iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Joseph A. Palermo

Joseph A. Palermo

Posted: November 7, 2010 06:03 PM

On what set of national policies was President Obama anything other than a "centrist?" How many times did he "reach out" to Republicans? On the war in Afghanistan, education, health care, Wall Street reform, immigration, and climate change he bent over backwards to accommodate the opposition party. Yet the Republicans stiffed him on all accounts. Any pundit who advises Obama to "move to the center" must be required to define exactly what he or she means by "center."

The political "center" of American politics is a moving target. And for the last thirty years it has moved in only one direction: Rightward.

In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan moved the "center" in his direction with "trickle down" economics, deregulation, and stoked up anti-communism. In the 1990s, Newt Gingrich and Tom DeLay bettered Reagan by exploiting social and cultural issues and elevating the Southern wing. In the 2000s, George W. Bush shifted the "center" so far to the right he alienated many old guard conservatives. And now in the 2010s, John Boehner, Mitch McConnell, and the Tea Party are pushing it again. How far can they go? (Apparently pretty far.)

North Carolina Representative Heath Shuler, the leader of the moribund Blue Dog Democrat coalition, wants to oust Nancy Pelosi to become minority leader by claiming that the 2010 midterm elections showed that the Democratic Party must "move to the center." But Shuler, like the pundits, hasn't defined what he means by "center." If the Democrats in Congress follow people like Shuler they're heading right down the primrose path to political irrelevancy.

In 2008, Obama's compelling personal story for a time captured the imagination of millions of Americans. But the coalition of voters that swept the Democrats into Congress and Obama into the White House was as fractured and fragmented as anything else in American society. Overlooked in the pageant of electing America's first black president were other significant factors that played into Obama's victory such as the weakness of the Republican ticket, Bush fatigue, and the effects of the economic collapse. We learned that other public figures have compelling personal stories too; people like Bobby Jindal, Nikki Haley, Sarah Palin, and even John Boehner.

When the history of the Obama presidency is written a key theme probably will be how wrong and naïve millions of people were in 2008 when they thought electing the first black president in American history might signal the beginning of a new attitude about race. On the contrary, before Obama was even sworn in the white multitudes on the Right became thoroughly unhinged. The over-the-top reaction to Obama from the Tea Baggers, Fox News, Glenn Beck, and other components of the Far Right echo chamber, which featured stories about birth certificates and Muslim influence, exposed the persistent racism in American society that cuts deep down to the bone and into the marrow.

In 2010, Republican candidates ran campaign ads targeting Latinos and Muslims, as well as depicting Obama in ways that played upon the color of his skin, all of which tested the boundaries of "acceptable" levels of racism in our political discourse.

But it's a different kind of racism than the old Jim Crow variety. It's an Internet age, postmodern racism that is fractured, fragmented, and multivalent. It can even be consistent with "multiculturalism." When a Latino Republican operative, Robert de Posada, thinks he can get away with running campaign ads (in Spanish and English) urging Latinos to "send a message" to the Democrats by disfranchising themselves, servitude to the Republicans' electoral interests became an "oppositional" expression of "protest." It's a weird manifestation of "multicultural" racism. Similarly, the blatant tokenism of Michael Steele's appointment to Chair the Republican National Committee along with all those anti-choice Republican women ("Mama Grizzlies") who have nothing but contempt for the vast majority of women who don't earn $75,000 per speaking engagement, illustrate the new racism and sexism. And don't forget the Log Cabin boys and Ken Mehlman and David Dreier and Lindsey Graham and Mary Cheney. (They even have a "working-class white male" signifier called "Joe the Plumber.")

The Far Right has learned to use "identity politics" to great political effect. This turn of events makes all the hand-wringing during the 1990s about the perils of postmodernism and multiculturalism seem quaint. Back in the '90s, even a giant among liberal historians, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., felt compelled to write a book lamenting the divisiveness of "multiculturalism" titled: The Disuniting of America. Alan Bloom, author of The Closing of the American Mind, could never have imagined how thoroughly the "multiculturalism" he saw as so threatening to conservatives would be co-opted and put to great use by his ideological soul mates.

In today's high-octane capitalist environment where commercial advertisers slice and dice American society into thousands of different "target demographics" -- cutting us up into subdivisions (and subdivisions of subdivisions) based on gender, race, age, religious affiliation, consumption habits, region, hobbies, brand loyalty, educational level, Internet hits, and so on - any "Grand Narrative" about the mindset of "the American people" quickly breaks down. This fragmented social reality, especially as refracted through the corporate media, is one of the reasons why opinion polls of voters' preferences on specific issues, like Social Security or Afghanistan, cannot be squeezed neatly into a story line that supports either political party. And there's no simple interpretation of the 2010 midterm elections that transcends these polarized, disparate, and artificial social categories and groupings.

Electorally the problem is even more complex: an extremist Supreme Court ruled that it's in America's interest to give more power over our political institutions to giant corporations; the Chamber of Commerce and all the other slush fund factories that are overflowing with corporate cash have skewed our politics even more toward the interests of the rich and powerful; and Fox News, right-wing talk radio, and the echo chamber largely define the political debate. Countervailing forces like labor unions have been beaten down over the past thirty years and in today's context of high unemployment have been made weaker still. If the "Grand Narrative" the Republicans are now constructing were true they wouldn't need all the subterfuge, money, and political legerdemain, they'd just open their doors and "the American people" would willingly rush in. And with the Republicans' 600-plus newly-won state legislative seats, along with their thirty governorships, they will be able to gerrymander at least 190 congressional districts. Democratic state governments will only be able to draw up about seventy.

No one could foresee how thoroughly the Republican Right would absorb, appropriate, and co-opt identity politics and multiculturalism by putting forth their own Clarence Thomases, Robert de Posadases, and Sarah Palins (blacks, Latinos, and women who are opposed to any piece of legislation or social policy that might benefit blacks, Latinos, or women). Combine this identity politics with the postmodern manipulation of political language, where words mean anything the rich and powerful want them to mean, and there could be a realignment over the next few election cycles that ushers in a very long period of direct oligarchic corporate control over our nation's governing institutions.

Back in the 1960s the Democratic Party did the right thing by shedding its racist segregationist wing. But a quick look at today's electoral map shows those same elements were welcomed into the waiting arms of the GOP. The Democrats kicked the bigots out of their "tent" and in the process cemented what might be the most important structural advantage the Republicans have.

Contrary to Beltway speculation, the Tea Party and the GOP leadership are not going to fight a "civil war"; their shared hatred of Obama and desire to maintain power will unify them. Sure, there will be times in the 112th Congress when the right hand doesn't know what the far-right hand is doing, but their squabbles will be minor and easily resolved by simply reminding members of the Republican caucus how much they all despise Obama. The lengths to which the WASP-GOP-Tea Bag coalition has gone to destroy the Obama presidency -- even when he has shown that he has been a "centrist" all along - exposes something deeper in American society. All of the "multicultural" education that the Right found so threatening in the 1990s has apparently achieved very little. The country is as racist as it ever was.

And all of a sudden the costs of presidential trips are being scrutinized after Internet crazies floated the lie that Obama's trip to India was going to cost $200 million a day. CNN deserves some credit for debunking this myth, but the episode is just the first shot in a new level of scrutiny of the Obama White House. Soon Representative Darrell Issa and other congressional Republicans are going to make the Clinton impeachment look noble for its comity. It's kind of amazing that people claiming to be "Tea Party Patriots" have such little respect for the office of the presidency. And where were these people when Bush wasted all that money landing on the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln for his flight-suited photo op?

Some wags have christened the midterms "the Fox News election" because it appears to be the fruit of a two-year, highly-focused effort from Rupert Murdoch's right-wing media empire to destroy Obama and his party. The Republican rout is just step one toward winning monopoly power for the GOP. But for the sake of maintaining the legitimacy of the two-party system Fox and friends must construct their own version of the perfect Democratic Party to fit the needs of the modern GOP. It would be a Democratic Party that plays a role similar to the one that Alan Colmes used to play on Sean Hannity's show: a hapless, ham-handed, interlocutor incapable of winning an argument. The "opposition" party would be placed there conveniently to make doomed, feeble attempts to articulate the "liberal" position. It would be an ersatz "debate" like we see on Fox every day with a predetermined "winner" and "loser." Joe Lieberman has been trying to help Murdoch accomplish this goal for years.

This kind of rump Democratic Party that would serve to solidify Republican one-party control like it enjoyed from 2003 to 2007 can only come into being with the help of Democrats who are touted as "moderates" and "centrists" who offer their full agreement and consent to the biggest pieces of the Republican agenda, such as tax cuts for the rich, aggressive wars abroad, deregulation, slashing social programs, and institutionalizing corporate power in all of its manifestations no matter how damaging to society. Lazy press commentators, Blue Dogs, and others who call for the Democrats to "move to the center" are facilitating this outcome.

 
 
 

Follow Joseph A. Palermo on Twitter: www.twitter.com/N/A

 
 
  • Comments
  • 273
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (6 total)
12:55 PM on 11/10/2010
If you remember from news clips right after Obama was elected, Republicans said from the very start that they were committed to making him a one-term president and would do whatever it took to make that happen. There was never a middle ground to find, as they would have (and did) reject every and any effort he made to reach across party lines.

Although no Republican would admit it, there were plenty of concessions made on the Democratic side.... why do you think so much of Obama's original base are disappointed with him now? They think he sold out. The sad part is that he angered his base and got nothing in return for those bipartisan efforts. The next two years will have a lot of grandstanding and political theater, but ultimately be nothing more than a stalemate.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rifraf1001
03:45 PM on 11/10/2010
Hey Tara. :) Yes a lot of people who voted for Obama are upset that their expectations have not been met in practice. I recall well that Obama was honest in his campaigning that he wanted to usher in a post-partisan era in American politics that would focus on really addressing the grave issues facing us all. Unfortunately he was elected at a time in history when politics are about as partisan as they have been in history. Obama tacking “right” may help him win some of the true center vote, but it will do nothing to abate the determination to thwart and destroy his presidency among Republicans and the right wing. The last election illustrates that that will produce apathy, if not opposition, among progressives.

The author notes one reason that the far right really freaked out as soon as Obama won the election. Locally I was hearing racial epitaphs about Obama from the moment he was elected. More to the point though, and the reason for the unrelenting monied opposition to Obama, is that he threatened a real reversal in direction. It has now been more than thirty years of corporations and the upper end economically having just about everything [as far as taxation and regulatory policy] go their way. No surprise that they immediately went into a full court press to stop any reversal.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
irisisland
04:21 PM on 11/09/2010
The center has moved so much to the right that, today, Reagan would have to be democrat.
06:09 PM on 11/08/2010
Racism is just the tool used to distract and divide people from the wholesale theft of the average American's tax dollars the all the rest of us of everthing in order to finance their never ending greed and self indulgence. Its time to stop identifying the tool as the problem rather than looking at what the tool is always used to accomplish. What the tool was invented to accomplish not just here and now but throughout history whether by gender, color, race, ethnicity, religion, or what have you. Stop missing the forest for the trees. It's what they want. Racism is just one tree planted in the forest of weapons the few use against the many. Once the 95% stop fighting amongst themselves for the biggest victim award, maybe they can focus on going after the real issue and the real villians. They might happen to be mostly old white guys in this country but they come in all shapes, sizes and color around the world. This is bigger than America, the malaise of its democracy, or racism. Its about wealth. Always has been, always will be. The only color that matters is the color of money. Never forget it. The villians don't.
03:54 PM on 11/08/2010
I disagree 100% with Palermo's understanding of the Center.

Peggy Noonan got it right with her yardstick analogy. The left is so far to the left that they think the center is at the 30" mark.

When Obama agreed to anything to the right of 30", the left thought he was selling out.

Impossible to meet in the middle.

And oh yeah, enough of the racial politics already. Please.
10:25 PM on 11/08/2010
Let us talk of red blood spilling for no good reason and the desire for outreach, unity, and bipartisanship that was looking forward and not backwards. Let us talk about single-payer health care versus the reality that is compromise with people who hate you and who hate America (though they claim otherwise). Let us talk about continued outreach while one is called a socialist, while ones religion is questioned, while one is called a foreign entity of lesser quality...while ones blood is seen as the water for the tree of liberty. Let us talk of silence on the Right while slander, pander, and propaganda raged.

"And oh yeah, enough of the racial politics already. Please."

I agree, and also enough of kicking people in the behind and telling them how they should say -- ouch! Enough of getting rich through rape murder and theft and then outlawing the practice once wealth accumulated. Enough with hypocrisy that concerns itself with the economy -- but all while outsourcing was raging, all while illegal war was manufactured, all while cronies and homies were being paid under the table, in the alley, and on battlefields far, far, away -- silence was golden and very American.

The middle is an impaled fence walker. I could care less about the passage of watered down legislation. I am for courage in the face of the faux and progress is shining a light on the problem for surely it is dark up in this US of A.
12:34 AM on 11/09/2010
"And we believe that when countries and cultures put aside old habits and attitudes that keep people apart, when we recognize our common humanity, then we can begin to fulfill the aspirations we share. It's a simple lesson contained in that collection of stories which has guided Indians for centuries-the Panchtantra. And it's the spirit of the inscription seen by all who enter this great hall: ‘That one is mine and the other a stranger is the concept of little minds. But to the large-hearted, the world itself is their family."

This is the story of India; it's the story of America-that despite their differences, people can see themselves in one another, and work together and succeed together as one proud nation. And it can be the spirit of the partnership between our nations-that even as we honor the histories which in different times kept us apart, even as we preserve what makes us unique in a globalized world, we can recognize how much we can achieve together."
President Barack Obama
http://www.in.com/news/current-affairs/fullstory-jai-hind-full-text-of-obamas-parliament-speech-16166673-7aab90e4bfe3f42e0aa0fa9a442701e211fa8c8b-rhp.html
photo
Lorindol
I shall consider it . . .
01:57 PM on 11/09/2010
F&F.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Beyrak
03:26 PM on 11/08/2010
Obama was elected more of a way for America to tell themselves and everyone else they are not racists, not that they agreed with Obama's liberal policies. If Obama does not move to the center, and the center is getting more right as everyday passes, he is a one term president. The novelty has worn thin.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TheRevV
My micro-bio is microbial.
03:23 PM on 11/08/2010
You're wasting a lot of time typing, Mr. Palermo. Eric Cantor is on record saying the only way Pres. Obama can get gov't to operate is to do 100% what Repubs propose, or else they'll shut down gov't (like the ch!ldren they are). There can be no center when one side is completely unwilling to work. "My way or the highway" is NOT how to govern, and allows for no center. Especially when that "way" is protect the top 2%, sch!ll for big corporations, and cut every social program that helped make America great.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
02:19 PM on 11/08/2010
"In today's high-octane capitalist environment where commercial advertisers slice and dice American society into thousands of different "target demographics" -- cutting us up into subdivisions (and subdivisions of subdivisions) based on gender, race, age, religious affiliation, consumption habits, region, hobbies, brand loyalty, educational level, Internet hits, and so on - any "Grand Narrative" about the mindset of "the American people" quickly breaks down. This fragmented social reality, especially as refracted through the corporate media, is one of the reasons why opinion polls of voters' preferences on specific issues, like Social Security or Afghanistan, cannot be squeezed neatly into a story line that supports either political party. And there's no simple interpretation of the 2010 midterm elections that transcends these polarized, disparate, and artificial social categories and groupings."

Sums it up nicely.
02:05 PM on 11/08/2010
Whew....finally been catching up to what I've been saying since 08....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DJleary
01:58 PM on 11/08/2010
Stop blaming the Republicans and/or the color of Barack Obama's skin. He's as much white as he is black for whatever that matters......BO is solely responsible for where he stands today!
President Obama has totally alienated his base of support and failed to win the respect of the opposition. He's toast!
He surrounded himself from day one with the same old hacks and cut backroom deals.
To cut to the chase.
That ain't CHANGE. I can't even claim it appears like a mock attempt to even look like the intention to affect change.
2012 is going to be much worse for this president and the democrats than 2010.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
PunKinPai
Tact is just not saying true stuff. I’ll pass.
02:58 PM on 11/08/2010
Don't you have a rightwing site to tro// at now?
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
satanlite
Liberal blogger
05:09 PM on 11/08/2010
I tend to agree. He's got two years to show a "change". I wonder if he's up to it.
01:52 PM on 11/08/2010
Are you kidding? He and Pelosi reached out to Republicans? They didn't even reach out to us Moderate Democrats that put him in office!!!!!!!
photo
joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
01:50 PM on 11/08/2010
When thinking clearly no longer helps, perhaps it's time to stop thinking.

One wonders what the point is.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/08/opinion/08krugman.html?_r=1&src=me&ref=homepage

The stage is set for pain. There will be extraordinary pain. Those with the power to avoid it have left the room. The jackalls and insects have overtaken the dying carcass of America. It is not a wonder that Zombie themed stories movies and television are popular as they reflect our time well.

I had so hoped that we could plot a new and brighter future time line. I still nurture that hope. Yet it feels that it's time to hide the embers in a cave now.

I appreciate your efforts Joseph. Yet the tidal wave will not be stopped. As many as will ever know or admit the truth, know it now. Buckle up. We are in for some rough riding.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Marcospinelli
an old liberal Democrat, a 'New Deal'-Democrat
01:48 PM on 11/08/2010
Dylan Ratigan, Glenn Greenwald, and Cenk Uygur talked the day after the elections last week about the Obama presidency, progressives and the Democratic Party. 

Watch it and see if you don't agree:

Part 1 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRpK_ANpTvM

Part 2 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMUx6Bt6qVg
01:32 PM on 11/08/2010
A solid propaganda piece if ever there was... strange...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
02:13 PM on 11/08/2010
How so? This guys a political historian. What are your credentials?
02:56 PM on 11/08/2010
Credentials - hmm, okay so he's an semi-educated propagandist. The article clearly shows a blatant denial of anything center. Seriously, how can someone claim any credibility whatsoever with statements like "On what set of national policies was President Obama anything other than a "centrist?" How many times did he "reach out" to Republicans?

If this past election did not convey the resounding rejection of the “national policies”, what does? Then attempt to qualify such a statement by implying Obama-Reid-Pelosi gang even contemplated reaching-out for anything other than our wallets, is stretch even for a fiction writer.

The man should have at least some self-respect…
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
PunKinPai
Tact is just not saying true stuff. I’ll pass.
02:59 PM on 11/08/2010
No credentials needed on the right...just ideology.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rendy Bee Mulyono
Someone with constant stream of
12:56 PM on 11/08/2010
Not only is it a moving target, but "center" in 2010 does not exist, since "center" can only be reached if BOTH side of the aisle is ready to compromise. Nov 2 to the election day is a CAMPAIGN preparation. Obama should focus on job creation and little else that requires GOP approval. Pass whatever policies that can be passed without GOP, but focus on JOBS.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mwilbur137
Political Junkie/Intellectual Elitist
01:57 PM on 11/08/2010
Unfortunately, in an Ultra-Capitalist economy such as ours, the President does not have the power to create(many) jobs; that is the job of the Private Market.

The Private Market is sitting on jobs in order to exert its authority over the Government.

The Recession and lack of job-creation is an intentional act of arrogance and defiance by The Market…because The Market has grown too powerful to be controlled, or even slightly scolded, by national governments.

This “Left/Center/Right” argument is merely, and has always been, a distraction from the destruction of our entire system of governance.

The Age of Nations may be coming to a close.
Welcome to the New World Economic Order.
photo
TurnToTheLeft
We have nothing to lose but our chains.
12:33 PM on 11/08/2010
Most incisive and brutally true article I have read in the last two years. Middle aged people of color "get it." Unfortunately most young people of color have bought into the "post racial" myth - they are more interest in reality show fame and tattoos than the now harsh political realities.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
PunKinPai
Tact is just not saying true stuff. I’ll pass.
03:00 PM on 11/08/2010
This middle-aged white woman gets it too, big time.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
satanlite
Liberal blogger
05:10 PM on 11/08/2010
And this middle aged white guy gets it too.