Dear
BS Filter
Because these groups are separated from each other.
However if they got together:
* the Latino activists speaking out against Democrats hijacking their party support and votes;
* the Workers and unions that came out first under Richard Trumka distancing themselves from Democrats;
* the Greens and Sanders supporters still divided over Clinton and the elitist establishment (where Sanders finally got national media publicity for real leftist progressives against Clinton and corporate interest liberals, while the progressive fight over Laura Moser and the divide in the party isn't covered in mainstream media);
* and now you bring up Jewish coalitions denouncing Democrats.
Then together, they might be taken seriously.
Divide and conquer. Unite and rise.
The Tea Party was also demonized and marginalized BY THE GOP not just Democrats, so they had to work in the background to keep getting Ted Cruz elected when the establishment GOP tried to get rid of him, too.
The workers unions seem to understand the power of unifying across party lines, and Richard Trumka started meeting with Trump outside Democrat establishment and leadership that is opposed and wants to denounce, refuse and resist for political points and elections only.
So if the workers are what gave the Latino factions their leverage,
maybe the Jewish factions need to base their foundation on the working people affected by politics and they can connect as well.
the other faction is the WOMEN, if the women across the Black, Latino, Jewish, workers, conservative and liberal factions unite
across social barriers and labels, then we might see some real voices and leaders rise up through the ranks who don't play corporate politics.
The Jewish would have to pick some angle that gets them
unified across party lines, so maybe the BUSINESS owners and BANKS wanting to bankroll social reforms directly, not through govt,
and fund or finance the agenda of REAL progressives who want health care cooperatives and worker owned businesses and districts.
If the Jewish get behind the workers and women disenfranchised by their own party politics, and start DIRECTLY financing the reforms being demanded, t hey can buy out the constituency right out from under the Democrats who keep promising reforms while taking billions in donations from poor working people and not delivering.
I guess that's what I'd recommend to Jewish leaders to break this political monopoly the Democrats have held without earning it.