When she ran for office in 2018, Porter realized that the wealth gap between most members of Congress and their constituents was almost guaranteed by the personal expense of the campaign. For a single mother, the extra child care costs created by the campaign was an enormous burden.
That year,
a record number of women ran for office,
exposing the need for more assistance for candidates who are also the primary caregivers in their families. 所以,
one of Porter’s first acts upon entering Congress was to introduce the Help America Run Act,
which allowed people running for Congress to use campaign funds for things like child care,
elder care,
and health care premiums,
parts of the care infrastructure that are particularly critical for single parents but important for anyone without considerable wealth.
Porter is, 当然,
not alone in that experience.
In law school,
she studied with Elizabeth Warren, WHO
grew up in a family where money was increasingly scarce.
Warren watched as her mother sought a paying job outside the home,
and as her parents traded the family home for something smaller and more affordable. 她, 太,
was briefly a single parent,
caring for —
and relying on the help of —
her extended family.
Warren would later funnel that experience into her fight for bankruptcy reform and consumer protections,
activism that led her eventually to the Senate.
As Warren’s example shows,
it’s not necessary to feel the pinch of inflation to fight for working-
and middle-class families. 她是, 毕竟, 也
one of the Senate’s millionaires.
But it is one thing to channel past experiences into policy, and another to actually experience scrimping and saving while in office. What Porter offers is the ability to say: This is happening to me, 马上, and it is having an effect on our constituents, 太. That’s a powerful voice to have in the room when the Democratic caucus meets.
The idea that personal experience is a valuable tool for policymaking is not limited to household budgets.
Several months ago,
Representative Cori Bush of Missouri for the first time publicly shared that she was raped and had an abortion.
Her revelation came in the midst of a House Oversight Committee hearing on abortion rights that was convened in response to new draconian restrictions on abortion passed by Texas this past fall.
在听证会上, 代表. Barbara Lee of California also spoke about her abortion at age 16, which took place in Mexico because the procedure wasn’t available in California at the time. Hearing their colleagues’ stories may not change Republican lawmakers’ minds, but they can have a real effect on the Democratic caucus as the party fights to secure abortion access at a time when the Supreme Court seems poised to overturn Roe v. Wade later this term.
Congress needs far more members like Porter and Bush,
who not only have a set of meaningful personal experiences,
but who are able to generate from those experiences an informed set of policy recommendations that would improve the lives of millions of Americans.
Elite apathy is a particularly dangerous condition now, 什么时候
faith in institutions has plummeted and extremist movements are feeding on feelings of frustration,
despair and resentment.
With more members like Porter and Bush,
the party can rely less on polling and more on experiences that make real the needs of ordinary Americans.