforts. But it worked and things changed and it didn’t require overthrowing the government and destabilizing everything.

            But voting would absolutely work too. At the end of the day, the people in charge are where they are because they were voted into their positions. Wealthy elites do not make up the majority of America. An angry populace would have the power to capsize their machine. “Voting doesn’t matter” as a position will only lose you ground. The “revolution” you speak of is pointless if you don’t have the majority of politically involved people behind you. At that point it’s not a “revolution”. It’s an “unpopular coup”. We see in the way people vote that the problem is that the voting populace has not been convinced by the stances of the left. Before any revolution would be an ethically sound idea, we should be seeing numbers that suggest that the majority of people are on board with radical change. And by the time that happens, those people would have the power to effect that change through voting. If the wealthy elites used underhanded tactics to suppress voting when the majority is clearly in favor of a certain change, then and only then does revolution become the ethical imperative.

            In summary, don’t bother suggesting revolution if the majority of people aren’t behind you on it. Instead focus that energy on convincing people that radical change is necessary. Use the system to your advantage. Only when that fails through corrupt means does revolution become necessary.

            The right wing understood this so much 3-4 decades ago and they have reaped the benefits of that understanding so thoroughly that people on the left have been running around like chickens with their heads cut off, calling for things like revolution. No, the playbook is simple. Use every advantage you can within the system. Fight for the SCOTUS and don’t be afraid to politicize it in opposition to the right wing fascists. Find wedge issues that you can call the other side on. Take control of the narrative. Be aware of your demographics and create a unifying message that brings the disparate groups together.

            • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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              I think I need to clarify. Only the threat of revolution can effect change. If your only recourse is reform. The system and structures of institutions will adapt to thwart them. If reforms worked, revolutions would never happen. Rosa Luxembourg found this out a century ago.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Of course the game is rigged. Don’t let that stop you–if you don’t play, you can’t win.

        -Robert Heinlein

        The only option is to beat them at their own game. There’s no reason not to try.

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            He said lots of stuff.

            He went from a staunchly conservative military officer to being one of the biggest opponents of the military industrial system and fascism and wrote what was known at the height of the hippie movement as “the hippie bible”.

            Dudes thinking evolved like neoliberals pretend Biden’s have…

              • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                Stranger in a Strange Land

                It’s a fucking trip and is basically about while an older person may not understand progress, that’s no reason to stand in the way.

                Now keep in mind tho, this shit was written over 60 years ago. Pelosi was in her early 20s, so even really progressive things at the time seem a little outdated.

                But it’s pretty much one of the most influential pieces of Science Fiction

        • PorkRoll
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          -11 year ago

          No, stop playing the game. The world is on fucking fire and we’re playing games. We need to take a material approach to this whole thing.

      • @HorseWithNoName@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        This is what irritates me when people don’t get it. Constantly seeing shit about Feinstein like “CaLiFoRniAnS VoTeD foR hER!” But when it comes to national elections, all of a sudden everyone is capable of seeing how imbalanced those are, because if they didn’t they would have to hold themselves responsible for 2016 by their own logic.

    • WagesOf
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      111 year ago

      There won’t be a single dollar given to anyone by the dnc to anyone but her. The obstruction power of the controlling party apparatus will get focused like a laser on any opponent who has any chance at all. You’re only a Democrat if the money people say you are, and you’re only their choice if you can help the oligarchy keep their money.

      She’ll be the only person with any chance to get on the ticket until she dies.

  • @Conyak@lemmy.tf
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    541 year ago

    Just retire already. Her seat is in no danger of going to a Republican and I’m tired of seeing these walking corpses making decisions for us.

  • @3rihskerb@lemm.ee
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    491 year ago

    They have learned nothing from what happened with RBG. Or they don’t care (probably more likely)

      • @3rihskerb@lemm.ee
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        241 year ago

        I’m just sayin RBG dying on trumps watch caused a ton of problems. They can retire gracefully on their terms and bring in fresh blood that isn’t bat shit crazy. It’s a similar situation we are in with fienstien and now the republicans are even in with McConnell.

      • nik0
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        201 year ago

        It has a lot to do with SCOTUS. She decides to hold her position for as long as she lives and when she dies there won’t be any other candidate. This leads to a president or some clever figure to decide to send “their guy” to replace them and as such leads to the rights of many being removed. I mean that’s how MTG got in really and here we are with Roe V. Wade being demolished and every red state under the sun taking away women’s rights. All thanks to our brave hero RGB.

        • @jeffw@lemmy.worldOP
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          -31 year ago

          Newsom would appoint her replacement though?

          And still, the house has zero influence on SCOTUS appointments? So even if she somehow got replaced by a Republican (ig we’re assuming Newsom has a stroke and goes insane in this situation?), it would have no impact on SCOTUS appointments or any other judicial appointments, since those are done in the Senate.

            • @BigNote@lemm.ee
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              11 year ago

              The point is that unlike with SCOTUS vacancies, there’s zero chance that Newsome appoints someone with radically different politics from Pelosi, so the analogy kind of sucks regardless of what you think of him.

              • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                That’s part of my point: another Pelosi would be AWFUL. Not anywhere near as bad as a GOP fascist, of course, but still absolutely AWFUL.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              Newsom ended single-family zoning in Cali so he is a god among inferiors.

              As for Billionaire-owned, from your article:

              They are not Newsom’s largest donors: The families in total have given about $2 million of the $61 million that donors have contributed to his campaigns and independent committees backing those bids

              • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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                -11 year ago

                Newsom ended single-family zoning in Cali

                Far from it.

                he is a god among inferiors.

                Nah, he’s just another rich and powerful crook looking out for the other rich and powerful crooks. Nothing new except the grin is extra smug

          • nik0
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            -41 year ago

            The president should also have zero influence on the supreme court. Yet there was this whole thing with Obama and such that led to Trump having the perfect window of opportunity to send MTG to stand.

            • @SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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              81 year ago

              I think you have that the wrong way around. According to the constitution, the President appoints a Supreme Court Justice with the Senate giving advice and consent. It’s the Senate that’s supposed to have the lesser role, but Mitch McConnell chose not to follow the spirit of the constitution on that.

              At any rate, the House of Reps have never been a part of the process, so it has nothing to do with Pelosi, and never has.

    • Like 90% of Congress and the Supreme Court are already there, man. Rapidly approaching senility and still no fucks given, “just keep the party going till i drop dead!” energy.

    • @Astroturfed@lemmy.world
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      81 year ago

      Her high note was 30+ years ago when she was up to calling for a floor vote on single payer health care. She’s been a corporate funded centerist piece of work, stuffing democrats pockets with bribes for decades.

  • @spiderkle@lemmy.ca
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    311 year ago

    It’s beyond me how she’s still allowed to make investments, but she and her husband are apparently so good at insider trading, that businessinsider made a Pelosi-ETF that copies the investments.

  • @ViewSonik@lemmy.world
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    281 year ago

    Why do these people want to continue in these leadership roles? It must be power and the attention seeking lifestyle., right? She is way too old. She would never be hired for a critical role outside of government. Move on and set age limits on our Country’s leadership roles.

    • pjhenry1216
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      71 year ago

      At this point, the highest levels of our government are mainly just filled with folks seeking power and money (not always the same thing, so I think it bears mentioning both). They may have started off at the bottom with different intentions, but at this point, I doubt Pelosi is running with the intention that she would best execute the Democratic Party’s agenda (and having an agenda is not a bad thing, I feel like people make that a dirty word, so felt the need to clarify in advance).

      • WagesOf
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        51 year ago

        She’s not supporting the democratic voter’s wishes at all, but the democratic party is entirely run by third way neocon oligarchs.

        She’s the most reliable corporatist they have.