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Democratic National Convention to approve party platform

A view of the 2016 Democratic National Convention with thousands on the floor and in the stands of a packed Philadelphia stadium when Hillary Clinton was nominated to run for president. This year it will be a subdued affair with only a few hundred attending in person. (File Photo: Arul Louis/IAS)
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Democratic National Convention to approve party platform

Washington: As part of the agenda of the ongoing US Democratic National Convention, delegates are expected to approve the party’s platform, introducing its policy stances on major issues less than three months before the presidential election.

Roughly 4,000 convention delegates cast their votes on the platform from August 3-15 remotely due to the coronavirus pandemic, which also forced organizers to postpone the four-day convention by a month, now running Monday through Thursday after the rescheduling, and hold it almost entirely virtually, reports Xinhua news agency.

A declaration of the party’s policy goals, the platform is largely symbolic and its passage is widely anticipated because delegates don’t necessarily have to endorse its contents.

Drafted and approved by the Democratic National Committee’s Platform Committee in July, the now amended 91-page platform incorporated policy recommendations submitted by task forces formed by allies of presumptive presidential nominee Joe Biden, a moderate, and those of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who champions a leftist progressive agenda.

A manifestation of intra-party unity with which Democrats sought to achieve the common goal of unseating incumbent President Donald Trump, the platform touched upon issues that are under heated debate nationwide as the election draws near, including the Covid-19 response, economic revival, environment, policing, racial equity, healthcare, among others.

Make no mistake: President (Donald) Trump’s abject failure to respond forcefully and capably to the Covid-19 pandemic — his failure to lead — makes him responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans,” said the platform.

Calling on state- and local-level governments to expand funding for public health departments in order for them to conduct sufficient contact tracing, Democrats said in the document that they “support making COVID-19 testing, treatment, and any eventual vaccines free to everyone”.

On economic recovery, the platform referred to the “Buy America” agenda Biden launched in July, a $700 billion plan that aims to salvage the economy through a domestic-leaning approach to job creation and manufacturing.

By spending $400 billion over three years in purchasing US-based goods and services, and $300 billion in research and development for new technologies and clean-energy initiatives, the Biden proposal is a direct counterprogramming to Trump’s “America First” vision.

On the environment, the platform said Democrats will work to achieve net-zero emissions from greenhouse gasses “no later than 2050,” while promising to eliminate carbon pollution from power plants by 2035 “through technology-neutral standards for clean energy and energy efficiency”.

While the pledge of constructing 60,000 wind turbines and 500 million solar panels further represents the Democrats’ commitment to clean energy, the platform didn’t include the Green New Deal — a bold resolution on fighting climate change introduced by progressive congressional Democrats that calls on the federal government to rid the US of fossil fuels, drastically curb greenhouse gas emissions across economic sectors, and guarantee new high-paying jobs in clean energy industries.

On policing, the platform advocated for reducing legal protection for law enforcement, saying the law, for too long, “has shielded police officers who stand accused of heinous violations of civil and human rights”.

On racial equality, the platform said Democrats will strive for a “new social and economic contract” aimed at “building equity and mobility for the people of colour who have been left out and left behind for generations”.

They also planned to establish “a national commission to examine the lasting economic effects” of slavery, segregation, and “racially discriminatory federal policies on income, wealth, educational, health, and employment outcomes”.

With respect to health care, the platform vowed to move toward universal health care by advocating for a public option through the Affordable Care Act, while strengthening Medicare, Medicaid and benefits through the Department of Veterans Affairs.

However, not all Democrats voted “yes” on the platform.

Hundreds of Sanders’ delegates signed a petition calling for rejecting it when the Platform Committee met on July 27 to discuss amendments, citing the reason that it didn’t support Medicare for All.


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