logo

Tom Perez Drains the DNC Swamp

image
Created: 29 March, 2017
Updated: 17 October, 2022
1 min read

Former Secretary of Labor Tom Perez recently took the helm as chair of the Democratic National Committee, and while new party leadership often leads to major staffing changes, this time, things are different.

Perez wants to clean the slate completely.

The chairman asked for the resignation of all committee staffers in an attempt to completely overhaul the organization. The DNC had been plagued by issues leading up to the 2016 presidential election, including those which suggested collusion between the previous chairwoman, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and the Clinton campaign.

This information, found in leaked DNC emails, served to fracture the Democratic Party by alienating supporters of Bernie Sanders. Those supporters form a large part of the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, and they have seen a recent surge in in support both in state-level delegate elections, as well as the popularity of their de facto leader, Senator Sanders himself.

Perez’s move of trying to start fresh in the DNC is likely an attempt to reach out to the progressives, most of whom backed Rep. Keith Ellison in the race for party chair. Progressives had been upset about the lack of left-leaning members of the DNC transition team, a concern that was remedied by adding more progressives to the team.

After the Democrats’ defeat in November, and following the resignation of the previous chairwoman on the heels of the leaked emails, the pressure is on the DNC to both reunite the party and to move forward in a direction that can make up ground in the 2018 elections.

Asking for resignation letters from staffers does not mean that they will all be let go, but it does give Perez the opportunity to completely overhaul the committee if he chooses.

Photo Credit: Evan El-Amin / shutterstock.com

Latest articles

Kennedy
DNC Loses Its First Attempt to Kick RFK Jr Off the Ballot
Independent presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr will officially appear on the Hawaii ballot after a ruling Friday blocked an effort by the Democratic Party to disqualify him from ballot access. It marks the first loss by the DNC in its legal strategy to limit voters' choices on the 2024 presidential ballot....
22 April, 2024
-
3 min read
Asa Hutchinson
Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson Declares His Support for Ranked Choice Voting
In a recent episode of The Purple Principle, a podcast that examines democracy and polarization from a nonpartisan lens, former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson said that while he was skeptical of ranked choice voting at first, he now sees it as a meaningful solution to elect candidates with the broadest appeal....
19 April, 2024
-
2 min read
electoral college
How Maine Started a Voter Revolution, And Is Now Going Backwards
Election reformers have looked to Maine for several years now as a pioneer in adopting policy solutions that put voters first in elections. Maine voters have taken it upon themselves to enact better elections – and have won major victories....
17 April, 2024
-
7 min read