Meet Debbie
Wasserman Schultz’s First-Ever Primary Challenger
By Glenn Greenwald
January 19,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept"
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Debbie
Wasserman Schultz, the six-term Congresswoman from
South Florida and Chair of the Democratic National
Committee, has been embroiled in numerous,
significant controversies lately. As The
Washington Post
put it just today: “DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman
Schultz’s list of enemies just keeps growing.”
She is
widely perceived to have
breached her duty of neutrality as DNC Chair by
taking multiple steps to advance the Clinton
campaign, including severely limiting the number
of Democratic debates and scheduling them so as to
ensure low viewership (she was co-chair of
Clinton’s 2008 campaign). Even her own DNC Vice
Chairs have
publicly excoriated her after she
punished them for dissenting from her
Hillary-protecting debate-limitations. She
recently told Ana Maria Cox in
a New York Times interview that she
favors ongoing criminalization for marijuana (as she
receives
large financial support from the alcohol industry).
She denied opposing medical marijuana even
though she was one of a handful of Democratic
legislators to
vote against a bill to allow states to legalize
it, and in her interview with Cox, she boasted that
her “criminal-justice record is perhaps not as
progressive as some of my fellow progressives.” She
also excoriated “young women” – who
largely back Bernie Sanders rather than Clinton
– for “complacency” over reproductive rights.
In general,
Wasserman Schultz is the living, breathing
embodiment of everything rotted and corrupt about
the Democratic Party: a corporatist who
overwhelmingly relies on corporate money to keep
her job, a hawk who supports the most bellicose
aspects of U.S. foreign policy, a
key member of the “centrist” and “moderate”
pro-growth New Democrat coalition, a co-sponsor of
the failed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA),
which was “heavily backed by D.C. favorites
including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the music
and motion picture industries” and which, if
enacted, would have allowed extreme government and
corporate control over the internet.
In 2012, at
the height of the controversy over the “kill list”
that
The New York Times revealed Obama had
compiled for execution by drone,
she said in an interview she had never heard of
it and mocked the interviewer for suggesting such a
thing existed. In 2013, she
demanded that Edward Snowden “should be
extradited, arrested, and prosecuted” because he
supposedly “jeopardized millions of Americans” and
then
called him a “coward.” “The progressive wing of
the party base is volubly
getting fed up with her,”
declared The American Prospect last
week.
This year,
however, Democrats nationwide, and in her district,
have a choice. For the first time in her long
Congressional career, she faces a primary challenger
for the Democratic nomination. He’s Tim Canova, a
smart, articulate, sophisticated lawyer with a
history of activism both with the Occupy movement
(he’s against the Wall Street bailout for which
Wasserman Schultz voted and the general excesses of
big banks and crony capitalism) as well as a
steadfast opponent of the Patriot Act (for which
Wasserman Schultz repeatedly voted).
He has
worked with former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson
against the Drug War and private prisons; worked
with the Sanders campaigns of the past; and was a
former aide to the late Sen. Paul Tsongas. He is an
outspoken advocate of the Ron-Paul/Alan-Grayson
sponsored Audit the Fed bill, and a vehement
opponent of the Trans Pacific-Partnership Trade
agreement. And he has vowed to run a campaign based
on small-donor support, calling Wasserman
Schultz “the quintessential corporate machine
politician.”
As David
Dayen
reported last week in The New Republic,
the widespread dislike for Wasserman Schultz around
the country has already triggered substantial
support and donations for Canova. To compete, he
will need much more. You can visit
his website here.
But beyond that, I spoke with him late last week to
explore his views, his motives for running, and what
he believes are the greatest contrasts between him
and the incumbent he is challenging:
* * * * *
GREENWALD:
My guest today is Tim Canova, who recently announced
a primary challenge in Florida’s 23rd Congressional
district to the Democratic incumbent, Debbie
Wasserman Schultz, who, in addition to representing
that district, is the chair of the Democratic
National Committee. It is the Congresswoman’s first
primary challenge ever.
Tim is a
former aide to the late Senator Paul Tsongas and
currently a professor at Nova Southeastern
University Shepard Broad College of Law. Tim, thanks
so much for taking the time to talk with me. I want
to begin by asking you:
It’s one of
the most difficult things in American politics to
challenge an entrenched incumbent, and in this case,
Congresswoman Wasserman Schultz is sort of the
embodiment of an entrenched incumbent. It’s her
sixth term that she’s currently serving. She hasn’t
really been challenged very successfully in the
past, and she’s also the chair of the DNC and has
that whole apparatus behind her. What are the
motivators that led you to take on this challenge?
CANOVA:
If we had spoken a year ago, this wouldn’t have been
on my radar. Last summer, I was very active with a
bunch of grassroots organizations here in South
Florida, lobbying against the fast track vote for
the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and we were lobbying
her office, trying to make contact with her or her
top aides, and we got nowhere. And it was
frustrating. She was one of the only Democrats in
the House in the country to vote for fast track and
she was the only Democrat in Florida’s delegation to
vote for fast track. She had voted for the Korean
Free Trade Agreement. She’s been taking lots of
corporate money.
According to
the Center for Responsive Politics, she took
$300,000 in just a two year period, 2012 to 2014,
from groups that support the TPP, and only about
$23,000 from groups opposed to it. The Citizens
Trade Campaign that I’ve been working with, it
consists of a lot of organized labor, a lot of union
people, and a lot of progressive Democrats. And
these are constituencies that she’s been taking for
granted, precisely because she’s run unopposed all
of these years. She’s been able to take working
folks for granted.
And the TPP
was really a lightning rod issue. I think it should
be. We saw how just a week or two ago, TransCanada,
the big Canadian energy giant, announced it was
going to sue the U.S. government for $15 billion,
for not going forward with the Keystone XL pipeline.
And that’s under NAFTA’s investment protection
provisions. The TPP has very similar provisions. So
now we’re going to open up these types of challenges
to another half-dozen to dozen countries that are
not in NAFTA who will be able to challenge the
sovereignty of U.S. law. And when I say “challenge
it,” you probably have read up on this enough to
know that these companies are not going to be able
to overturn the laws, but they will be able to get
the taxpayer to have to pay for their compliance
with the laws. So it really shifts the cost of
compliance from corporations to taxpayers.
It’s a way to
enshrine in international law what these
corporations could not get through in constitutional
jurisprudence, which is the regulatory takings
approach, the idea that whenever the government
regulates in a way that impedes the value of an
investment, it should be considered a taking of
property requiring just compensation. They couldn’t
get that line of analysis through the Supreme Court,
they go around it and they enshrine this in
multilateral trade and investment agreements,
bilateral investment treaties. And it’s become a
litmus test at this point, and deservedly so. It’s
environmental laws, it’s health and safety, it’s
labeling laws. It really puts an awful lot of the
kinds of protections that we’ve come to rely on and
need up for sale, in a way.
GREENWALD:
The TPP is obviously controversial in certain policy
and intellectual circles. My guess is that a small
percentage of Americans have even heard of that
agreement, let alone have strong opinions about it,
although they probably are a lot more informed and
opinionated about trade issues generally because of
the effect it’s had on jobs and the NAFTA
controversy.
Do you have a
strategy for communicating why a seemingly esoteric
conflict like the TPP is something that moved you
and ought to move voters to reject their incumbent
representative?
CANOVA:
Well, my friends in labor who are very supportive of
this candidacy, and are really like-minded in that
somebody should step up and challenge her – they
make the argument that it’s going to lead directly
to a lot of job losses, and they’ve got the
statistics about just how many job losses came about
from the Korean Free Trade Agreement. I’ve been
trying to link these discussions about TPP to what
every Floridian should see as an existential threat,
and that is climate change. In 20 or 30 years down
the road, big parts of South Florida could be
underwater.
It’s not just
the tourist industry, it’s people’s homes and
businesses that could be in danger. And if we’re
going to start confronting climate change, either
through regulating carbon emissions or to finding
funds for infrastructure investments to mitigate the
effects of climate change, TPP just gets in the way
right down the line. Now I hear you, and I agree
with you, that most people don’t understand those
connections and many people have never heard of the
TPP. I’m hoping this campaign starts elevating the
discussion and informing people and helping to
educate voters. I think it’s already beginning to
happen a little bit.
But I’ve also
got to say the TPP is not the only issue we’re
running on. Wasserman Schultz has been taking – and
you know this, The Intercept published a
piece about the kind of money she’s been taking from
big alcohol PACS. She’s for private prisons.
GREENWALD:
While she’s been a hard core Drug War
warrior and
in favor of the penal state for putting people in
cages for consuming drugs.
CANOVA:
Exactly. And, you know, that’s not popular in this
district. In 2014 there was a statewide referendum
on medical marijuana. Fifty-eight and a half percent
of the voters in this state voted for it, for
medical marijuana. It needed 60% to pass, so it came
close. She was against it. Her votes in Congress
have been against medical marijuana. I say, allow
states to decide these issues. On medical marijuana,
and recreational marijuana. We should not be locking
people up, for what? Using the same drugs that
apparently the last three American presidents, and,
by some surveys, a majority of the American people
have tried.
GREENWALD:
One of the things that I do think people understand
relating to the TPP and some of the other critiques
you’ve voiced is the idea that there are a lot of
people who go to Washington, take lots of money from
corporate interests, and end up serving those
interests at the expense of the ordinary voter,
often contrary to the rhetoric they like to spout.
That’s probably part of the reason for Donald
Trump’s success, who has sold himself as a
self-funder and therefore immune to those
influences, and it’s definitely a big part of Bernie
Sanders’s success as well, critiquing this kind of
systemic, legalized corruption.
Where does
Debbie Wasserman Schultz fall on the spectrum of
political officials with respect to how much
corporate money she relies on, and then how much
corporate interest she serves?
CANOVA:
OK. First, let me say, your first question was what
animated me to jump in, and I started with the TPP.
But this question really gets to the thematic heart
of the campaign. Across the board, whether it’s the
TPP or the drug war, she’s taking a lot of corporate
money, and she’s been taking it for years. She talks
the talk about campaign finance reform – she will
say she’s for campaign finance reform – but she’s
not walking the walk.
She voted
recently the way most of Congress did on this latest
omnibus spending bill. There were a couple of
terrible provisions that allowed dark money to
remain in our politics. One provision that she voted
for in this omnibus package was to prevent the
Securities and Exchange Commission from writing
rules for transparency – to require corporations to
disclose to their shareholders the extent of their
campaign contributions; their political spending.
Another ties the hands of the Internal Revenue
Service from creating rules to curb special interest
donors from forming these sham social welfare
organizations that hide political spending.
She’s been
raising corporate money for herself; she’s been
giving it away to other candidates. She is the
quintessential corporate machine politician. She
really is, across the board. And then it influences
her votes. And it’s not just TPP and the drug war,
it’s Wall Street issues, and this is really what
I’ve been teaching and writing about for many years.
Just in the past few months – the past year or two –
she has voted to prevent the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau to write rules to regulate payday
lending, to prevent racial discrimination in car
loans.
In December
2014, she voted to eliminate the part of Dodd-Frank
that had prevented big banks from using deposits to
speculate in financial derivatives. So she doesn’t
have any real vision for public finance other than
lining the pockets of her donors.
GREENWALD:
So, one of the issues that has arisen over the past
few years, most prominently with regard to the
Federal Reserve, is this movement to subject the Fed
to comprehensive, probing audits. And what I’ve
always found interesting about that debate is that
it had lots of support from people on the left like
Dennis Kucinich and Alan Grayson, who were prime
movers of that in the house, and then also from
elements on the right. People like Ron Paul, this
sort of libertarian faction who sees the dangers of
crony capitalism.
Where do you
stand specifically on the question of auditing the
Fed, and more generally, do you see this potential
for, on economic issues, and on issues regarding
Wall Street and the Fed, for there to be some kind
of a union between ordinary people on the left and
the right who are both being victimized in the same
way by these kind of systemic corruptions?
CANOVA:
Absolutely. In 2010, I worked with Alan Grayson’s
staff, and with Bernie Sanders’s staff, and with Ron
Paul’s staff on the transparency and provisions that
went into Dodd-Frank. The transparency of the Fed —
the two GAO Audits. That I’m sure you know about.
The GAO had one audit that dealt with the governance
of the Fed and their conflicts of interest, and the
second one dealt with the Fed’s emergency lending
facilities, which lo and behold, rewarded those big
banks that dominated and continue to dominate the
Fed’s governance.
So I am very
much in favor of auditing the Fed on a regular basis
and reforming the Fed so that its governing boards
more reflect the diverse interests of society, and
not just bankers.
This is a
tradition that goes back to John Commons, the great
institutional economist of the 1930s and 1940s, Leon
Keyserling, the head of Harry Truman’s council of
economic advisers. This used to be, some decades
ago, part of the discussion as far as reforming the
governance structure of the Fed. It needs to be part
of the conversation again. And, you’re hitting it on
the head when you say this is a discussion – this is
an agenda – that spans the spectrum from right to
left.
I saw it when
I was involved in Occupy Wall Street, at the Occupy
Los Angeles encampment. There were plenty of tents
and banners, you name it, saying “End the Fed.” I
taught at the People’s Collective University at
Occupy LA, and I taught a workshop on the Federal
Reserve, and I was making the case “Let’s not end
the Fed, let’s mend the Fed. Let’s reform the Fed.”
And it’s a discussion that people on the right and
people on the left can get engaged in very quickly.
Unfortunately, in Washington, it’s the mainstream,
establishment center of both parties that resist
this kind of reform.
GREENWALD: Speaking
of the mainstream establishment center in both
parties resisting reform, obviously a lot of the
topics I write about and that The Intercept
covers center on surveillance policy and foreign
policy, where there is an enormous amount of
agreement between Republican and Democratic
establishment wings.
Can you just
sort of give me your general perspective on where
Debbie Wasserman Schultz is in those areas, and how
you differ from the standard Democratic orthodoxy
and the Republican orthodoxy on those questions as
well?
CANOVA:
The Patriot Act is probably the original starting
point in this discussion, and I was not a proponent
of the Patriot Act at the time, and Wasserman
Schultz is. So I’m very skeptical of concentrated
power in this national security state. Dismantling
that power and exposing it to the light of day is a
job and a half, as you know personally, and how to
do that? Congress is a place where you can start
doing it.
I certainly
hope if I’m elected and if I serve in Congress, that
I would be a critic of this concentration of state
power that’s being used for surveillance. And not
just surveillance, I’ve got to say, it really goes
to a lot of the United States’s approaches in its
foreign policy abroad. I think the drone war has
been a disaster. It’s a way that the President and
the administration can talk tough and look tough,
but in my estimation it is creating far more enemies
than it is killing. It’s not serving our long-term
interests.
We should be looking
for a general disarmament in this part of the world,
instead of the United States leading this race among
major powers in arms sales to these regimes. The
conflicts that exist between Arabs, Muslims, Jews,
Sunnis, Shiites are centuries old – decades old,
centuries old – and arming these countries to the
teeth is not a solution. At all. For foreign policy.
At least not in a way that’s going to serve the
interests of humanity and try to bring peace to that
part of the world. It used to be, 100 years ago, the
world would have disarmament conferences. How
effective they were, the history books can write
about. But it’s not even discussed at this point.
GREENWALD:
Yeah, even Reagan and Gorbachev and Nixon and
Brezhnev had incredibly successful disarmament
conferences as well and ultimately, treaties, and
you’re right – it’s essentially off the agenda.
CANOVA:
That’s right. And with Reagan and Nixon, the arms
treaties are talking about are thermonuclear
weapons. In our day and age, yes, we have to have
disarmament of thermonuclear weapons, but we also
have to have disarmament of all other kinds of
weapons that we see being used in these proxy wars
throughout the Middle East.
The proxy wars have
been a disaster. There’s something to be said for
the critique that I’ve heard Bernie Sanders and
Donald Trump actually make, that we should have
left
“well enough” alone
in Syria. And this policy of trying to continue with
regime change – you know, Bush was criticized for
regime change; it’s continued under the Obama
administration, and all it has done is created
vacuums for more radical groups like ISIS to gain
greater influence; greater strength.
It’s led to
all kinds of – not just destabilization, but massive
death, dislocations of people. It’s a horror show.
It’s got to stop, and disarmament, and talking
through peacefully to resolve disputes has got to be
put on the agenda, and I don’t see it on the agenda
from most of these candidates, and certainly
Wasserman Schultz doesn’t talk like that.
GREENWALD:
Absolutely, she does not. Let me just ask you a
couple of last questions here. People are just now
for the first time hearing about your primary
challenge, and becoming familiar with you, and who
you are, and what your positions are, so could you
just talk a little bit about your history of
political activism and your professional background
as well?
CANOVA:
Sure. I am a lawyer by training. I studied at
Georgetown University, and then was a Swedish
Institute visiting scholar at the University of
Stockholm. I practiced law in Manhattan for a large
firm for a few years, and then went into teaching,
and really my entire legal career was animated by
the study of, you can say, making our institutions
more democratically accountable. The thesis I wrote
as a Swedish Institute visiting scholar was a
comparison of Swedish and American labor law and
corporate law, and comparing how in Sweden and in
other European countries, labor had a seat at the
table. Fifty percent of the board members were
labor. And in the United States, labor doesn’t have
a seat at the table. They get run over. So that is
the orientation – more democracy – that has animated
me throughout my career.
I served on
Capitol Hill as a legislative aide to the late U.S.
Senator Paul Tsongas in the early 1980s. A lot of
this is on my campaign website, on the About Tim
page, that I was an opponent of financial
deregulation very early. I was writing in the early
1980s that the Garn-St. Germain Act, deregulation of
depository interest rates and lending standards,
would be a disaster, that it was a repeat of what
had happened in the 1920s. It opened the door to
predatory lending and sub-prime mortgages. I was
calling that decades before that actually came to a
crisis stage, you could say. In the 1990s, both as a
lawyer and as a law professor, I was warning against
getting rid of Glass-Steagall. Brooklyn Law Review
article in the mid 1990’s, 1995. I warned against
financial derivatives. So I’ve been a constant
critic of Wall Street deregulation. I’m for Main
Street; I always have been. I believe in the New
Deal. I believe in bottom-up economics.
My activism
has manifested itself in many ways, in many forms:
certainly the anti-corporate globalization movement
during the time of Seattle, against the Free Trade
Area of the Americas Agreement. When I was a
professor at the University of New Mexico, I threw
myself into a grassroots campaign to get rid of
felony disenfranchisement, and it was one of the
great grassroots movements I’ve ever been involved
in. It’s a small state and we were able to see
change come real fast. It was right after the 2000
deadlock in Florida. There was a deadlock in New
Mexico also, and we woke up to find that there
weren’t enough electoral votes to count in New
Mexico compared to Florida, but New Mexico was one
of, I think, nine states at the time where someone
who was convicted of a felony was barred from the
rest of his or her life from voting. And we had an
opportunity because we had, even though he was a
Republican governor, he was a libertarian governor,
Gary Johnson, who was trying to end the War on
Drugs.
We got a
grassroots movement that lit a fire underneath him.
We got Democrats in the state house, in the
legislature, to pass legislation within wo months,
and Gary Johnson signed it. And that’s all it took,
was two months of good organization and a lot of
grassroots lobbying and New Mexico was no longer a
felony disenfranchisement state.
And then
there’s the Occupy movement, so I’ve been engaged
really my whole life. I know some people have said
“Well, you haven’t run for political office.” No,
but I’ve been engaged in grassroots lobbying and
activism, and the focus of my mind, my heart, my
soul, has really been on public policy issues and
trying to create a better world.
GREENWALD:
The last question. The critique that you’re making
of how Debbie Wasserman Schultz funds her political
career and her reliance on big corporate money is
one that resounds to a lot of ears. The problem,
however, is the reason politicians go in and feed at
that trough, is that it’s a really potent weapon. It
helps them buy ads, it helps them build campaign
staff and get re-elected.
What is your
strategy for being able to be competitive with
someone so well-funded by large corporate interests,
and how can people who want to see her subjected to
a real competitive challenge, and even lose, how can
they get involved in your campaign and support it
and help?
CANOVA:
Well, I’m not taking any corporate money, and I
think that that is resonating with folks. In the
first three days after I launched the campaign, we
got over 1,000 individual contributions. It’s now
been a week and I’ve lost track, it’s somewhere
between 1,500 and 2,000 individual contributions.
You don’t see that at most campaigns. I know in some
ways, we’re fortunate compared to other first time
insurgent challengers, because Debbie Wasserman
Schultz is the poster child of a lot of what’s wrong
with the Democratic Party. That we’re attracting
donors from all over the country.
We’re igniting
the grassroots here in Florida. So we are raising
money. We need to raise a lot more to compete with
her, and I would just urge folks to go to
timcanovaforcongress.com, to give what they can.
It doesn’t have to be a lot, but it adds up with
people power. It has been adding up, so that’s our
strategy, and we’re fortunate that we’ve gotten so
much good attention so quickly.
GREENWALD:
Well, I really want to thank you for taking the time
to talk to me, I think it’s been super enlightening,
and I wish you the best of luck.
CANOVA:
Well Glenn, thank you. I really appreciate you
having me, and I want to thank you for your lifetime
of work. You’re an inspiration to me and to a lot of
other people, and it’s an honor to be on your show.
GREENWALD:
Thank you so much. |