Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

yellow dahlia

(3,982 posts)
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 06:22 PM Monday

I just received an email from Ezra Levin and Indivisible.

His communication is in response to last night's capitulation in the Senate and other recent events.

Some of us need to hear this, right now. I have copied and pasted the body of the email. I hope that an acceptable way to share it on this forum.


FROM INDIVISIBLE:
"Hi friends,

If you haven’t seen, Senate Democrats surrendered. What I am about to write may sound calm and collected, but know that I am channeling my searing hot incandescent rage in an effort to explain what went down, and what it requires of all of us next.

1. This was a surrender.
We didn’t just get a “bad deal” -- we got essentially nothing. The original Dem demands were threefold:

Permanent extension of the ACA subsidies
Medicaid funding restored
No more blank checks for the regime (rescission/impoundment restrictions)

Democrats dropped the Medicaid funding demands immediately after making them. They then stopped talking about rescission and impoundment. They dropped from “permanent” to “multi-year” to, finally, “one year” of ACA subsidies this week. A one-year extension -- Schumer's offer on Friday -- is actually the same demand as front-line Republican House members scared about reelection. But they couldn’t even hold the line there -- they surrendered without even getting that.

2. The vote itself was a bit of Kabuki theater.
Conveniently for them, none of the eight Senate Dems who voted for this are up for reelection next year. That’s by design. There’s going to be a lot of well-deserved anger directed at those specific eight Dems, but make no mistake -- this vote was stage-managed.

The way this works is that a critical mass of Dems within the caucus decides they’re going to surrender, they look at the number of votes they need to do it (eight), and they agree on eight Dems who don’t have to face voters anytime soon. That’s why Senators like Mark Warner can vote against it, even though they were widely known to be drivers behind the surrender.

This is not true of literally every Senate Dem -- we know that a bunch of folks, like Elizabeth Warren, Chris Murphy, Bernie Sanders, and Chris Van Hollen were arguing strongly against it behind closed doors. But many who voted no publicly helped engineer this surrender privately.

3. Schumer and Dem Senate leadership broadly failed.
Chuck Schumer, Brian Schatz, and Kirsten Gillibrand all voted for the March surrender, but voted against this surrender. Is that a meaningful shift? No.

Even aside from the Kabuki theater aspect of all this, it's the leadership's job to unify the Dem caucus to fight the fascists. That’s it. Their individual votes are irrelevant. If the Dem caucus fractures and fails to unify against the Bad Republican Bill, then that’s a failure of both the individual senators who caved and leadership for failing to lead the caucus.

We do not know now and will never know for sure if Schumer orchestrated this (my suspicion) or if he simply lacked the leadership skills to prevent it (also possible). But we don’t have to know the reason -- it is just factually true that he and the rest of the leadership team failed to hold their own caucus together.

Combine #3 with #2 above, and it leads here: If you’ve got a Senate Dem who is not calling for new leadership, they’re part of the problem. We should no longer trust Senate Dems who decline to come out against the leadership that led us here. Until proven otherwise, we should assume they were in on the game to fool their own supporters. It is easy to disabuse us of that assumption -- they just have to publicly make the popular call for new leadership.

4. This is bad policy.
The Republican budget guarantees that healthcare premiums will continue to skyrocket, rural hospitals will close, more people will go without healthcare, and more people will die. It does nothing to stop Trump from treating the federal budget as his personal piggybank.

The “win” some Dems are claiming is bullshit. They got a pinky-promise agreement from Republicans for a vote on ACA subsidies 40 days from now. They do not have the votes to win on that with serious concessions in both the House and Senate. It’s fake.

5. This is bad politics.
Senate Democrats surrendered when they had maximum leverage and were winning the fight. This surrender came weeks after the largest protest in American history, and days after the best election night in a decade or more. The public opinion polling showed Democrats were winning the fight, and the party’s own approval ratings were rising in response to them keeping up the fight.

We know where Indivisibles were on this. We polled them after last week’s "What’s the Plan?"call asking if Dems should take a GOP deal to reopen the government, or if they should continue fighting for ACA subsidies. 98.67% wanted to continue the fight!

This week, for the first time all year, Democrats were riding high. The regime was on the ropes. We had just clobbered them last Tuesday -- crushing the regime electorally everywhere. To surrender now is a message to all rank-and-file Democrats: "We don’t care that you want us to fight." I agreed with Brian Beutler’s take last night: the surrender in March felt like a reflection of “poor morale and low self-confidence.” This surrender is “throwing the fight.”

If the Senate leadership’s goal was to demobilize and depress rank-and-file Democrats, they could not have played their cards better.

6. The surrender will embolden the regime to do more damage.
The threat from Trump and Republicans is real and existential. They are violently attacking our communities, looting our services to serve their billionaire buddies, and shredding the Constitution. They’re behaving like they won’t ever be out of power again, because that’s their plan. There is nothing more urgent than ensuring they do not succeed.

By surrendering so utterly and completely at a moment of their maximum leverage and momentum, Senate Democrats teach Trump and his cadre an important lesson: do enough damage, and your opponents will buckle. This is an extremely dangerous lesson for Trump to learn as he ramps up his attacks on blue states and cities and prepares to steal the midterm elections. Because of this surrender, our democracy is more imperiled now than it was before.

7. The only path to a real opposition party is through a cleansing primary season.
We have spent a year now trying to convince the Democratic Party to unify and fight back. It started as a lonely fight shortly after the election, but our numbers grew. We’ve seen some Democrats lead from the beginning, some come around, and some do their best to at least perform resistance. There’s been real progress -- in large part because of our collective work.

But at some point, you gotta either change your leaders’ minds or you gotta change your leaders. And the time for changing minds is over.

After this week, we should expect more fecklessness unless we demand a change. You don’t demand that change in a general election -- you do it in primaries. And conveniently, primaries are right around the corner.

This all leads to one big announcement. Today, Indivisible is launching the largest Democratic primary program we’ve ever run.

This isn’t about left vs right. This is about fighting back vs losing. The regime’s threats are too real and the stakes are too high to settle for the feckless, loser version of the Democratic Party we saw this week. As we head into the midterms next year, we need a Democratic Party that inspires and instills pride. In this moment when the fascists are on the march, we need a Democratic Party with a spine.

Our primary program will include both the House and Senate. We will work with Indivisible groups to identify key races, provide support on the ground, and tap into movement energy across the country to boost candidates with a spine. One thing we can say for sure: We will not back any Senate primary candidate unless they call for Schumer to step down as Majority Leader.

And after the primary, whatever happens, we will rally behind the winner, and crush the regime electorally in the midterms just like we did this last week.

There will be much more to announce soon, but here are a few things we’ll ask you to do right now:

If you’re as pissed as I am and this all resonates with you, sign up to be part of this campaign to rebuild the Democratic Party today.
If you’ve got a Democratic Representative in the House, call them today and tell them not to be a party to this surrender -- or we’ll remember it next year. Yes, Republicans can likely pass this through the House without Democratic votes, but Dems don’t need to make it easier for them or put their names on a bill that betrays their constituents.
If you’re raring to do even more, you can also chip in to help us get this primary project off the ground. We’re going to be counting on grassroots supporters to fund this, but there will be many, many ways to get involved, so only give if you can.

We get the party we demand, and we intend to demand one that fights -- a Democratic Party with a spine."

In solidarity,
Ezra Levin
Co-Executive Director, Indivisible
51 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
I just received an email from Ezra Levin and Indivisible. (Original Post) yellow dahlia Monday OP
Kicking, Recommending, and Bookmarking Drum Monday #1
And to beat it all the DNC is strutting around Bluetus Monday #15
The reason the DNC is not allying is simple. Shipwack Tuesday #48
Give a cheer for David Hogg jaymac Tuesday #50
Amen brother! jaymac Tuesday #49
Highly recommended democrank Monday #2
I'm in. I'm going to write Merkley and Wyden tomorrow. CanonRay Monday #3
Difficult read senseandsensibility Monday #4
Agreed - it seemed like the Dems should hold out longer. yellow dahlia Monday #8
There is no calvary coming over the hill Seinan Sensei Monday #24
A lot of other Dem senators hiding behind the eight. Sneederbunk Monday #5
I'm impressed Cirsium Monday #6
Ezra Levin knows his stuff. yellow dahlia Monday #9
I tried to post his 2 Instagram's from him late last night BigmanPigman Monday #7
The numbers matter when it comes to constituent calls. yellow dahlia Monday #10
They think I AM a constituent BigmanPigman Monday #23
Very creative. yellow dahlia Monday #25
Out of the 8 traitors, I could only leave a mess. with 3 of them! BigmanPigman Monday #31
Good work. yellow dahlia Monday #34
How do you know about the money? BonnieJW Monday #35
You beat me to it. usonian Monday #11
Thanks. yellow dahlia Monday #14
The links have personal info past the ? in the URL. usonian Monday #18
Gotcha. yellow dahlia Monday #22
How do you post it with links? I always just end up coping and pasting with a note to go to the main link to read it Amaryllis Monday #19
That's a great idea. usonian Monday #28
Not just after the question mark. Remove the question mark too. What's left is the clean link. summer_in_TX Monday #32
Oops. I was hungry. usonian Monday #43
so the guy is gonna start running candidates of his choice in a partisan manner using indivisible's data base? msongs Monday #12
No. THat is not the way Indivisible works. Amaryllis Monday #21
All the work we do and Dems just fail. As usual. Bluesaph Monday #13
Like the Door's song, this is the end, the party seems to be suicidal. nt yaesu Monday #38
I'm going to have that song and When the Music's Over BigmanPigman Monday #41
THIS IS WHY MANY HAVE LOST CONFIDENCE Clouds Passing Monday #16
Anyone supporting this sell out is dead to me. Moostache Monday #17
We must remember, it's the billionaires and their "donations" dlk Monday #20
All I know is remember how dems caused this Tree Lady Monday #26
K&R Mr.WeRP Monday #27
The two sides of the swamp cooperate bucolic_frolic Monday #29
Kick, Rec, and Bookmarking proud patriot Monday #30
Me, too. Time to get to work and change the guards, as they say. Deuxcents Monday #42
Yep proud patriot Monday #44
Time to change the democratic party to Antifa party and have those dem politicians who are Bev54 Monday #33
KICK TO RESIST orangecrush Monday #36
"There's going to be a lot of well-deserved anger" well, sadly, a lot of that anger could show up in the form of low yaesu Monday #37
I wonder if the anger will affect donations more than turnout. yellow dahlia Monday #39
Yes! Grenouille50 Monday #40
I reposted in Activist Headquarters with links. usonian Monday #45
Thanks. yellow dahlia Monday #46
I saw him on the Jim Acosta show today & signed up - TBF Tuesday #47
He's right - we need different leadership RainCaster Tuesday #51

Bluetus

(1,893 posts)
15. And to beat it all the DNC is strutting around
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:29 PM
Monday

Talking trash like they did something to win the elections last week.

That wipeout was clearly the result of Trump overreach and the massive grass roots energy that the DNC has fought all along.

Why the F is the DNC not partnering with Bernie/AOC and the No Kings people. And David Hogg's organization?

Shipwack

(2,907 posts)
48. The reason the DNC is not allying is simple.
Tue Nov 11, 2025, 10:26 AM
Tuesday

They have money and power.

Hogg et al is a threat to their money and power.

That's it.

Progressive goals or even democracy have nothing to do with it.

jaymac

(103 posts)
50. Give a cheer for David Hogg
Tue Nov 11, 2025, 02:23 PM
Tuesday

He's the real deal and those older dam dems better start listening to him and others like him or the dem party is ( or will shortly be ) dead, dead, dead.

senseandsensibility

(24,051 posts)
4. Difficult read
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 06:52 PM
Monday

as hard truths tend to be. This is a tough assessment of what happened, but I think it is clear eyed. I do think he is right about why these particular Dems were chosen, and there is a kabuki theater element to all of this. I understand the anger. It's also true that Rs were dug in. I wish that Dems had given it a bit longer though, because Rs were just starting to feel the heat.

Seinan Sensei

(1,253 posts)
24. There is no calvary coming over the hill
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:05 PM
Monday

Whatever gets done, however it happens, it must come from us

BigmanPigman

(54,364 posts)
7. I tried to post his 2 Instagram's from him late last night
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:13 PM
Monday

but since I do not ever use social media I couldn't post anything but the link.

When I went to bed and couldn't sleep I read his post about him being "shocked" especially after NO KINGS, largest US protest ever and the Blue Wave last week.

I searched for his input this morning as well.

I'm calling the 8 Traitors tonight in their states. I got the phone Numbers and I am doing what I can. Ever though they are not up for reelection and they did this BS for $$$$$ they will still get an earful from me.

*** I just realized that both Dem senators from Nevada and New Hampshire voted to end the shut down. What is going on with those 2 states?!?

BigmanPigman

(54,364 posts)
23. They think I AM a constituent
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:04 PM
Monday

I learned a sure fire system for getting around that at a 2017 anti-tRump rally.
I have shared it on DU for 8 years. I've literally called every single senator at least 3 times and I call Congressmen too.

This is the method ...works like a charm and only takes 5 minutes to do.

You get the representatives' local and DC offices addresses and phone numbers.
Then do to a local contact office and see what their specific cities are represented. I go to any of their cities, and then I do a Zillow search for homes for sale/rent in which every location of the rep is located.

For example...
Maggie Hassan, New Hampshire.

Go and get a local office (Manchester was my choice this time) and then I went to Zillow for homes for sale in Manchester so I can get a local address and zip code in case a staffer asks my location. They rarely do.

It does NOT matter about which telephone area code you call from since people move all the time across the country and they keep their same phone number.

I always tell them that my family, friends and co-workers (teachers) are all very angry with their vote and we will never support them!

*The only problem is that the 8 Dems aren't up for reelection so they don't give a shit what anyone is calling about. They got big $$$$$$$ to sell out from corporate Dem backers.

yellow dahlia

(3,982 posts)
25. Very creative.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:09 PM
Monday

I try and call and write those who aren't my Congress Critters - some let it through and some don't.

In my opinion, they should all take calls from ALL of us. Once in Congress that take votes that affect all of us. I believe they represent all of us. And we pay their salaries.

BigmanPigman

(54,364 posts)
31. Out of the 8 traitors, I could only leave a mess. with 3 of them!
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:42 PM
Monday

Since I am experienced at this form of resistance I sort of know what they are doing.
Only 1 had a "mailbox full" (Shakeen) and can't leave a message. That is good...people ARE calling the reps.
However, when I called Fetterman, Kaine, Durbin and Rosen I was not even ALLOWED to leave a message at all. This is bad...these reps KNOW their constituents hate them and they don't give a shit.

I was able to leave a message with King, Hassan and Masto.

They are voting right now I believe.

Even if they don't change their vote or care about the USA they know that we are onto their BS...greed!!!!! They DO NOT CARE!

It wasn't just Schumer's fault at not keeping the party together but the dirty 8 are NOT up for reelection. They sold their souls to MAGA! And they will sleep soundly tonight, with that great big pile of cash under their dirty mattress.

yellow dahlia

(3,982 posts)
14. Thanks.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:29 PM
Monday

It was the first time I tried to share an email letter. I didn't know how to get the links to work.

There was a lot of great info in the email.

usonian

(22,371 posts)
18. The links have personal info past the ? in the URL.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:41 PM
Monday

I clean it out when I post. It's tedious, but worth it.

I'll do so after dinner and post it in Activist HQ.

Even the link I posted had to have the personalization removed.

Amaryllis

(10,829 posts)
19. How do you post it with links? I always just end up coping and pasting with a note to go to the main link to read it
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:43 PM
Monday

with the links.

usonian

(22,371 posts)
28. That's a great idea.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:21 PM
Monday

I have done it several times.

When I am feeling energetic, I copy links from the email or the "view this email in a browser" page, and post them here.

But when I do this, I remove everything in the link after the ? mark. That is personal/tracking info.

I'll post this email in Activist HQ shortly. It's just for those who prefer to read on DU and not jump to the Indivisible web page.

It's all good. Thanks for asking.



summer_in_TX

(3,925 posts)
32. Not just after the question mark. Remove the question mark too. What's left is the clean link.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:47 PM
Monday

Companies don't need our personal data that they get through the tracking portion of the URL.

usonian

(22,371 posts)
43. Oops. I was hungry.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 09:13 PM
Monday

It's not that I mind Indivisble knowing about me. It's that EVERYONE ELSE can see it.

msongs

(72,828 posts)
12. so the guy is gonna start running candidates of his choice in a partisan manner using indivisible's data base?
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:24 PM
Monday

Amaryllis

(10,829 posts)
21. No. THat is not the way Indivisible works.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:47 PM
Monday

"Our primary program will include both the House and Senate. We will work with Indivisible groups to identify key races, provide support on the ground, and tap into movement energy across the country to boost candidates with a spine. One thing we can say for sure: We will not back any Senate primary candidate unless they call for Schumer to step down as Majority Leader. "

Ezra and Leah, his wife, are co-executive directors, but they would be the first to tell you that the Indivisible groups are the leaders.

Bluesaph

(1,007 posts)
13. All the work we do and Dems just fail. As usual.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:28 PM
Monday

I’m so sick and tired of this shit! We need new leadership and we need to primary all the weak ass f@cks.

We wouldn’t be here if Biden hadn’t picked milque toast Garland. We wouldn’t be here if Dems had any kind of balls whatsoever.

Schumer needs to retire yesterday. And that goes for every single one who is owned by AIPAC. The only time they show any strength is when they are putting Israel first. The rest of the time they buckle and cave.

I’m sick of it. If Americans don’t have free college and universal health care then why are we sending money to any country that does?

I am losing faith in the entire party. They fail us over and over and over again!

BigmanPigman

(54,364 posts)
41. I'm going to have that song and When the Music's Over
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 09:01 PM
Monday

Played at my wake/party. I wish I could be there. It is all in my will (really) It should be lots of fun! Jim die don my B-day...seems appropriate.

Moostache

(10,915 posts)
17. Anyone supporting this sell out is dead to me.
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:38 PM
Monday

Forever.

I am done surrendering to the worst human beings of my adult life. Anyone who thinks giving more ground in the hopes of getting something later is a fool.

dlk

(13,023 posts)
20. We must remember, it's the billionaires and their "donations"
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 07:47 PM
Monday

Until we make a serious effort and actually succeed with removing big money from our political process, everyday Americans will continue to be sold out, guaranteed.

Tree Lady

(12,899 posts)
26. All I know is remember how dems caused this
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:18 PM
Monday

By staying home last time? Well thanks to this shitty cave in more will stay home next time.

I am so pissed I feel like saying a big f u to the party although there are many in it that hated this.

We have major problems and we already did, this makes it worse.

Bev54

(13,024 posts)
33. Time to change the democratic party to Antifa party and have those dem politicians who are
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:48 PM
Monday

willing to fight fascism to join them and get rid of the rest of them and vote in those who will really fight. Luckily for me I can turn all this off and concentrate on our Canadian Politics, I don't know how the rest of you do it. Just when there was hope, the democrats in the senate pulled the rug. Why did they not wait until the appeals court and supreme court weighed in? Talk about deflating everyone in the country, those you thought would fight, capitulated at the height of the fight. Unbelievable. I wish you all good luck, I just cannot watch this disaster anymore.

yaesu

(8,807 posts)
37. "There's going to be a lot of well-deserved anger" well, sadly, a lot of that anger could show up in the form of low
Mon Nov 10, 2025, 08:50 PM
Monday

voter turnout in the midterms, so the whole country will pay for the crazy 8's fuckup and the leadership that let it happen, not taking the House, Senate and ending probably any chance of democracy ever returning.

TBF

(35,278 posts)
47. I saw him on the Jim Acosta show today & signed up -
Tue Nov 11, 2025, 12:06 AM
Tuesday

at least he has a plan. They are going to primary anyone who thinks Schumer should still be in charge after this debacle.

RainCaster

(13,315 posts)
51. He's right - we need different leadership
Tue Nov 11, 2025, 04:15 PM
Tuesday

I'm ready to publish a public letter to my senator demanding that she publicly denounce Schumer or I will do all I can to primary her.

I'm in Europe right now and wondering if I want to come home. There are so many valid reasons why being an expat is good right now.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»I just received an email ...