By Will Beaman
Democratic endorsement politics around Zohran Mamdani continue to bend in ways that feel at once familiar and strange. A spokesman for House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries brushed off Senator Chris Van Hollen’s endorsement with a Trumpian dismissal—“Chris Van Who?” Meanwhile, Governor Kathy Hochul published an endorsement in the New York Times, listing disagreements with Mamdani before endorsing him anyway. On The Rachel Maddow Show, Kamala Harris endorsed “the Democrat in the race” without naming Mamdani, and then pivoted to other contests.
These are not the same kind of gesture. I stay with these moments because they carry a larger question: how do gestures get taken up—shutting rooms down, or opening them—when the stakes are fiscal and political at once? Jeffries’s move is not an endorsement with qualification; it is the refusal of endorsement as such. It puts allies in deliberately vulnerable positions to flip some of them into collaborators with a loyalty regime. The result is an anemic, fractured coalition—a few battered yes-people, and almost no one else. The core misread is methodological, not personal: under this anti-democratic habit of leadership, responsibility to a coalition—with its conditions, accountabilities, and shared decision paths—registers as disloyalty. Conditional support is treated as a threat to hierarchy rather than a way to coordinate. A gesture that could organize co-governance is read as an attempt at sabotage. And here the comparison turns uncanny: collaboration with an unaccountable party apparatus works the same way as the Trump regime—leaders manufacture precarity to flip partners into collaborators, preserving access for some while starving everyone else.
Hochul and Harris are doing something else. Yes, their endorsements are calculative and cynical. At the same time, they provide a repeatable model for the Democratic coalition to mobilize on some basis other than Trumpian loyalty. Both are improvising here, but their improvisations are conditioned by a shifting field of shared playbooks within the coalition. First, the usual patterns of withholding that Jeffries and Schumer tried to deploy against Mamdani failed to break his campaign’s spine of cross-endorsements and shared priorities. And crucially, warm endorsements from NYC Comptroller Brad Lander and Sen. Elizabeth Warren—leaders who were in tension with the Sanders campaign in 2020—offered a frame Hochul and Harris could follow: name the differences and endorse anyway. In practice, that creates promises—concrete commitments others can attach their work to. If either leader later reverts to withholding or loyalty tests, the channel they opened will close quickly; if they carry the tension, the partnership becomes sturdier. Because these invitations run across difference—across factions, geographies, and idioms—the mobilization they enable routinely outscales what any single actor’s allegedly scarce political capital can buy from loyalists or a cult of true believers
The Paradox of Political Thrift
In the early years of the Great Depression, economist John Maynard Keynes diagnosed what he called the paradox of thrift. The more that private investors tried to save money by withholding investment, the more impoverished everyone became—and the more dire their calculations for what awaited them on the other side if they did invest. Caution, when universalized, deepened the crisis it meant to avert. Keynes is remembered as a proponent of “deficit spending” in emergencies. The real man was more complicated, but the intuition is simple: what looks like prudence from an individual’s balance sheet can become ruinous in aggregate. Public investment, viewed as deficit spending from the standpoint of the cautious investor, was in fact surplus creation for the public as a whole. From the macro perspective, savings were not depleted but provisioned by spending.
Call the present moment of democratic weakness and collaboration a paradox of political thrift. The hoarding of endorsements—treated as a form of scarce political capital rather than a renewable public surplus—has steadily weakened the immune system of democratic politics. Party leaders mistake coordination for power, conditional support for risk, and coalition itself for debt. These are the political implications of austerity thinking. It recasts the party’s health as a matter of personal thrift: save your endorsements, save your reputation, spend only on the safe bet. The result, as Keynes would have predicted, is contraction. Each act of withholding tightens the circle until only the most loyal remain, and loyalty replaces shared responsibility as an inflexible medium of governance.
The alternative is not reckless spending but collective investment—deficit spending from the point of view of party elites, surplus creation from the point of view of the coalition. Endorsements, acknowledgments, and small public acts of co-governance are the political analogs of public investment: they create openings for new work to begin. They are promises, not withdrawals. Where austerity politics hoard recognition, coalition politics extend it; where machine politics imagines scarce political capital, the coalition practices renewable credit.
Debt or Credit?
Political gestures work this way: not as the disclosure of hidden loyalties, but as reversible stagecraft. In past writings, I have referred to the famous drawing that looks like a duck or a rabbit. That reversibility is not unusual or a trick. It is how coalitions move—how people who do not agree on everything still act together. We often read polyvalence as insincerity, or worse, as a dog whistle. Dog whistles exist; they are the manipulative, irresponsible form of polyvalence. But polyvalence itself is an ordinary and even essential feature of public life.
With that in view, consider two ways of reading. The dialectical tradition, following Marx, registers multiplicity as contradiction and seeks transformation by staging contradiction as untenable. A dialogic reading (in reference to the literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin) mediates multiplicity without synthesis so that multiple voices remain usable at once. The dialectical tradition sharpens opposition to achieve transformation; the dialogic tradition sustains tension as a productive reversibility that enables coordination. Read dialogically, the gestures of Hochul and Harris are reversible in their meaning—both hedge and partnership. Our task is to set up the board for partnership.
This reversibility move applies to public finance. As Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) reminds us, the very existence of money means that an issuer somewhere is in a deficit position equal to the money that exists. But the same accounts can be read forward as capacity, if we think from the perspective of the world. What is moralized as debt functions as credit: it comes from nowhere and it authorizes collective endeavors. There is no essence of money to be revealed. To borrow another term from Bakhtin, debt or credit—duck or rabbit—is “unfinalizable” because it lives in dialogue.
Holding both readings in view is not an equivocation. It is a maneuver that widens the field of action so that the debt reading can be reconstructed as credit—from backward-looking guilt to forward-looking capacity.
Two theoretical inheritances pull us toward the debt reading. First, a dialectical reflex—when generalized to money and obligation—reduces money to capital and commodity production. In that frame, credit is read as an exploitative claim on future labor that keeps people ensnared in commodity production—in short, credit is read as debt. Politics becomes a long accounting of labor in service to capital rather than shared work in and for one’s community.
A second inheritance comes from what might be called philosophies of difference, from Nietzsche to post-structuralism. Here, notions of obligation and responsibility emerge from the retroactive moralization of some real or perceived injury and persist as regimes of control. Visibility and recognition amount to categorization and surveillance. It is a powerful way to see domination, but it detains the present in a fabricated past of sin and debt with no possibility of repair at any sort of scale.
The dialogic course moves differently. It neither compresses contradiction into a single resolving line nor dissolves it into fragments. It holds tension so people who disagree can still act together. Money is read forward as capacity rather than backward as guilt. Interpreted from a dialectical horizon, this may look like a retreat from conflict or synthesis. It is not. For philosophies of difference, this may look like an attempt to detain immanent generativity in a top-down idiom of capacity. It is not. Reading money as credit rather than debt reorients obligation from forced detention in the past to newly visible capacities and responsibilities that organize repair in the present.
The Politics of Receivability
In the most conventional explanations of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), money is considered receivable because the state requires it for taxes, fees, and other obligations—by threat of force. Historical accounts of this happening in colonial contexts appear to corroborate Nietzsche’s account of money as the arbitrary imposition of debt through violence. But publics do not only take up money (or any other public symbol or gesture) because they are threatened with violence; they also do so because they can coordinate their lives with them.
In that broader sense, ‘receivability’ names how acts are staged so they can be taken up across disagreement and still carried forward. The “we differ, but I still endorse” formulation leaves the difference in place while delivering partnership—not unity by erasure, but coordination through what many can accept and act on together.
What matters is not only that reversibility exists, but that the range of live readings can shift. The hedged endorsement that might once have landed as cynicism alone now works as a coordinating gesture. The mocking dismissal that might once have been shrugged off now registers as sabotage. These are not accidents of personality; they mark a change in what the coalition can take up. I call this a credit event—not a literal event, but a shift in reading practice that reorganizes time: it rereads the archive, widens what counts as usable partnership now, and opens near-future moves.
The Archive Reopened (2008–Present)
Read through this dialogic framework, today’s Democratic endorsement politics permits us to reread the last two decades as rehearsals for two political tendencies: one that engages leaders in accountable coordination, and another that yearns for leaders who model exemption from accountability.
Looking back to 2008, we can see that Barack Obama’s coalition brought together multiple ideals of democratic renewal. For those politically marginalized in the Bush and Clinton years that Obama brought into the fold, the campaign promised a more democratic and inclusive relationship between politicians and their base. For many white supporters anxious about their position and identity amid global economic changes, the campaign offered a script of redemption and innocence through post-racial politics. At the same time, Obama’s operation prototyped a digital organizing hub that choreographed small-dollar giving alongside small-labor contributions—house parties, phone banks, canvasses—staging the campaign as a collective production that would persist in different forms and venues for years. These were not just fundraising tools, but early formats of distributed coordination.
The public backlash to the Great Financial Crisis and the administration’s handling was fractured between these voices inside the coalition. The small-d democratic wing of the Obama coalition concerned with reform responded to disillusionment with demands for accountability. Occupy Wall Street brought “the 99%” thrown under the bus for financial elites out in public to testify to their existence. Black Lives Matter held the Democratic Party accountable for its continued investment in mass incarceration, calling on politicians to say the names of Black victims of police violence who are normally rendered nameless through rituals of criminalization. Emerging campaign choreographies of time and effort were repurposed to serve movement infrastructures of accountability and care.
At the same time, the politics of white innocence and colorblind redemption that brought many into the Obama camp broke down with the destruction of its longest standing symbol: homeownership. Libertarian movements like the Tea Party and spectacles like Cliven Bundy’s 2014 armed showdown with the federal government rejected social responsibility as government overreach on behalf of a parasitic underclass. Libertarians were less concerned with the daily government overreach enacted through police violence, redeeming “blue lives” as a protected class to be showered with resources and shielded from accountability. Outrage news cycles, list-building, and direct-response fundraising fused into a grievance-validating infrastructure—less about coordinated volunteer labor, more about converting outrage into pledges of loyalty and cash on demand.
The 2016 Democratic primary surfaced these dynamics inside the Democratic coalition for the first time post-Obama. What was expected to be a coronation for Hillary Clinton became a surprisingly competitive contest with Bernie Sanders, whom Clinton and her backers cast as disloyal to the party—missing that his base viewed that stance as a virtue. As with Obama’s 2008 outsider bid against Clinton, the Sanders campaign carried both an inversion of Clinton’s inside/outside loyalty politics—flipped but not deconstructed—and an impulse toward co-governance and accountability. When Black Lives Matter organizers disrupted campaign events, the Sanders operation was reluctant to move beyond a colorblind, class-reductionist posture. Some Sanders supporters questioned why he was being critiqued at all when Clinton’s “tough on crime” record was so much worse for BLM’s priorities. Meanwhile, the campaign’s small-dollar model and mass volunteer phone/text banks widened the sense that a campaign could run entirely on recurring public contributions—money and labor—pledged and renewed like a wartime bond drive. And beneath these campaign practices, the organizations that emerged in its wake—Our Revolution, Justice Democrats, the Democratic Socialists of America, and the Sunrise Movement—became contested laboratories for coalition politics. From this mosaic, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and later Zohran Mamdani emerged.
The Clinton campaign, for its part, adopted BLM’s moral vocabulary as a ritual of white exculpation—direct identification with Black Americans in place of accountable commitments. “We face a complex set of political challenges,” Hillary Clinton tweeted in February 2016. “They’re intersectional, reinforcing, & we’ve got to take them all on.” Sensing this was not working, Barack Obama told the Congressional Black Caucus gala in September 2016 that it would be a “personal insult” if Black voters failed to turn out for Clinton. In the end, one-sided appeals to loyalty did not work. Depressed Black turnout proved instrumental not only to Sanders’s loss in the primary but to Clinton’s loss in the general.
Trump’s 2016 campaign recognized the increasing centrality of innocence, exceptionalism and grievance to the Republican base. The campaign hijacked existing forms of horse-race punditry, crisis reporting in media and learned helplessness among politicians in the face of sublime economic forces to flip the usual rituals of emotional blackmail and crisis staging used to discipline party fringes into pageants of humiliation and coerced loyalty. The result was the institutionalization—through Trump—of a right wing social project to dispense permission and innocence to supporters in return for their loyalty and identification, shored up by conspiracy theories and a constant churn of internal enemies to humiliate. Now, in Trump’s second term, old habits of neoliberal governance fully co-opted to stage routine fiscal chokepoints around “finding the money” as mob-style shakedowns designed to flip liberal institutions into servile collaborators.
Biden’s 2020 campaign reactivated the language of democratic renewal, promising to “restore the soul of America” and inviting citizens to see themselves as participants in collective repair. Yet the familiar pattern returned: once in office, the administration treated accountability as disloyalty. Progressive organizers and digital creators who had been courted as partners were cut off when they criticized Gaza policy, climate inaction, or the decision to seek a second term. Biden’s refusal to hold Trump accountable for January 6 and his enthusiastic support for the genocide in Palestine against cries and pleas from Democratic voters collapsed whatever high ground that administration had into a loyalty cult without a following.
With the collapse of any hope for accountability, campy irony emerged as an affective genre for sustaining investment in Democratic politics. “Dark Brandon” stylized the gap between the real Biden and the one voters needed—an ironic fantasy of competence and backbone conjured by the coalition itself. It was not a cult of personality but a collective experiment in franchising charisma—a conditional line of credit that Biden misread as unconditional devotion. The same misreading repeated with Kamala Harris’s “brat summer,” when lighthearted camp energy from online publics was read as uncritical fandom instead of a playful rehearsal of participation and possibility—redeemable at the polls only through accountable politics. Harris ignored the Uncommitted campaign, reading its demands for a seat at the table as disloyalty. Why should Harris be held accountable for her position on Gaza, party loyalists asked, when Trump is so much worse? From this perspective, “Brat Summer” and the Uncommitted campaign were two faces of the same durable structure: a coalition reclaiming and regulating its political investment in franchised form, with conditions and obligations extended to authority figures.
All of this brings us to the Mamdani moment, in the eye of a national authoritarian takeover. Where other Democratic leaders mistook provisional star power for personal greatness, Mamdani has treated it as a platform for shared authorship. His campaign’s citywide #ZcavengerHunt and ongoing Zetro Card do more than “energize”—they choreograph specific commitments with dates, thresholds, and roles, turning attention into work others can pick up. The games make visible what earlier cycles only hinted at: affect, credit, and coordination can be provisioned locally; recognition is not a prize but a relay. Participation comes with responsibilities leaders must meet, and when they do, the channel widens. Read this way, the campaign has begun to map a different circuit from Trumpism’s pageants of loyalty and punishment—a coalition loop that converts coalition demands into campaign promises, promises kept into usable capacity, and spent capacity into a renewed franchise on larger terms. These habits already function like fiscal authority franchised from the middle—authority that works because publics have rehearsed in advance how to receive, carry, retire, and re-issue it.
Fiscal Insurgency and the New Finance Franchise
Viewed in hindsight, these democratic rehearsals of small-dollar and small-labor capacity can be read as fiscal policy with a different and complementary issuance structure—a new finance franchise. The finance franchise was coined by legal theorists Robert Hockett and Saule Omarova, to describe the public–private architecture of modern money. In their account, chartered banks and licensed financial institutions operate as state franchises of monetary authority. Like a restaurant franchisee carrying a parent brand’s guarantees, banks extend the public’s credit under license. The upshot is simple, but radical in its implication: Every bank loan is a public issuance routed through regulated (even under the guise of deregulation) agents—an institutional foundation that grounds Modern Monetary Theory’s claim that all money is public and boundless before it is private and scarce.
The theoretical framework and reconstructed history developed here points to a new finance franchise with an expanded view of causality and new horizons of possibility. It lives not in sovereign power, but in a rehearsed public capacity extended to political leaders: a franchised authority to mobilize a coalition for assigned roles and responsibilities, renewed and enlarged periodically with demonstrations of courage and accountability. Like the legal finance franchise, it creates credit ex nihilo—not by ‘finding the money’ but by staging credible promises and work to match. Unlike legal sovereignty, however, it does not rest on an originary act of exception that renders money as debt. Sovereignty appears, like debt, as a gloss: a retrospective claim laid over authority that is, in practice, dependent, coordinative, and provisioned in common.
In this expanded sense, the finance franchise is polyvocal and contested. Every contribution, canvass shift, or meme drive carries a small piece of public capacity, rehearsed in advance of formal institutions. Where traditional fiscal policy moves through budgets and appropriations, these unofficial circuits move through commitment and follow-through. And there are multiple formats that do not necessarily align: when Democratic leaders read loyalty politics into franchised accountability (as with Jeffries’s refusal to endorse, or with Biden/Harris treating activism as disloyalty), the channel stalls. When leaders read conditional solidarity into those same formats (as with Hochul’s “we differ, I endorse” and Uncommitted’s posted conditions), the channel opens. The difference is more substantial than tone—it is the whole format.
These coalition habits—small-dollar subscriptions, shared volunteer work, conditional endorsements—already coordinate fiscal capacity from the middle. The task now is to formalize and extend them.
Blue Bonds and Solidarity Bond Drives
One logical extension of the new finance franchise is what Money on the Left has called Blue Bonds. Blue Bonds refers to ordinary municipal bonds, framed politically as credit to coordinate public life despite Trump’s attempts to sabotage it rather than debt held by the private sector. A progressive city comptroller could invest public pensions in Blue Bonds, undoing the early neoliberal gesture that tied them to Wall Street. Whether bonds are treated as the debt duck or the credit rabbit is a live political question. A post-Trump government could simply retire the bonds at an appropriate time or convert them to other kinds of public assets—because they would have served their actual purpose: keeping democracy funded and public employment steady, not enriching the private sector. And in the meantime, a national bond drive for democracy would stabilize Blue Bonds for years to come.
The popular enthusiasm for small-dollar giving that defined the Sanders and Warren campaigns, and that continues to sustain countless local initiatives through ActBlue, already points in this direction. The same public that sustains campaigns with recurring small dollars is well-positioned to sustain bond drives that keep services running when federal support is sabotaged. When supporters contribute to causes that act visibly and accountably, they are not merely donating—they are underwriting capacity. Blue Bonds would formalize that same logic as democratic fiscal infrastructure. They would transform sporadic enthusiasm into lasting commitment, turning the habits of coalition politics into enduring instruments of public credit. A solidarity bond drive makes that commitment legible: it tells the story of how communities can fund their own continuities when national politics stalls.
Complementary Currencies and Swap Lines
Locating the finance franchise in the rehearsed capacities of our civil society makes informal circuits of public provision visible everywhere. Complementary currencies are a more structured format that puts these circuits in dialogue with official fiscal circuits more broadly, foregrounding receivability—where are credits usable and for what?—as a live political question. Money on the Left has written at length about expanding the Zetro Card, university-issued “Unis”, and all manner of coalition credits for Democratic Socialists of America and other organizations. To the extent that credits can be receivable for local taxes (as with progressive local governments), basic goods and services (as with municipal vendors and private businesses) or pathways to institutional opportunities and responsibilities (as with coalition organizations), the coordinative capacity of that fiscal circuit is expanded.
The governing principle of complementary currency is thus not separateness from the dollar, but what high finance calls “swap lines”—practices of conversion and receivability between fiscal circuits that preserve their distinctness while enabling coordination at scale. Just as central banks maintain swap lines to stabilize currencies without forcing them into uniformity, coalitions can establish all kinds of reciprocal arrangements between campaigns, unions, schools, clinics, and local governments. Such arrangements build on the same pluralism that defines a healthy democratic coalition—diverse idioms and responsibilities held together by mutual recognition rather than a single rule. They make visible a plural fiscal landscape and provide a language for the coordination that we practice every day.
Published by