Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton met privately with Black Lives Matter activists after an event Tuesday in Keene, New Hampshire. It was the latest sign the movement has injected itself into the 2016 presidential race.
The movement, which formed in the wake of last year’s racially charged protests in Ferguson, Missouri, has already disrupted speeches by two other 2016 Democratic hopefuls — Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley — and it was only a matter of time before they targeted Clinton.
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While the Black Lives Matter movement’s confrontational tactics have been controversial, their impact is unquestionable. Pressure from the movement has led all three leading Democratic candidates to put out comprehensive criminal justice reform plans. The candidates have woven racial justice into their stump speeches, uttered the words “black lives matter” in public events and said the names of African-Americans killed by police.
It’s just one example of progressive grassroots activists shaping the 2016 Democratic primary, with candidates often responding to priorities set by the movements. At a time when general election success will be determined largely by the ability of candidates to turn out Democratic base voters, activists can convince candidates it’s in their best interest to support liberal causes. And that’s especially true for Clinton, who wants to show she can unite the Democratic Party behind her.
On Monday, Clinton rolled out a $350 billion college affordability plan that included a proposal for debt-free public college.
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The former secretary of state has long talked about college affordability. During her 2008 presidential campaign, she would ask audience members to shout out their student loan rates. But advocates believe her recent plan is much bigger, came sooner in the campaign cycle and was made a higher priority than it otherwise would have been without their pressure.
Clinton now promises to make college affordability a centerpiece of her campaign, along with criminal justice reform, which she discussed in the first policy speech of her campaign.
Debt-free college is a new idea that rocketed to the top of the progressive agenda at lightning speed. The term was on few peoples’ radars until the liberal think tank Demos published a widely shared white paper on the idea in September.
The Congressional Progressive Caucus endorsed the idea in the spring, followed by some liberal senators. “I’m hopeful that debt-free college is the next big idea,” New York Sen. Chuck Schumer said in April.
Now, all three leading Democratic candidates have adopted the idea. “For months, [Progressive Change Campaign Committee] members and think tank Demos engaged presidential campaigns on this issue. Together with allies, our organizing in Congress and early presidential states put this idea on the map — and shifted the 2016 debate,” said Adam Green of the PCCC, which led debt-free college advocacy efforts.
Last year, facing the prospect of a largely uncontested Democratic primary, many progressive groups realized they had to do something. Their goal was to push for the most progressive nominee possible, whether it meant pressuring Clinton to move to the left or supporting an alternative like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, whom some groups tried to draft into the 2016 race.
The battlefield is between Clinton’s ears, some activists quipped.
While the groups used different tactics, and are often not in in cooperation with each other, the effect on the 2016 field is notable. The result is a presidential primary field that is decidedly more progressive on a person-for-person basis than the one Democrats were presented with the last time they had to choose, in 2008.
“If you had any doubt that the populist, progressive Warren wing is the driving force in the Democratic Party today, the emerging competition among Democratic presidential candidates to establish the biggest, most comprehensive plan to tackle student debt should erase it,” said Charles Chamberlain, executive director of Democracy for America.








