US Muslim Keith Ellison targets Democrat party leadership
Keith Ellison announces bid to become chair of Democratic National Committee
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Washington: Keith Ellison, a US Muslim lawmaker and a supporter of
Bernie Sanders, on Monday formally announced his bid to lead the
battered Democratic Party, vowing to take it in a more liberal
direction.
“I am proud to announce my candidacy for Chair of the
Democratic National Committee, and if given the opportunity to serve, I
will work tirelessly to make the Democratic Party an organization that
brings us together and advances an agenda that improves people’s lives,”
Ellison, 53, said in a statement.
Ellison, a member of the House
of Representatives who hails from Minnesota, became the first Muslim
elected to the US Congress in 2006.
He was one of the first
supporters of Sanders, in October 2015, in the Vermont senator’s
ultimately unsuccessful bid against Hillary Clinton in the Democratic
presidential primaries.
Clinton’s loss in the November 8 election to Republican tycoon Donald Trump has left the party reeling.
Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, was among the first to announce his support for Ellison to lead the DNC.
A
number of other party heavyweights also back him, including the next
Democratic leader in the Senate, Chuck Schumer of New York.
“The
Democratic Party needs to look itself in the mirror and work tirelessly
to become once again the party that working people know will work for
their interests,” Sanders wrote in launching a petition drive to support
Ellison’s bid last week.
A party in crisis
As Democratic President Barack Obama winds up his eight years in office, his party is in crisis.
In
addition to losing the White House in last week’s election, the
Democrats were unable to retake control of either the Senate or the
House from the Republicans and lost a number of state races.
In
the battle to rebuild the party of former presidents John F. Kennedy and
Bill Clinton, Ellison said, the focus needs to be populist and anchored
at the grassroots level.
“We should have to make the voters first. Not the donors first,” Ellison said in an ABC television interview Sunday.
“I
love the donors and we thank them but it has to be that - the guys in
the barber shop, the lady at the diner, the folks who are worried about
whether that plant is going to close.... They’ve got to be a laser beam
focus on everything we do,” he said. “That’s how we come back.”
Ellison would be the first Muslim and the third African American, according to the Huffington Post, to head the DNC.
He notably faces a rival in Howard Dean, former party head from 2005 to 2009 and a presidential contender in the 2004 primaries.
The
DNC is currently led by interim chair Donna Brazile following the
resignation of Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who stepped down in July under
fierce criticism of her pro-Clinton bias during the primaries.
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