I'm not sold with the new slogan and it's once again promising things they have no control over.
Excepting the viciously fought minimum wage laws which have much better chance changing locally than something national passing beyond small increases that don't even match inflation, politicians have basically NO direct influence over wages. They have basically NO influence over job numbers. (Despite that being a major section of grading on the rubric these days.) And I'm glad they think they can predict the future, but I don't have any faith in that.
Democrats are just taking "things people are worried about" and saying "We'll do them better." Which is complete bullshit marketing.
You're also entering an era where it's irresponsible to promise these things. "Better jobs." Are simply not there anymore. EVERYTHING is getting automated from the assembly line worker, to the truck driver, to the middle management office worker. The "Better jobs." Are few and far between and generally centered around automating even more of the workplace or ensuring that automation keeps running smoothly by keeping everything oiled and fixing things other people break. (People who will be replaced with machines soon enough because they keep breaking things.)
So what are we left with now? Basically just the jobs that are outward facing. People in general still prefer to interact with other people. We've basically become the secretaries for the machines. Taking messages and passing on the agendas that people want the machines to do. Interpreters, trying to convert "what a human wants." Into "what a machine can understand and do." And basically just filling in the spaces where humans and machines just can't yet interact all that well. (As nice as roombas are, all it takes is for me to leave a pair of pants laying on the floor and it, at best misses half the room, and at worst gets tangled up and breaks.) Robots just aren't all that great at dealing with the chaos that humans disperse, just yet.
Granted, it's not 100% yet... I'd still say it may not even be majority yet in most sectors. But in some sectors it's approaching total takeover by machines and most there's significant growth that can't be ignored. People keep saying that "The jobs will just move elsewhere. People will find something else to do." But it's not that simple. And it's certainly not guaranteed.
This isn't something 20-30 years down the road anymore. Not something you see in a crazy black and white thing from the 50s or 60s of a "kitchen that does all the work for you" the sort of thing that's fun to watch but never expect to see in your lifetime. This isn't "off in the future." This is happening now. It's been slow and steady and sneaking up on us across human history. But we're near the finish line now and it's broken out into a sprint. Kids in school now will probably run straight into it as they graduate.
But that's far too much that probably deserves to be in another thread.
My point is that Democrats are promising things which are pandering and irresponsible. This is no better than Trump promising a wall because the right is afraid of Mexicans. This is just democrats promising something that they can't follow through on and won't likely help even if they did manage to do something with full support of government.
I get it... pandering is how you win elections. People do have to vote and don't often like hearing that what they want isn't best for them. But it's also downright scummy to promise these things like they're actually going to help. Like they're actually significantly better than what we already have. That patching the holes in the lifeboat is at all going to help when they've forgotten to untie it from the Titanic.
But once again. Typical politics. 'tis why I don't support either party.