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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Special Report -> 
Political novice Ocasio-Cortez scores for progressives in NY
    2018-06-29  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

SHE has never held elected office. She is still paying off her student loans. She is 28 years old. “Women like me aren’t supposed to run for office,” Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said in a viral campaign video released last month.

They certainly weren’t supposed to win.

But in a stunning upset Tuesday night that ignited the New York and national political worlds of the United States, Ocasio-Cortez, a Bronx-born community organizer and member of the Democratic Socialists of America, defeated representative Joseph Crowley, a 19-year incumbent and Queens political stalwart who had not faced a primary challenger in 14 years.

Crowley, who is twice Ocasio-Cortez’s age, is the No. 4 Democrat in the House of Representatives and had been favored to ascend to the speaker’s lectern if Democrats retook the lower chamber this fall.

Now the Democratic nominee in the diverse 14th district, following her win, she faces Republican candidate Anthony Pappas in November’s midterm elections. If she wins — in what is a traditionally Democratic district — she would dethrone Elise Stefanik, a Republican representative from upstate New York, as the youngest woman ever elected to Congress (Stefanik was 30 when she took office in 2015).

“I’m an organizer in this community, and I knew living here and being here and seeing and organizing with families here, that it was possible,” a visibly shocked Ocasio-Cortez said in an interview at her victory party Tuesday.

“I knew that it was long odds, and I knew that it was uphill, but I always knew it was possible.”

The daughter of a Puerto Rican mother and a Bronx-born father, Ocasio-Cortez earned a degree in economics and international relations from Boston University but worked as a waitress and bartender after graduating in 2011 to supplement her mother’s income as a house cleaner and bus driver, according to The Intercept.

Her father, a small-business owner, had died three years earlier of cancer. After his death, her family fought foreclosure and her mother and grandmother eventually moved to Florida.

She dabbled in establishment politics during college, working for Edward M. Kennedy, a Democrat Senator of Massachusetts, on immigration issues, but soon turned her attention to the grass-roots work that would come to define her candidacy.

Returning to the Bronx after graduation, she began advocating improved childhood education and literacy, starting a children’s book publishing company that sought to portray her home borough in a positive light, according to a 2012 article in The New York Daily News.

The importance of education had been instilled in her from a young age: As a child, she was sent to school in Yorktown in Westchester County because of the dearth of quality schools in the Bronx.

She returned to national politics when she worked as an organizer for the 2016 presidential campaign of Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent candidate from Vermont. But even then, the idea of one day seeking office herself seemed unattainable.

“I never really saw myself running on my own,” she told New York magazines this month.

“I counted out that possibility because I felt that possibility had counted out me. I felt like the only way to effectively run for office is if you had access to a lot of wealth, high social influence, a lot of dynastic power, and I knew that I didn’t have any of those things.”

But if Ocasio-Cortez has, overnight, become the face of progressives’ hopes for ousting not only Republicans but also moderate Democrats who they see as insufficiently outraged about President Donald Trump, her bid against Crowley predates the anti-Trump backlash that has fueled what many see as a “blue wave” across the country.

She has credited her decision to seek office with her experience protesting at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in 2016 against the Dakota Access Pipeline. Soon after, she was contacted by Brand New Congress, a newly formed progressive organization that asked her to run.

Ocasio-Cortez, who has called for Medicare for all, tuition-free public colleges and the abolition of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, made her underdog status the central pillar of her upstart campaign.

In her bid against Crowley, she was unafraid to foreground race, gender, age and class. When Crowley sent a Latina surrogate to debate Ocasio-Cortez last week, citing scheduling conflicts, Ocasio-Cortez blasted him on Twitter for sending someone with a “slight resemblance to me.” She attacked Crowley for taking corporate money, for not living in the district and for looking increasingly unlike the constituents of the Bronx and Queens he was elected to represent.

“These communities have been so ignored,” she said in an interview with The New York Times earlier this month.

“What other leaders or what other choices does this community even have? For me, I just feel like it’s a responsibility to show up for this community.”

She has joined activists in Flint, Michigan, calling for safe drinking water, and traveled to the Mexican border this past weekend to protest family separations of migrants outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency detention center in Texas.

“We have families and communities here [in the 14th district] from Ecuador and Colombia, Bangladesh, [South] Korea, Pakistan, and I see them every day, many of them are very scared about what’s going on,” she said. “With my campaign, in terms of immigration, we’re trying to say, ‘Hey, we’ve got your back.’”

Like Sanders, Ocasio-Cortez made her rejection of corporate donations and reliance on small donors a rallying cry for supporters; nearly 70 percent of her campaign funds came from individual contributions under US$200.

“Not all Democrats are the same,” she said in her May campaign video, adding — her voice rising with emotion — that a Democrat who “doesn’t send his kids to our schools, doesn’t drink our water or breathe our air cannot possibly represent us.”

“Congress is too old,” she told a reporter from the website Elite Daily. “They don’t have a stake in the game.”

Following her victory Tuesday evening, Sanders said: “She took on the entire local Democratic establishment in her district and won a very strong victory. She demonstrated once again what progressive grass-roots politics can do.”

Cynthia Nixon, the former “Sex and the City” star running for New York governor, described Ocasio-Cortez as the “future of the Democratic Party.”

“Alexandria and I are joining together to take on the old boys club, rejecting corporate money and running people-powered campaigns that envision a progressive New York that serves the many, not just the few who can afford to buy influence,” she said.

Crowley on Tuesday night congratulated his rival on her victory, and promised to support her this November. In a statement, he warned the United States could “lose the nation we love” if Ocasio-Cortez and other Democrat nominees failed to win back the House from Republicans.

Before Tuesday’s victory catapulted her to the front of the political conversation, Ocasio-Cortez seemed to find readier audiences with outlets such as Elite Daily, Mic or Refinery29 — websites most often associated with millennial and female audiences — than with traditional publications.

“I’m hoping that this is a beginning,” Ocasio-Cortez said at her victory party Tuesday. “That we can continue this organizing and continue what we’ve learned.”

Still, shock seemed to be the predominant emotion at Ocasio-Cortez’s party Tuesday. “Oh my God, oh my God,” she said as she realized she had won, her hands flying to her mouth and her eyes widening.

Throughout the night, as more and more people flooded into the packed Bronx pool hall, Ocasio-Cortez was trailed by a swarm of reporters, supporters and campaign staff clamoring for hugs, selfies or just a glimpse of the woman behind a feat many had considered impossible.

She added: “I hope that this reminds us of what the Democratic Party should be about, which is, first and foremost, accountability from the working-class people.”

(SD-Agencies)

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