Arizona Democrat Raul Grijalva, the son of a migrant laborer from Mexico who has in recent years been one of the U.S. House's most ardent defenders of the rights of immigrants and workers, will serve as the new co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.
Grijalva, a border-state congressman who has boldly challenged the anti-immigrant and anti-labor excesses of congressional Republicans since his election to the House in 2002, promised "to move (the CPC) to the next level and continue to advance our progressive agenda in an effective and pragmatic manner."
The Arizona representative will serve with California Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey, a returning co-chair, as the head of a caucus that currently numbers 73 members but could grow to more than 80 with the intake of two dozen new House Democrats when the next Congress is seated in January.
Woolsey's CPC co-chair in the current Congress, California Congresswoman Barbara Lee is stepping down from her CPC position to take over as the new chair of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Grijalva and Woolsey were elected to the co-chair positions at a caucus where Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison also competed for the leadership position. (The vote was reportedly Woolsey 30, Grijalva 26, Ellison 23, with the top two finishers taking the co-chair slots.)
Other leaders of the CPC in the 111 Congress will be:
• Whip Diane Watson, D-California
• Vice-Chair Liaison to Black Caucus Sheila Jackson-Lee, D-Texas
• Vice-Chair Liaison to Women's Caucus Hilda L. Solis, D-California
• Vice-Chair Liaison to Asian Pacific American Caucus Mazie K. Hirono, D-Hawaii
• Vice-Chair Liaison to LGBT Equality Caucus, Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio
Woolsey, a stalwart critic of the war in Iraq, declared after Wednesday's caucus meeting that, "From rebuilding our economy and expanding access to health care, to finally bringing our troops home from Iraq, our nation is at a unique time in it's history. Perhaps not since the Great Depression has there been a moment when the decisions and actions taken by those in Washington will have such a profound and lasting impact on generations to come. Today, we ensured that progressives continue to have a seat at the table, and a hand in crafting the legislation to come."
- Atrios
- Arts and Letters Daily
- The Caucus
- Campus Progress
- Crooks and Liars
- The Daily Gotham
- Daily Kos
- Echidne of the Snakes
- Ezra Klein
- FAIR
- Feministe
- Feministing
- Firedoglake
- Glenn Greenwald
- Gothamist
- In these Times
- Hendrik Hertzberg
- Huffington Post
- Hullabaloo
- Matthew Yglesias
- Media Matters
- Mother Jones
- My DD
- New York Review of Books
- Openleft
- Pam's House Blend
- Pandagon
- Political Wire
- The Progressive
- RaceWire
- Real Clear Politics
- Roberto Lovato
- Romenesko
- Swing State Project
- Talking Points Memo
- Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Tapped
- Tech President
- Tompaine
- The Washington Note
- Utne Reader
- Wonkette
- ZNet

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Mixx it!
Reddit




RSS
" Today, we ensured that progressives continue to have a seat at the table, and a hand in crafting the legislation to come."
Yes....A seat and A hand.
Others too.
Posted by Mask at 11/19/2008 @ 10:15pm
It will be interesting to see whether as many as half of the new Democratic Represtentatives do join the CPC. I doubt it would shut them up, but at least it could be thrown in the face of all of the pundits who keep harping on the election of centrist and conservative ("Blue Dog") Democrats while ignoring the fact that the CPC is the single largest Democratic caucus and may make up nearly a third of the party's total membership in the House.
Rahm Emmanuel gets way too much credit for the Democratic pick-ups in the House over the last two cycles, especially with some of his pet projects (Duckworth in Illinois) failing while more progressive candidates suceeded without his and the Dem's House Campaign Committee's support.
Posted by cka2nd at 11/20/2008 @ 10:20am