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Expanding the Pipeline for Progressive Talent

If Democrats win big in November, they will need an infusion of new policy staffers.

James Carden

September 14, 2018

Supporters celebrate Ayanna Pressley’s victory in Boston, Massachusetts. (AP Photo / Steven Senne)

The primary victories of progressives Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez and Dana Balter in New York, Ayanna Pressley in Massachusetts, Rashida Tlaib in Michigan, and James Thompson in Kansas have a number of House progressives hoping that a “blue wave” will wash over Capitol Hill this November and swell the numbers of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) by potentially two dozen or more elected officials.

Winning elections is one thing, but it is after Tuesday, November 6, that the hard work of governing begins. And progressives in the House are preparing for the very real possibility that come November there may be a need to hire roughly 150 new legislative-policy staffers—and to meet this requirement, a major new infusion of talent on Capitol Hill will be required.

As Justin Talbot Zorn correctly observes in The American Prospect, “If Democrats regain control of Congress, staff capacity will be key to developing creative ideas, converting them into sound policies, messaging them effectively, and mobilizing the electorate around them—all while holding the administration accountable.”

The Progressive Pipeline may be a new and welcome idea on the left, but as Talbot Zorn, himself a former legislative director for three progressive Democratic House members, noted, in this regard, conservatives are light years ahead, noting the “huge network of capacity-building programs on the right, including the Heritage Foundation’s Young Leaders Program, the Charles Koch Institute’s Hill-focused professional development programs, the Federalist Society’s multifaceted pipeline for right-wing legal talent, Capitol Hill staff programs from the conservative Tax Foundation and Mercatus Center, and multiple talent development programs from neoconservative groups like the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Foreign Policy Initiative.”

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Nothing of the sort exists on the left, perhaps until now.

Recently, CPC co-chair Mark Pocan and CPC first vice-chair Pramila Jayapal, in conjunction with nonprofit advocacy groups like Demand Progress and progressive think tanks such as the Center for Economic and Policy Research, launched an innovative new program, The Progressive Talent Pipeline, that would help staff up progressive members of the incoming freshman class.

According to its website, the Pipeline project would:

  • identify talented and diverse progressives around the country through educational, organizing, and advocacy networks,
  • recruit these individuals to apply to be part of an endorsed group of candidates,
  • provide these endorsed candidates intensive training on how to succeed in a Congressional office through a three-day program in November 2018,
  • present newly elected Democratic Members of Congress with the slate of endorsed candidates, and provide opportunities for these incoming lawmakers to meet with the candidates prior to the start of the new Congress,
  • provide continuous training and support for staffers, once placed in Congressional offices, including skill-development, research assistance, and strategy meetings with allies and experts
  • maintain a roster of exceptional vetted candidates for Hill positions, track new openings in Congressional offices, and seek to ensure placement of qualified candidates.

The Pipeline touts CPC members’ leading roles in advancing proposals to enact Medicare for All, a jobs guarantee, an end to mass incarceration and homelessness, major public investments to tackle climate change, expanded voting rights, humane immigration policy, and reproductive justice.

A congressional staffer associated with the project told The Nation that “there has been a longstanding recognition on the part of progressives in Congress, particularly after Bernie Sanders’s 2016 run, that we need to build a deeper bench of progressive staffers in Congress with the policy chops to flesh out the big ideas that inspire voters and promise to build a just, humane society.”

“The fact is,” said the staffer, “the current crop of Hill staff on the Democratic side could benefit from greater diversity: racially, in terms of class, and bringing fresh ideas to the table. We recognize a need to bring in people from outside the process who will depart from the establishment approach to politics on the Hill and will be immune to the allure of ultimately landing a job as an industry lobbyist on K Street. Given the exciting values and positions that many progressive candidates and lawmakers are staking out themselves, we hope to recruit staffers who can help these elected officials seek out new opportunities that harness that passion and who help us secure progressive reforms.”

And challenging the establishment mentality on economic and foreign-policy issues is something that the CPC has been doing with much energy since Trump took office. In just the past year, progressive members have stood up to powerful private-equity firms over mass layoffs; introduced legislation to radically jump-start labor organizing; forced Congress to debate and vote on stopping the illegal war on Yemen; bucked other Democrats by supporting diplomacy with North Korea; challenged the odious legacy of US policy toward Honduras and the root causes of migration; and sought to reassert the congressional prerogative over matters of war and peace. In order to continue to do so, and with some measure of success going forward, you need, as the progressive staffer noted, “passionate, proactive aides in policy and communications to help members lead new fights and ultimately change the Democratic party’s priorities.”

Visit the Progressive Talent Pipeline for more information on how to apply.

James CardenJames W. Carden is a contributing writer for foreign affairs at The Nation. He served as a policy adviser to the Special Representative for Intergovernmental Affairs and the Office of Russia Affairs at the US State Department.


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