Month: December 2024

What happened? A Nation panel analyzes the election.

What happened? A Nation panel analyzes the election.

One of the early sessions on this The Nation cruise was called “Dissecting Democratic Malaise: WTF happened.” The panelists were Nation publisher Katrina vanden Heuvel, Jeet Heer, Christina Greer, Elie Mystal and John Nichols, moderated by Sam Seder.


These comments are transcribed from my notes and might seem a bit choppy, but brings out the progressive view of how the election was lost.


John Nichols was the first speaker, and described our situation as “whipsaw politics,” where we go back and forth from one dangerous extreme to the other: rather than holding power for any longer period. He blamed the media for not knowing how to cover politics, but instead reduces it to simplistic gossip. He also noted that the GOP does NOT have a mandate: they had a very narrow victory.


Elie Mystal began by explaining that all the issues we discuss are shared except the issue of whiteness. All of the minorities knew that Trump was wrong, but he was essentially elected by white people. On our cruise ship, he assumed that we could easily find people who voted for Trump, but that if you asked them why, they would give you a “socially acceptable answer,” but the real issue was white racism.
Seder noted that we will have to devote significant efforts to reaching these white people.


Christina Greer said that we are watching a kleptocracy forming itself in real time. And while you might expect that poor white women (who voted for Trump) they didn’t, because they had never “experienced the boot.” Instead, voters latched onto some essentially irrelevant issue like transgender teenagers (who are a very small number of people) as an excuse to swing their vote to Trump.


Jeet Heer noted that it was amazing that we elected a con man and criminal toe the presidency. Trump’s appeal seemed to be “I will protect you,” which is unlikely to be true unless you were some of the super-rich. He also noted that Kamala ran as part of the establishment rather than as a refreshing change.
Katrina vanden Heuvel noted that Kamala spending three days with Liz Cheney was 3 days wasted when she could have been reaching the voters she needed. There is a significant need to reorganize the Democratic party, because they are heading to being the party of Rahm Emmanuel.


In general discussion that followed, the point was raised that Harris was never able to take her own position on Gaza, which probably hurt her with younger voters. She was more or less captive to Biden’s unpopular policies.


The DNC (Democratic National Committee) came under significant attack. Speakers felt that it “served no useful purpose,” and gave Harris no useful help. It didn’t have any strategy to reach the working class. Harris didn’t exploit her multi-racial, multi-ethnic characteristics in her campaign, and this, they blamed on the DNC. Their strategy was too cautious.


Christina Greer felt that had there been a primary, Kamala would not have been the nominee. Democrats chase speakers where there are problems, showing that “I can build coalitions with horrendous people.”
California needs to revise how they count votes. Democrats need to maximize their turnout. Only 63% of eligible voters voted this year, and a lot of Democrats stayed home. In California this was a significant problem for Democrats.


The media did not do an adequate job of covering the election: they are more interested in who has the power. As far as encouraging young voters, young people don’t see themselves in politics.


Great politicians may arrive in non-traditional ways. Seder sees possible candidates among Ro Kahana, Chris Murphy, and AOC, and those already active include Gavin Newsom and Christie Whitmer. Sometimes a transformational figure arrives from outside traditional politics: one such candidate might be LeBron James. And don’t count out Jamie Raskin. What we do have to do is move from party-centered politics to candidate-centered politics. And resist Clintons and Obamas getting involved!

In an afternoon session, Joan Walsh joined a discussion with Christina Greer and John Nichols.
Walsh said that Kamala’ reputation was being torpedoed quietly by Biden staffers, and said should cold cite names. Biden was more popular among black women. She said that Kamal’s campaign was inititially a sh*t-show when she took over. She tried to introduce a working class agenda for women, not men.
Kamala did better than Biden among seniors. Lower middle class women should have gotten a lot of help from the Kamala campaign, but “Nancy said no.”


The media doesn’t know how to report on black issues.


John Nichols finished off this session. He noted that her campaign defined her in terms of Trump rather than in terms of her own plans and ambitions. While commentators were saying that they didn’t really know Harris, it was Kamala who moved Biden closer to unions and arranged all of his union appearances. The fact that she was in charge of that labor movement was never communicated.


Her campaign as too much about Trump and Liz Cheney contributed nothing useful. The DNC is not a useful organization: it is solely concerned with raising money, rather than promoting candidates and policies.


Nichols said that he had a chance to interview Kamala early in the campaign, and one on one she was very impressive. She could easily have been a good President and might have been a great President.

The Nation magazine is a 160-year old publication, originally organized to combat slavery, but moved into other progressive causes after the passage of the 15th Amendment.

On board the Holland America Nieuw Amsterdam

On board the Holland America Nieuw Amsterdam

I arrived in Miami Saturday around 12:30 pm and took an Uber up to my hotel (Embassy Suites) in Fort Lauderdale. Then many of us boarded a shuttle bus at about 10:15 am. It was  towing a baggage trailer to the pier where our ship waited. Our baggage boarded separately. We had to go through scanning of our boarding pass, and of our passports and then go to a huge room full of chairs where I was given a card saying Group 17. That sounded ominous, but in fact the wait was barely 15-20 minutes and we were on the ship. Overall, the whole process from the hotel to the ship was barely an hour.

The Nieuw Amsterdam, to me seems a pretty big ship. Walking from one end to the other takes a good ten minutes or more. It has a capacity of 2100 passengers and 910 staff, giving you a passenger to staff ratio of about 2.4. This puts it in the Moderate Luxury class. Previously, we had sailed on Celebrity once and Seabourn twice. This seemed to be a step up from our experience on Celebrity, but of course with Seaborn’s ships being smaller and with more staff, you get a lot more attention (and pay more).

We were put in elevators to the 9th deck, where there is the Lido Market informal restaurant and bar. Here you can get drinks and a plethora of food from a buffet. They will also grill your hamburgers and hot dogs to order. On Holland America ships, you can get a drinks package that gets you up to 15 hard and soft drinks a day, or an all-in-one package which includes Wi-Fi in your cabin and a contribution towards one or more excursions and one premium dining restaurant. This latter cost about $350 a week (per person).

After lunch with a beer, I went down to the 5th deck to my “stateroom” just as my baggage was arriving. I also met our cabin steward, Anton, who made it a point to greet me by name and ask if I needed anything. This is a very nice touch. It had a nice veranda and chairs, but the room was pretty cramped.

I think if I had a partner with me, we would have been running into each other. I could have upgraded from Veranda Suite to Signature Veranda suite for about $2000, but since there was only one of me, it seemed extravagant. A friend of mine suggested I ought to upgrade to Neptune Suite with Veranda for about $4000 more. It comes with some privileges like free laundry and priority boarding and access to a private restaurant and lounge area. Might be fun, but for one, I didn’t think so.

About 125 of us were on this cruise sponsored by The Nation magazine, and there are talks morning and afternoon on sea days and in the afternoon on port days. The speakers included Sam Seder, Katrina Vanden Heuvel, John Nichols, Sasha Abramsky, Jeet Heer, Elie Mystal, Kristina Greer, Eddie Soufrant, Joan Walsh and Bhaskar Sunkara.

There was a welcome party at the Lido Market Bar and pool area at 4pm, with a DJ and a lot of menacing looking drinks for sale. One was a rum punch in a souvenir glass for only $18.75. I stuck to diet Coke. 

Then there was a welcoming Nation reception with free drinks and snacks in the Crows Nest bar on the 11th deck at 6:15.

After a few sips of my innocuous punch, I felt rather dizzy, but it turned out it was the ship rocking, with the 11th floor amplifying the rocking motion. You could see the liquid in the liquor bottles sloshing back and forth. In these  receptions, you really have to insist to get a soda or non-alcoholic drinks. They never have any right there for the asking.

Then we all went to dinner in the main dining room at 7:30, each with assigned seating so we could all get to know each other. Most of the diners at my table ordered the Mahi-Mahi, served with shellfish as shown. They all devoured it. I ordered the nightly special: pork belly served with mashed sweet potatoes and spinach. It was not the best example of pork belly I’ve had.

Among the desserts, we had a strawberry sundae, bread pudding and a chocolate tart. Only the sundae received much praise. 

For breakfast this morning, I had a delicious room service American breakfast with perfectly done eggs and sausage, with orange juice and toast.  They sent  two by mistake, so I photographed one on the veranda.

Lunch on these ships is limited to the Lido Market, which is, in essence, a great big buffet. I have never liked waiting in line for food from  a steam table, but I was able to pick up a delicious little premade sub sandwich, and went back for some ice cream for dessert. Very nice. There are always free tables, already set and helpful staff everywhere.

So far, I am having a great time. Tonight I’ll visit one of the fancy restaurants (Tamarind) and tomorrow, I’ll summarize the fascinating talks I heard from The Nation’s writers.