US tech futurist Andrew Yang, upending 2020 White House race 
https://news.yahoo.com/us-tech-futurist-andrew-yang-upending-2020-white-033356218.html?hl=1&noRedirect=1

 

 Michael Mathes
 
 ,AFP•August 31, 2019
 

 
 US tech entrepreneur Andrew Yang, the son of Taiwanese immigrants, has gone 
from virtual unknown to one of the 10 Democratic hopefuls who made the stage 
for the party's third presidential debate, set for September 12, 2019 (AFP 
Photo/ALEX EDELMAN)
More
 
 Washington (AFP) - Tech entrepreneur Andrew Yang may not become the next US 
president, but the clear-headed futurist has mounted a surprisingly vigorous 
White House bid centered around his plan for universal basic income.
 For the past year, the son of Taiwanese immigrants has crisscrossed early 
voting states like Iowa, calmly but convincingly telling whoever will listen 
that the automating away of some four million jobs in America's heartland 
helped elect President Donald Trump.
 Yang's message is part dark warning -- the rise of the machines is real -- and 
part clarion call for solutions to cushion the blow in an era of massive 
transformational change.
 His campaign has gone from a long slog convincing skeptical voters about his 
pledge to provide every American adult with $1,000 a month, to a solid run for 
the Democratic nomination that few saw coming, and which puts him in the next 
nationally televised debate with nine other Democrats.
 Yang, 44, has seen his crowds, once numbering a few dozen people or fewer, 
nudge into the hundreds, sometimes 1,000-plus, and readily sits for interviews 
with conservative commentators, leading to broad cross-party exposure.
 While he has described himself as the opposite of Trump -- "an Asian guy who 
likes math" -- he is eager to woo Trump supporters, especially working-class 
white men anxious about their diminishing socioeconomic status.
 Come September 12, Yang will be the only non-politician on the debate stage, 
standing alongside political giants like former vice president Joe Biden and 
Senator Bernie Sanders.
 People have taken notice, including SpaceX and Tesla Motors founder Elon Musk.
 "I support Yang," Musk tweeted August 10, a succinct seeming presidential 
endorsement from a highly visible global entrepreneur.
 Yang, whose go-to outfit is a sport coat, dress shirt and no tie, has never 
held elected office. He is relaxed and direct, a skilled explainer beholden to 
no political camp.
 One year ago he was a political nobody. By February he was the novelty 
candidate. Today he is outpolling three sitting US senators, a current and 
former congressman, and the mayor of New York.
 "People started catching on to the fact that I was proposing solutions, not 
sound bites, and that we can actually start solving the problems on the 
ground," Yang told AFP in Iowa at a Democratic dinner.
 "I'm identifying things that politicians only occasionally pay lip service 
to," like rising rates of suicide and depression, and declining US life 
expectancy.
 His campaign raised more than $1 million from small donors in nine days 
following the second debate July 31.
 - Yang gang -
 The unlikely nature of Yang's candidacy -- "Random Man Runs for President," 
read one magazine cover -- has only elevated his stature.
 "Once they hear about him... they love him," said Tom Krumins, a 25-year-old 
in South Carolina who once worked for Venture For America, the Yang-founded 
non-profit training thousands of young professionals to work for US start-ups.
 "As that support continues to grow and as he continues to build his visibility 
online and in-person presence, he's going to take it by storm."
 Yang has released several dozen policy prescriptions, including an ambitious 
$5 trillion outline to battle climate change.
 But his signature plan provides every American 18 and over with a $1,000 
monthly "freedom dividend," no strings attached, to counter automation 
pressures which he says could cause one third of all Americans to lose their 
jobs in the next 12 years.
 Republicans blast the proposal as socialism. But Yang notes that a version of 
universal basic income has long been in place in conservative-leaning Alaska, 
where residents get government checks, funded by state oil revenues.
 He says his dividend could be funded through consolidating certain welfare 
programs, implementing a value-added tax, and hiking taxes on top earners.
 Not everyone is sold, including the liberal Sanders, who said he prefers a 
federal jobs guarantee.
 "I think most people want to work," Sanders told Hill TV this week. "Part of 
our humanity is when we are productive members of our society."
 Other party rivals have ignored Yang, even as he presented sharp answers in 
the second debate, when he warned that "wall-to-wall robots," not undocumented 
workers, were stealing away US jobs.
 "Immigrants are being scapegoated for issues they have nothing to do with in 
our economy," he said.
 But he raised eyebrows when he bleakly pronounced: "We are 10 years too late" 
to confront climate change.



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