What makes a progressive anyway?
The bedrock of Minnesota's Democratic voter base will head to the polls next week. As voters in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth prepare to cast ballots in their local elections, we've seen a progressive arms race break out.
Candidates with all sorts of different policy positions and political ideologies are vying to be "the progressive." Even Minneapolis Works, a right-wing political action committee of downtown business leaders, promotes its candidates as progressive. The silly season has arrived.
While it's good news for progressives that so many are vying for our attention, now is the time to ask: What makes a candidate a progressive?
In our two-party system, a party label is not enough to identify a candidate's core beliefs and policy positions. As voters, we should start by examining how a candidates' values match their actions. Racial equity, social and economic justice, interdependence between people and our environment, and sustainability are core to who we are and what we believe as progressives.
As voters, we should investigate a candidate's vision and seek out those who aspire to make our community a place where all people live in joy. Progressives are about more than mere survival. We're about joy. Actual joy.
A minimum wage of less than $15 an hour is still a poverty wage. Without access to paid sick time, affordable housing and transportation, no one can get ahead, let alone fully enjoy life.
A progressive also understands that deeply ingrained inequities stand in the way of this pursuit — especially if a person is of color, if that person also happens to be a woman, lives in a rural area or is low-income.