With Biden In Place, The ‘Resistance’ Tries To Pivot From Defense To Offense

Members of Virginia’s Herndon-Reston Indivisible group take part in a protest in front of the White House on Aug. 6, 2018. With former President Donald Trump out of office, progressive groups are turning their focus.

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When Ezra Levin and his wife founded the progressive group Indivisible in 2016, they widely circulated a handbook on “resisting the Trump agenda.” It took tactical lessons in grassroots politics from the Tea Party, which had prominently resisted President Barack Obama’s agenda.

There’s another lesson Levin now thinks progressives can take from the conservative Tea Party: that it’s easier to oppose a policy than to advance one.

“We saw this from the Tea Party themselves during the Obama years,” he said. “After Obama lost his House majority and then the Senate majority, the House passed a repeal of the Affordable Care Act literally dozens of times.”