Gravel 2020 Platform: Fundamental Political Reform
Gravel 2020 Platform: Fundamental Political Reform
Gravel 2020 Platform: Fundamental Political Reform
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against their conscience and choose the “lesser of two evils.” Ranked choice voting, or
instant run-off voting, allows voters to rank candidates, giving their first vote to their
preferred candidate. A candidate can only assume victory with a majority of first-round
and run-off votes, making every vote count.
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year on just air-conditioning in Afghanistan and Iraq (more than the annual budget of
NASA at that time.) This is a disastrous valuing of ‘guns over butter.’ As President Dwight
Eisenhower said, “every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired,
signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are
cold and are not clothed.”
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Groups like AIPAC wield far too much influence over our foreign policy, as critics like Rep.
Ilhan Omar, as well as mainstream experts like Professors Stephen Walt and John J.
Mearsheimer, have highlighted for more than a decade. It is time to craft a foreign policy
independent of undue influence by the Israel lobby, and to stop turning a blind eye to the
injustices of the occupation.
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● Formally declare an end to the Korean War, which was only paused in 1953 with the
Armistice Agreement. Ending hostilities is necessary for the total denuclearization
of the peninsula.
● Continue nuclear dialogue with North Korea through multilateral mechanisms, with
the goal of complete denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.
● Observe its own Treaty obligations towards denuclearisation.
● Promote cultural exchange between the United States, South Korea, and North
Korea. The isolation of the North Korean people is of benefit of no one.
● Encourage the reunion of North and South Korean families that have been
separated by the war. Whether through digital communications (e.g. video chats) or
in-person, should both governments be amenable.
● Formally apologize to survivors of the No Gun Ri and Jeju Island massacre, meet
with them and South Korean officials on potential compensation.
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aviation, banking & consumer finance, communications, food production & retail, health
insurance & health service provision, internet services, news media, retail investment,
social media, ground transport, and so on. Horizontal corporate agglomeration and
vertical integration have produced economic behemoths that control vast swathes of the
market, are unresponsive to consumer demands, and enjoy undue influence over politics
and economy at both national and sub-national levels. Meanwhile, the gargantuan
Amazon, which alongside providing cloud services to 17 federal intelligence agencies,
promises to flex its monopsonistic power over vendors and workers; it may soon reach a
concentration of power rivalling Standard Oil at its height. It is time for the U.S. to return
to the grand tradition of trust-busting and break apart market-controlling businesses. It is
time to return competition to the marketplace that allows innovation and
entrepreneurship to thrive. Our democracy depends on it.
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rates and lower matriculation rates in poorer areas. Moreover, the oft-prohibitive cost of
attending a university (let alone attending a graduate program) means that many forego
the possibility or attend cheaper options for post-secondary education. Many lower-
income people who do decide to pursue post-secondary education also take on a
precipitous amount of student debt, debilitating their financial prospects for years.
The United States has some of the best specialised health care in the world, for instance
in the treatment of certain cancers. At the same time, coverage is highly unequal and in
effect still inaccessible to millions of Americans. Some of the health data is appalling. Out
of 35 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
the U.S. ranks 29th for infant mortality and 26th for life expectancy. Maternal mortality is
the worst in the developed world, and worse than in Iran. Forty percent of adults in the
U.S. are obese, giving rise to an epidemic of chronic illnesses. The mental health crisis has
also reached disastrous levels, affecting women and men in different ways that expensive
clinical responses alone cannot remedy. Government policy, social convulsion, economic
insecurity, lifestyle choices and poor nutrition are factors, but the single largest
impediment to the achievement of health as a human right are health insurance
companies. These private-sector bureaucracies control the market of health care
provision and what medical professionals can or cannot prescribe. With government
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license, they have itemised every conceivable procedure in order to extract revenue from
patients, extending corporate control over the human body. The result? A healthcare
system that costs 40 percent more than the OECD average, and delivers poorer overall
results. The close ties that exist between Congress and the health insurance industry
makes the current status of public health in America an example of both government and
market failure. It is unsustainable.
● Draw on good practices in universal health care provision from around the world in
order to construct the best possible approach suited to the specific profiles and
health care needs of the American population.
● Use resources freed up from the wasteful wars of choice, military overreach, and
generated from revenues raised from progressive taxation of wealth and income,
to offer a publicly-run and -financed national health service.
● With Medicare-for-All as a medium term transitional system, the ultimate aim is a
“Veterans Administration-style healthcare for all,” or “VA4A” for short.
● Institute a single-payer system for all Americans and tax-paying permanent
residents irrespective of income and employment status.
● Provide full coverage as is, to date, provided by private health insurers, including
dental, vision, and hearing services.
● Retain private health insurance companies to provide ancillary health and social
care services.
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for everyone, not only the fully impoverished. By opening affordable housing to all,
we can decommodify housing and ensure everyone has a good place to live.
● Enact rent control nationwide with a regulatory agency to ensure that rents cannot
skyrocket and that tenants cannot be exploited.
● Massively increase and expand tenants’ rights.
● Guarantee legal counsel in tenant-landlord court.
● Increase the ease of acquiring community land trusts that develop and steward
affordable housing, community gardens, civic buildings, commercial spaces, and
other community assets.
● Enact stricter licensing requirements for landlords and stiffer penalties for failure to
keep apartments in good condition.
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● Set up a federal program to help these-- along with all other-- cooperatives, teach
them how to operate, and ensure that they are self-sufficient.
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to their paycheck then in years before. As rent and cost of living rise, and as workers bring
in more profit for their employers, their wages must increase.
● Establish a national $15 minimum wage and eliminate the tipped minimum wage.
The minimum wage would be indexed to the Consumer Price Index.
● Invest $1.5 trillion in infrastructure over a ten-year period.
● Institute a Federal Jobs Guarantee to offer jobs of last resort at high wages on the
model of the Works Progress Administration, exerting upward pressure on wages.
These jobs would not be unskilled; instead, these jobs should focus mainly focus on
developing infrastructure (in line with the above plank), and may include job
training in fields like nursing).
● Repeal the Taft-Hartley Act. The law prevents labor unions from amassing any sort
of real power through its ban on secondary boycotts and the infamous “free-speech
clause,” and (by defining independent contractors so as not to be employees)
allows companies to deny their workers real benefits. Repealing the law would be a
first step in re-empowering the labor movement.
● Provide a free public credit registry (as suggested by Demos) to compete with large
credit reporting agencies like Experian and Equifax. The public credit registry would
not charge fees for seeing credit scores, and would require lenders and other
companies that provide information to be wholly accurate.
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fiduciary duty.” Simple changes to American corporate law would bring corporations
under more democratic control, and would allow for other reforms to be made.
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● Re-establish banking services within post offices as Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has
put forth, using our pre-existing nationwide infrastructure to benefit people in even
more ways. Include no-cost checking and savings accounts.
● Establish small-dollar loans through these public banks with small dollar amounts
and tiny interest rates, allowing people to
● Ensure that municipal taxes flow through these public banks rather than coercive
behemoths like Wells Fargo, making it so that interest and loans go towards the
public good rather than the profit motive.
● Using Germany’s nation-building municipal banks as a model, along with North
Dakota’s profitable, beneficial state bank, fund major and minor infrastructure
projects through loans made by public banks that consistently offer lower interest
rates and more capital for these public-good projects.
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● Cap tax expenditures for households making over $130,000 at $8,000 a year.
● Have the IRS create a free online tax prep and filing program similar to TurboTax or
others, ensuring that almost no one has to pay to file their taxes.
● Ban the IRS from collaborating with tax filing companies as they do right now,
abolishing the corporatized Free File program that less than 3% of the population
uses due to lack of advertising and exacting, confusing eligibility requirements.
● Establish a “return-free” filing option to allow millions of Americans with a
straightforward tax situation to choose a pre-prepared, simple filing process that
comes with their tax return already calculated and immediately redeemed.
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opioid overdose in 2017, and we have made this happen. By criminalizing users and
dealers at every step, we offer no alternative but the needle.
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“such as the death penalty” after “cruel and unusual punishments” and before
“imposed” in the Eighth Amendment.
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disparities in who gets locked up and why. Our trials and sentences are not fitting for a
nation that calls itself the land of the free, and have to be changed if we want to
rehabilitate the hurt rather than locking them up and throwing away the key.
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they need to live a good and legal life. We are draining our own pockets to pay for torture,
and gain nothing through it: only the pain of those that sometimes need our help the
most.
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affair rather than an external one. Install more accountability procedures into our
prisons to minimize the current rampant abuse.
● Stop sending people back to prison for minor parole violations.
● Enfranchise ex-prisoners and current prisoners: even if someone has committed a
crime, they are still a citizen. Prisoners are under the full control of the state yet do
not even get a say in how it is run.
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● Abolish the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency and U.S. Customs
and Border Enforcement, which was only founded in 2003 and which has only
functioned as a destructive secret police tasked with promoting fear in immigrant
communities.
● Offer immediate legal status to all undocumented immigrants who have resided in
the country for more than three years on a three-year pathway to citizenship.
● Pass a law against deporting any veteran of the U.S. military.
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(including aiding and abetting, or carrying out, extrajudicial killings.) The fundamental lack
of accountability and transparency must end: a government cannot be of the people nor
for the people if the people do not know of, or have oversight over, what is being done in
its name and with its tax dollars.
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