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question everything

(52,216 posts)
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 05:16 PM 8 hrs ago

A Party Divided: The Socialist Shift & The Fight For Minnesota's DFL - Darwish, Minneapolis Times

For decades, Marjorie Simon was a pillar of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) party. She believed in its “big tent” philosophy and its historic commitment to working-class Minnesotans. But today, Simon says the party she once called home has been “hijacked” by radical elements—and she is now prepared to take her grievance to court. In a candid and fiery interview on the Liz Collin Reports podcast, Simon, a self-described lifelong Democrat, delivered a scathing indictment of the DFL’s current trajectory. She warned of what she describes as “creeping communism” and a systemic takeover of the party by the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).

(snip)

The interview highlights a deepening schism within the DFL that has been simmering for years. While the party has historically balanced the needs of rural farmers, urban labor unions, and suburban moderates, the recent surge of DSA-backed candidates in Minneapolis and St. Paul has shifted the power dynamic. These new voices have pushed for radical reforms in public safety, rent control, and taxation—policies that Simon and other traditionalists believe are alienating the party’s moderate base.

Simon pointed to the increasing influence of the “Squad”-aligned wing of the party as evidence of a shift toward socialism. She expressed concern that the DFL’s traditional focus on pragmatic progressivism has been replaced by an “ideological purity” that leaves no room for dissent from long-term members. “I’m not a Republican, and I don’t want to be one,” Simon emphasized. “I’m a Democrat who wants my party back. I want to save the DFL from the people who are trying to burn it down from the inside.”

(snip)

“Marjorie Simon represents a generation of Democrats who feel abandoned by their own party,” said one local political consultant. “Whether or not her lawsuit has legal standing, the political optics are significant. If the DFL loses the support of its traditional moderate base, the path to a statewide majority becomes increasingly narrow.”

As for Simon, she views her potential legal challenge as a rescue mission for the party she spent her life supporting. “Someone has to stand up and say this isn’t right,” she concluded. “If we don’t fight for the soul of this party now, there won’t be a party left to save.”

https://minneapolistimes.com/a-party-divided-the-socialist-shift-the-fight-for-minnesotas-dfl/


6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A Party Divided: The Socialist Shift & The Fight For Minnesota's DFL - Darwish, Minneapolis Times (Original Post) question everything 8 hrs ago OP
"...pragmatic progressivism..." OldBaldy1701E 8 hrs ago #1
Or doing it in such slow moving motions, that no one slightlv 2 hrs ago #6
The Minneapolis Times is an "alternative" publication whose main purpose Ocelot II 7 hrs ago #2
Lol Minneapolis Times come on WhiskeyGrinder 7 hrs ago #3
Peanuts from the nosebleed section Sweet Rosie Red 6 hrs ago #4
If she's whining to Liz Collin dflprincess 4 hrs ago #5

OldBaldy1701E

(11,292 posts)
1. "...pragmatic progressivism..."
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 05:23 PM
8 hrs ago

Another term for 'not changing anything that actually matters, or will affect my sociopolitical position in any way'.

slightlv

(7,848 posts)
6. Or doing it in such slow moving motions, that no one
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 11:12 PM
2 hrs ago

notices along the way... we've lived that for what seems like forever. It IS time for a change, and now is perfect for a reordering of our important priorities... helping the middle class and the poor. Building support systems like every other 1st world country has done since WWII. That includes all-inclusive healthcare and education. Both items I suspect this person would claim as "socialism." If so, I'm afraid I'm not on her side.

Trump has so flipped the norms and stripped the teeth from the Law, that now is the perfect time to put force back into the Rule of Law, set civil decency as the norm once again, and drag the Magas either into the 21st century or back under their rocks. We've got major problems in this country to solve. We'll need ideas from everyone to solve them. No one party has the answer to everything. If we can remember that and build bridges among us all, we might come out okay on the other end. But first and foremost has to be helping those who've been hurt worst by trump and his minions. The prioritizing of that group is going to be the first hard hurdle to jump. gods, what a mess this country is in. And that says nothing to what he's done to our foreign policy. I'll be long dead before this ship of state rights itself completely once again... and that's only if we can keep the majority of Repugs out of office! We've done it before; it can be done again. And I dearly hope the younger generations have the will, the strength, and the creativity to see it through. I just apologize for what we're leaving them; and hope dearly they know not everyone had a role in handing it to them. Many of us have worked decades trying to building something better and truer for them. We just got quashed by sheer evil.

Ocelot II

(130,842 posts)
2. The Minneapolis Times is an "alternative" publication whose main purpose
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 05:55 PM
7 hrs ago

seems to be to discredit progressives and push centrist Democrats. They aren't MAGA, but the cited interview with Marjorie Simon is with Liz Collin of Alpha News, which is MAGA. So there's that.

Sweet Rosie Red

(112 posts)
4. Peanuts from the nosebleed section
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 07:15 PM
6 hrs ago

Everyone has an opinion, whether based on fact or class bias. Marjorie Simon has never even run for political office, much less answered to a constituency or publicly discussed political/social/economic issues. Minneapolis Times describes her background as:

"Marjorie Simon, Minneapolis, holds degrees from the College of St. Benedict, and the University of Northern Colorado in Music Education. When vocal cord problems ended her band directing career, Simon switched to writing. She served as PR director for the St. Paul Winter Carnival, then an ad agency, before starting her own business. She’s won numerous awards at the state and international levels. Her work has appeared in publications ranging from Mechanical Engineering and ENR, to Better Homes & Gardens and many more.”
https://minneapolistimes.com/author/simonspraol-com/
Searching her name brings up no writing credits for any other publication. She did write an article for this publication last year, clutching pearls and whining about disorder at last year's DFL convention. Her article seems to derive substance from Roberts Rules of Order.
I see no reason why this person’s opinion deserves notice or discussion and question why it was deemed worthy of inclusion in this forum.

Anything that helps working families survive and spend time raising their children instead of working for a subsistence wage is deemed “socialism” by a certain type of person whose general attitude towards the great mass of humanity seems to be “I got mine, f88k you.” Certain other people delight in catapulting the propaganda into general awareness. Draw your own conclusions.

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