
The leader of the Congressional Progressive Caucus sent a message on Wednesday to corporations that are hiking prices on American consumers at the gas pump, the grocery store, the medicine counter, and elsewhere: âWeâre going to come after you.â
In an interview with Common Dreams shortly after the CPC unveiled its New Affordability Agenda, Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas) said he believes American voters across the political spectrum are hungry for a concrete policy platform that takes aim at the corporate forces driving price increases across the economy, from the for-profit utility companies raking in huge profits off the backs of struggling families to oil titans reaping massive windfall gains thanks to war-driven oil price surges.
âLook, I smell blood in the water,â Casar said of the current political moment, marked by rising public anger against corporate price gouging thatâs fueling the nationâs cost-of-living crisis.
âLetâs take this opportunity to finally build a new consensus within the Democratic Party that we should be uninvited from those lobbyist dinners and instead do what the voters are asking us to do,â added Casar, who is partnering with Rep. Josh Riley (D-NY)âa swing-seat representative and member of the centrist New Democrat Coalitionâon a new bill to crack down on utility giantsâ price increases.
Thatâs just one element of the CPCâs new 10-plank agenda, which aims to unify Democrats behind a set of popular policy demands ahead of the 2026 midterms. The agenda includes legislation to challenge the pharmaceutical industryâs monopoly control over medicine production, confront price-fixing schemes by large grocery chains, profiteering by oil giants, and prohibit unlimited election spending by corporate groups and billionaires hell-bent on maintaining the status quo that enriched them.
âI welcome their hatred,â Casar said of the corporate forces standing in the way of the affordability platform, in a nod to Franklin D. Rooseveltâs famous line.
âIn my lifetime,â Casar continued, âa populist anti-corporate message has not been the priority of most of the Democratic Party, and this has to be our chance to change it, because the past has failed us. And thatâs why we have this new agenda.â
Casar stressed that the 10th and final plank of the New Affordability AgendaââGetting Big Money Out of Politicsââis critical because âcorporations being able to buy politicians and buy elections is a huge driver of whatâs made things more expensive.â
The plank calls for passage of Rep. Summer Leeâs Abolish Super PACs Act, which would cap contributions to super PACs at $5,000 per calendar year. Super PACs, an outgrowth of the Supreme Courtâs notorious Citizens United decision, can currently raise and spend unlimited sums on political campaigns, giving them massive sway over elections.
Casar said Leeâs bill would effectively render super PACs âuseless, and no different from any other PAC.â
âThere are going to be a lot of corporate interests who just want Democrats to say the word âaffordability,â but not do much about it. And we have to recognize itâs been many of those corporate interests that have gotten us into the problem here in the first place,â Casar told Common Dreams. âWeâve got to have a plan that wins over the voters, because I would rather have the voters than the money.â
âThis is our chance to move the party. We canât wait until weâre in the majority to start taking on these interests.â
The bills that make up the CPCâs agenda stand no realistic chance of passage as long as Republicans control at least one chamber of Congress or the presidency. This is true despite the popularity of the progressive platform among voters across the ideological spectrumâincluding among those who backed President Donald Trump in the 2024 election.
New polling by Data for Progress shows that every plank of the New Affordability Agenda won âmajority support from at least 3 in 5 voters.â Among Trump voters, the CPCâs proposals to guarantee at least two weeks of paid vacation to all full-time workers and combat price hikes by for-profit utility companies enjoy at least 75% support.
The broad appeal of the policy agenda makes sense, said Casar, given that much of it grew out of âprogressives doing town halls in Republican-controlled districts where voters say that theyâre already sick and tired of Trumpâs lies, but they want to know whether the Democratic Partyâs really going to fight for them.â
âWe need to fight against Trump, but we need to do more than that and fight against the big corporations that are screwing you over,â said Casar. âTrump voters and progressive voters want to see us crack down on the utility companies that are jacking up your bills. They want to see us crack down on Big Pharma, which is driving up the cost of prescription drugs. And so weâre using this agenda to say that Democrats have to get away from big donors and fancy parties and start doing something to take on the billionaires and corporations who are ripping people off.â
The New Affordability Agenda is already facing some opposition with entrenched elements of the Democratic establishment, such as the corporate-funded centrist think tank Third Way. Jim Kessler, the groupâs executive vice president for policy, told The New York Times that âthereâs obvious things to do on affordability that they ducked,â such as repealing Trumpâs far-reaching tariffs. (Casar responded that âof course progressives have been for getting rid ofâ Trumpâs ârecklessâ tariffs.)
The Times reported that Kessler also claimed the CPC agenda was missing âmore ambitious changes necessary to reduce costs, such as overhauling regulations.â
âI understand that corporate funded think tanks have to try to say something negative here,â Casar replied, âbut [Kessler] didnât sound like he opposed anything in the agenda.â
The criticism from Third Way underscores another obstacle in the way of enacting the New Affordability Agenda, even if Republicans are swept from power: corporate-friendly congressional Democrats.
Asked if the CPC agenda has garnered support from the upper ranks of the Democratic Party, Casar said he is âtalking to leadership and rank-and-file members about changing not just our message, but also our priorities as a party.â
âThis is our chance to move the party. We canât wait until weâre in the majority to start taking on these interests,â said Casar. âWe have to organize across the party to get all kinds of Democrats onto these bills. We have to campaign on these ideas and then push to get them on the House floor and passed next year under a Democratic majority.â
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