Whether he wins the nomination or not, Bernie Sanders will play a big role in writing the Democratic Party platform.
Of the 15 members of the official DNC platform writing committee, 5 will be Sanders' picks, including environmental activist Bill McKibben, renowned scholar Cornel West, and pro-Palestinian activist James Zogby.
These are real progressives and they will give progressives a real chance to put their stamp on the future of the Democratic Party.
They could also play a big role in the fight against the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, which I like to call the Southern Hemisphere Asian Free Trade Agreement -- SHAFTA.
As it stands right now, the TPP’s best chance of passing is in the slim window of time between Election Day and Inauguration Day -- the so-called lame duck session of Congress.
This is really the easiest time for President Obama to push through a massively unpopular trade deal like the TPP without anybody noticing.
The corporate media will be too busy speculating about who’ll join the new president’s cabinet to bother covering something they never really bothered covering to anyway - and because election day will have come and gone, lawmakers will be free (from the White House’s perspective, at least) to vote as they like without having to worry about the consequences at the ballot box.
We’ve seen this kind of thing before. Taking advantage of media cluelessness and public apathy during the lame-duck session to pass unpopular and unsavory legislation is a time-honored tradition.
For example, back in 2000, Bill Clinton worked with Republicans in the final months of his presidency to pass the Commodities Futures Modernization Act, the Wall Street deregulation bill that more or less caused the Great Recession.
If he wants to pass the TPP, President Obama, like President Clinton in 2000, will also have to rely on Republican votes.
In fact, he pretty much HAS to rely on Republican votes because the TPP wouldn’t stand a chance in a Democratic-controlled Congress.
What makes this even more screwed-up than it already is is the fact that Democrats actually have a very good chance of retaking the Senate this November.