New York
Related: About this forumNew York's Superstar Progressive Isn't A.O.C.
Also posted on the Editorial Forum
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1016302730
Ritchie Torres, a congressman from Americas poorest district New Yorks 15th, in the Bronx quietly bristles at the A.O.C. comparison. Theres a sense in which the media narrative diminishes me, I resist the temptation to fit into a preconceived narrative. My career in politics long predates the Squad.
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The bigger mystery is why Torres (who was emphatically not at the gala) hasnt yet become a household name in the United States. On the identity-and-background scorecard, he checks every progressive box. Afro-Latino, the son of a single mom who raised three children working as a mechanics assistant on a minimum-wage salary of $4.25 an hour, a product of public housing and public schools, a half brother of two former prison inmates, an N.Y.U. dropout, the Bronxs first openly gay elected official when he won a seat on the City Council in 2013 at the age of 25 and the victor over a gay-bashing Christian minister when he won his House seat last year.
Hes dazzlingly smart. He sees himself on a mission to radically reduce racially concentrated poverty in the Bronx and elsewhere in America. In other words, Torres is everything a modern-day progressive is supposed to look and be like, except in one respect: Unlike so much of the modern left (including A.O.C., who grew up as an architects daughter in the middle-class Westchester town of Yorktown Heights), he really is a child of the working class. He understands what working-class people want, as opposed to what so many of its self-appointed champions claim they want. I dont hire ideologues or zealots, he tells me on a walk through his district. Most of the people in the South Bronx are practical rather than ideological. Their concerns are bread and butter, health and housing, schools and jobs. What this translates to is a 21st-century civil rights agenda based on pressing working-class needs for affordable housing, better schools, safer streets, good health care. The goals are progressive, but the solutions, for Torres, have to be pragmatic.
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He is also consumed by the crisis of affordable housing, probably the single biggest challenge facing lower-income New Yorkers. One of Mayor Bill de Blasios early drafts for solving the crisis, Torres recalls, involved building 75,000 units over 10 years. Yet the demand was closer to six times that number. Even if we created 75,000 tomorrow instead of 10 years, wed fall catastrophically short between bridging the gap between supply and demand. His answer is a classic triangulation between big-government interventionism and small-government common sense. He wants to greatly increase the Section 8 federal voucher program, turning it into a new federal entitlement housing vouchers for all, he calls it that would ensure that no American family would need to pay more than 30 percent of its income in rent. Doing so would instantaneously make millions of units affordable for the lowest-income households.
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Torres is also particularly alarmed by the phenomenon that the Russian American evolutionary anthropologist Peter Turchin calls elite overproduction. We produce far more college graduates than there are elite positions for those graduates to occupy, Torres observes. When those graduates find themselves deep in debt, shut out of the kinds of jobs they were promised and crushed by the cost of housing, it is bound to have a radicalizing effect. Its a strong argument for more vocational schools. Its also an F.D.R.-esque call to save capitalism from itself, lest the people Torres calls the New Jacobins gain further grip.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/21/opinion/Ritchie-Torres-AOC.html
By Bret Stephens
msongs
(70,172 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(154,470 posts)Torres is a superstar
nycbos
(6,345 posts)Maybe he is a future "baldy"