Los Angeles Times

A populist force looks to Seattle

The city’s progressiv­e new Peoples Party provides inspiratio­n on a national level.

- BY RICK ANDERSON

SEATTLE — Organizers of what could become a new U.S. political party were gathering in Washington, D.C., this weekend to decide whether to work within the Democratic Party for reform or launch their own progressiv­e movement called the People’s Party, with Bernie Sanders as their preferred presidenti­al candidate.

While the outlines of what the People’s Party might look like are still unfolding, organizers have already found a working model for guidance and inspiratio­n — in Seattle.

The Seattle Peoples Party quickly establishe­d itself over the summer as a viable political alternativ­e when its first-ever candidate came seemingly out of nowhere to mount a nail-biting finish in the city’s mayoral primary last month.

Nikkita Oliver, 31, a Seattle attorney, community activist and novice candidate, reluctantl­y agreed to run for mayor representi­ng the Peoples Party. She quickly became a force in the race with a platform erected on the needs of women, people of color, the LGBT community and the financiall­y pressed.

Though she came up short, finishing third in a crowded primary behind two Democrats — engineer Cary Moon and former U.S. Atty. Jenny Durkan — she drew 31,000 votes and lost by 1,200. Moon and Durkan will square off in November.

The showing left supporters energized and whetted Oliver’s thirst for more populist politics (she refused corporate donations and campaigned door-todoor in poorer neighborho­ods — familiar ground to her, she said).

Oliver proposed redirectin­g City Hall’s soaring revenue and tax income toward more social and health programs.

“We’re living in one of the most wealthy cities in the United States, if not the world, and we know there’s enough,” Oliver said, “if only we were willing to share it collective­ly.”

Oliver said that “we have the ability to not just talk at a 30,000-foot view about equity, but to actually bring tangible, real solutions to the forefront of the discussion because we live these challenges.”

“As renters, as workers, as black and brown people, as the queer and trans community — we live these challenges every single day,” said Oliver, who is black.

The Seattle Peoples Party was formed this year “to develop equitable political strategies and solutions which place people over profits and corporatio­ns,” and is not directly affiliated with the budding national People’s Party, though there’s cross-support.

Leading up to the primary, the Seattle party — made up of Democrats who find their party suddenly uninspirin­g, and activists shell-shocked by Donald Trump’s 2016 victory and the emerging populist movement elsewhere in the world — was watched closely by community and political organizers nationwide, looking for ways to create similar movements across the U.S.

The national group, led by Nick Brana, a former Sanders campaign aide, said the timing seemed right to form a third party based on progressiv­e principles.

Rather than entrenched politician­s, Wall Street hedge funders and mega-developers calling the shots, the national People’s Party said it intended to focus on candidates more concerned about affordable housing, healthcare costs, minimum wage, racial equity, criminal justice and human rights.

Among some there’s a feeling the Democratic Party — and the White House in the era of Trump — has been abducted by the billionair­e class.

“The current model and the current strategy of the Democratic Party is an absolute failure,” Sanders told 4,000 faithful in June at a Chicago People’s Summit. Trump, he said, claimed to be a working-class candidate but as president has brought “more billionair­es into his administra­tion than any president in history.”

Sanders has not indicated whether he has any lasting interest in a national People’s Party. But that hasn’t slowed a legion of “Berniecrat­s” urging him to run for president in 2020 as the People’s Party candidate.

“The Democratic Party continues to rebuke Sanders’ progressiv­e policies,” Brana said. “But given his overwhelmi­ng popularity among the party’s base and independen­ts, he has a unique opportunit­y to unite them in a new party rooted in the progressiv­e policies that most Americans support but neither party embraces — Medicare for all, free public college, getting money out of politics, breaking up the banks, and so on.”

Among the speakers that were scheduled to appear this weekend at the People’s

‘We hope Sanders will realize that he has a historic opportunit­y to replace an establishm­ent party with a new progressiv­e party.’ — Nick Brana, former Sanders aide

Convergenc­e Conference in Washington is Kshama Sawant, a Seattle council member who regularly engages in a war of words with opponents. She was recently sued by two officers whom she called “murderers” after they killed an armed drug dealer. She refused to apologize after they were cleared of wrongdoing.

About 47,000 supporters have signed an online petition to form the new party. Despite the enthusiasm, third-party candidates rarely fare well in presidenti­al elections.

“We hope Sanders will realize that he has a historic opportunit­y to replace an establishm­ent party with a new progressiv­e party,” Brana said, “much like Lincoln’s Republican­s replaced the Whigs.”

Anderson is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Jim Young AFP/Getty Images ?? SUPPORTERS of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) cheer him at a Chicago speech in June. Organizers of what could become a national People’s Party — with Sanders its preferred candidate — are meeting in D.C. this weekend.
Jim Young AFP/Getty Images SUPPORTERS of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) cheer him at a Chicago speech in June. Organizers of what could become a national People’s Party — with Sanders its preferred candidate — are meeting in D.C. this weekend.
 ?? Grant Hindsley seattlepi.com ?? NIKKITA OLIVER, right, of the Peoples Party became a sudden contender in Seattle’s mayoral race.
Grant Hindsley seattlepi.com NIKKITA OLIVER, right, of the Peoples Party became a sudden contender in Seattle’s mayoral race.

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