The Democratic Primary Doesn't Have to Be a Nightmare.
'Lets talk about whose policy proposals are most likable!
A few years ago, when I was self-employed and had recently had my second child, my husband went combing through my credit card statements, looking for tax deductions that Id missed. Im financially disorganized at the best of times, and with a baby and a toddler, I was barely even trying to keep track of my business expenses. So its not surprising that I hadnt noticed the hundreds of dollars of weird recurring bank charges that my husband discovered.
It turned out Id been signed up for a dubious program that purported to protect users credit in certain emergency situations. My bank had been accused of fraudulent practices in connection with it and fined $700 million by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the government agency that was Senator Elizabeth Warrens brainchild. I tried, maddeningly, to seek redress from the bank cycling through phone trees, screaming at automated operators. No one could tell me how Id been enrolled in the program, or for how long.
Eventually, I turned to the C.F.P.B. itself, filling out a simple form on its website. A few weeks later, I was notified that the bank had been deducting money from my account for years, and I was being refunded more than $11,000. Having financed my own maternity leave, it was money that I badly needed.
Republicans, who under President Trump have been gutting the C.F.P.B., have long decried the agency as an overweening bureaucracy. To me it was an astonishingly user-friendly tool that cut through opaque corporate bureaucracy on my behalf. My experience with it shaped my perception of Warren as a brilliant policy innovator.
Since then, my husband, who works at a digital strategy firm, has done work for Warren; hes fully behind her presidential candidacy. Im enthusiastic about it as well, but I also find myself excited by Washington Gov. Jay Inslees announcement that hes considering a presidential run centered on the battle against climate change. Perhaps this is naïve, but his entry could encourage a substantive argument about progressive priorities, one that transcends facile theater criticism, ideological purity tests or horse-race handicapping.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/04/opinion/inslee-warren-2020-election-democrats.html?