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Richard (RJ) Eskow

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Is Obama's Corporate-Friendly Approach Really "How Liberals Win"?

Posted: 07/05/2012 11:17 pm

Recently my friend and colleague Bill Scher challenged progressive critics of President Obama's conciliatory approach toward corporations with a New York Times op-ed entitled "How Liberals Win." Far from being "business as usual," Bill writes, "the Supreme Court's upholding of Mr. Obama's health care law reminds us that the president's approach has achieved significant results."

Bill argues that, critics notwithstanding, ours is not "a system paralyzed by corporations." He adds: "The most liberal reforms in more than 40 years have been brought about because Mr. Obama views corporate power as a force to bargain with, not an enemy to vanquish."

Sorry, Bill. I'm with those who have concluded that the Obama White House has failed, both pragmatically and politically, on a number of key progressive issues. In my view, believing otherwise requires an almost ahistorical view of liberalism. We can't preemptively limit the definition of "liberal victory" to whatever corporate interests will allow.

Wherever the truth lies, the road ahead is clear: We can't allow the radical right to take power this year. But we need to fight for results, not politicians, by building a mobilized and truly independent citizens' movement.

Young and Estranged

This is an important discussion, especially in an election year in which liberals should be terrified. A Romney Presidency and increased Republican control on the Hill would endanger much they hold dear, including representative democracy, our social safety net, and workplace rights. And yet the outcome of this election may depend on the ability to mobilize precisely those voters who believe, not unreasonably, that the Obama Presidency represents "business as usual."

That may not be easy. Youth voters helped propel Obama into office and handed Democrats the House of Representatives. But youth turnout was lower in 2010 than in the previous off-year Congressional election of 2006, meaning they'd been more turned off in the preceding two years than they had been turned on by Obama.

To be sure, they still favor Obama over "generic" Republicans by a wide margin. But a poll which otherwise bodes well for Obama shows that young voters' enthusiasm has diminished considerably since 2008.

Why? Here are some clues: Another poll shows that three out of four young voters consider unemployment a "critical" issue. Obama's jobs messaging was ambiguous for years, at best, promoting jobs-destroying deficit panic as he "bargained" with corporations and their political representatives.

Three out of four young people also believe our economic system unfairly favors the wealthy, while a plurality of them feels their generation will never achieve the American Dream reached by those who came before. The President's rhetoric has improved on these issues in recent months - but that's precisely because independent progressives and the Occupy movement refused to believe that dealmaking with corporations was a "win."

The Dispossessed

It's a similar story with middle-class voters who struggle with unemployment, stagnating wages and growing wealth inequity, retirement insecurity, lost home value, and tax laws which help the wealthy avoid paying their fair share. Who's speaking for liberals on the economy?

And let's be clear: By "liberals," what we really mean "most Americans." Take Social Security and Medicare: Poll after poll has shown that most Americans oppose their benefits to balance the budget. And yet, through his Simpson/Bowles Deficit Commission and on numerous occasions afterward, the President has opened the door to doing precisely that.

Most Americans want more government action on jobs, yet the President has offered only weak job proposals - and tempered even those with tax cuts that muddy his own message and lave the public confused.

As our own analysis showed, more than twenty million voters live in underwater homes. There, too, the President's corporate-friendly agenda has limited his ability to connect with disaffected voters. These homeowners have been tormented and exploited by the Administration's own HAMP program, which is now better known by the name "extend and pretend."

Obama's Wall Street-friendly approach may be netting him a lot of banker contributions again this year, but a recent poll shows that independents in crucial swing states believe the President has mishandled the mortgage crisis and isn't holding Wall Street bankers "accountable" for their role in the housing crisis.

And when it comes to taxing the wealthy, the President has opted for the milquetoast Buffett rule (Is that the most Warren Buffett should be asked to chip in - the same rate as his secretary?) rather than making the case for truly progressive taxation. On all of these key issues, the President's corporation-placating agenda has hamstrung his ability to connect with key voters the way he did in 2008.

Sure, the President's popular. But there's a difference between approval and votes. The difference is turnout.

Driving Turnout

There are two possible ways to get these voters to the polling booth: One is to convince them that the Obama Presidency has been a great liberal success. That's the approach taken by my friend Bill, undoubtedly because that's what he believes. Will that bring young voters, the unemployed, underwater homeowners, and other disenchanted citizens to the polls? That means convincing them that what looks like defeat - burdensome debt, foreclosed homes, prolonged joblessness - is really victory.

Good luck with that.

The other approach, which I believe is both more accurate and more effective, is to explain two very important things to them: that the GOP will cause enormous harm if it gains more political power, and that neither a President nor a party will fight for what's right - or even what's popular - without relentless pressure from an independent and mobilized activists.

It didn't have to be this way. Had the President made different decisions, these voters could have been energized over the last three and a half years by hearing clear and forceful arguments in their favor. He could have used his bully pulpit to explain the extent of Wall Street's crimes and then used his Justice Department to investigate them. By viewing "corporate power as a force to be bargained with," Obama chose instead to sacrifice the principle of "one law for all." That alienated voters while leaving our economy at risk.

But what's done is done. That means there are two ways to get out the progressive vote in November: either to pretend that the Obama Presidency has been a victory for progressive values, or to build a movement that will fight for deeper change.

Winning?

The health care bill which Bill touts as a liberal triumph is a perfect case in point. I don't envy Democratic leaders who must defend it against charges that it contains tax increases - because it does. Some of those taxes, like the surcharge on high earners, would actually be quite popular if the President chose to explain it clearly. Others are un-progressive, unjust, and unwise - and directly contradict the President's campaign promises.

The RIght's "big lie" of the week is its claim that the health bill contains "the largest tax increase in history." It's not even close, and its biggest increase is for those who earn more than $200,000 per year. But middle-class families will take a hit when the law raises the limit for deductible medical expenses to 10 percent of adjusted earnings, up from its current 7.5 percent. Rule changes for health pending accounts will also increase the tax burden for some middle class families.

And they weren't all the result of compromises with corporate power, either. A case in point is the excise tax on higher-cost health plans, which is based on ivory-tower economics and will punish people economically for belonging to health plans whose demographic cost drivers they can't control. he President aggressively fought for the unpopular excise tax - one of the few provisions he personally fought to include in the bill - despite campaigning against it in 2008.

Public Option, Private Deals

Then there's the individual mandate, which will affect very few Americans but will nevertheless impose a financial penalty on middle-class and lower-income people. The President asked for trouble when he jettisoned the public option early on in secret negotiations with for-profit health providers.

The public option (a Medicare buy-in for people under 65) was popular across the political spectrum - 51 percent of Republicans supported it, according to polling - and it provided a ready answer for Americans (liberal and otherwise) who were outraged at the idea of being forced to buy a private insurance product that offers inadequate coverage and lousy services at exorbitant prices.

That answer? You can always choose the public option instead.

Instead the President cynically chose to keep backing the public option publicly, long after he'd traded it away privately. But he did so in a lackluster manner that quickly made it clear to some of us that he had made some sort of deal with someone, somewhere. He damaged both himself and liberalism with this approach, by undercutting his personal credibility while failing to champion progressive principles.

The Right Proposes, The Left Disposes

The most direct message Obama sent to Congress as healthcare deliberations began was this one: "I am not the first President to take up this cause, but I am determined to be the last. "To cynical parliamentarians that sounded very much like this: I'll sign pretty much any health care bill you send my way.

The way in which the President got his health care bill passed - which mostly involved letting conservative Democrats parlay with Republicans, then failing to win Republican votes anyway - carried the seeds of troubles yet to come.

The end result was a bill whose key provisions were developed by the conservative American Enterprise Institute an enacted into law by Republican Governor Mitt Romney in Massachusetts.

Here's a question: Is it a liberal "win" if Democrats enact policies in 2010 that were first proposed by conservatives in 1993?

Medicare For Almost

Bill Scher points to legislative triumphs of the past, like Medicare under Lyndon Johnson, as proof that dealmaking with the powerful gets results. But Johnson never abandoned the rhetoric of liberalism, even when he sacrificed some of its goals in pursuit of the best achievable outcome. On far too many occasions Obama has abandoned that rhetoric.

The President has also treated progressives inside and outside his party with scorn that borders on contempt. "Sanctimonious," he called them, and "purists" who would be "without victories."

And yet, as some of us predicted at the time, a more "progressive" outcome would have been far more popular than the one he got. Obama's push for unpopular provisions like the excise tax wasn't politically expedient. It was the result of his own choices, by all the evidence, and not the product of political necessity. He owes the left an apology, and more attention to its advice, now that it has proved to be prescient on so many issues.

Obama's defenders defend the healthcare bill's weaknesses by pointing to the improvements made to Medicare since it was initially passed. But could those improvements have taken place if LBJ had dismissed their importance during Medicare's initial passage?

There's no evidence that the President tried to win liberalism's battles before trading them away for the sake of expediency.There are many ways to lose a battle, but the most important one of all is this: First you must try to win it.

The Long View

Something else is missing from the "How Liberals Win" approach: a long view of liberalism. Obamacare's a textbook example, since it was first proposed as a conservative alternative to "Hillarycare" (itself a cumbersome compromise with corporations) in the early 1990s.

Yes, its passage was "historic" in several ways, at least one of which was ironic: Had Democrats agreed to support this conservative proposal in 1993, when Republicans like Warren Rudman were introducing it in the Senate, it would be approaching its twenty-year anniversary.

That doesn't make it a bad bill or mean it's worse than nothing, but it illustrates something very important: While liberals focused on a narrow, short-term definition of "winning," conservatives took a longer view. As a result, conservatives have moved the national dialog radically rightward while liberals frantically shift their definition of "winning" accordingly. A "liberal win" is apparently now defined as the passage of a conservative proposal, as long as it's better than nothing and is signed into law by a Democratic President.

If this keeps up in a few years we'll be celebrating passage of the Romney/Ryan Medicare voucher plan as yet another "liberal win." Didn't America's seniors get something? And didn't a Democrat sign the bill?

The health care bill does some good things, but it also contains many flaws and weaknesses. Bill Scher's engaging in faith-based reasoning, as anyone does when suggesting that the outcomes the President got were the best that anyone could have achieved. Like most professions of faith, that statement can neither be proved nor disproved.

But even if it's true (which we doubt), these outcomes could have - and should have - been accompanied by stronger rhetoric, by clearer defenses of the good things that were being sacrificed and a pledge to work for them again in the future. That didn't happen, and we're all paying the price.

Parallel Universes

On issue after issue, President Obama adopted positions that would have been considered center/right Republicanism in previous decades: Over-emphasizing the urgency and importance of deficit reduction. Willingness to cut Social Security benefits to balance the budget. Minimal or destructive action regarding underwater homeowners. Claiming that "Wall Street and Main Street rise and fall together" while failing to investigate criminal bank activity. (And this list doesn't include civil liberties issues, since the topic is economics.)

Would a more progressive Obama be in a stronger political position today? That gets into alternate-history scenarios that can never be proved or disproved. He might have met with more corporate resistance to his agenda - although its hard to imagine much stronger resistance than we're seeing now, despite his many concessions - and his donations from Wall Street and other large donors would have undoubtedly been smaller. That's not trivial in this post-Citizens United world, and we understand that.

On the other hand, a truly progressive President Obama would presumably be enjoying the enthusiastic backing of the core voters who propelled him to the Presidency in 2008. Would a more progressive economic agenda have been a net political advantage? We can't know.

But isn't it about time a Democrat tried it? Clinton's corporate-friendly agenda including the repeal of Glass-Steagall and the deregulation of Wall Street. Obama's corporate-friendly agenda left his party vulnerable to a GOP attack on the left over Medicare, wounded his party's brand as the defender of Social Security, and tainted him as too cozy with Wall Street. How that workin' out?

And here's something we do know: The passage of better bills would have been better for the country.

The Way Forward

One thing is clear: Victory for liberalism cannot and must not be defined by the limits of what legislators can accomplish. Legislators operate within the realm of the politically possible, while independent movements change what's politically possible.

One of the President's greatest failures over the last three and a half years is that he chose to think like a legislator, not a leader. And one of liberalism's greatest failures was allowing so many people to identify with a leader, not with the principles and values that should be a movement's guiding star.

We can't change the past, but we can learn from it. We know that we need to think both short-term and long-term. We know now that electing persuadable politicians is the first step in the change process, not the last one. (Sure, re-elect them, as long as we can pressure them. But don't confuse tactics with strategies, compromises with goals, or politicians with ideals.)

Most of all, we know that we need a vigorous and truly independent movement - one that will speak to disaffected voters like the adults they are, mobilizing them with honest talk about the limits of elected leaders, the power of a engaged citizenry, and the perils of outsourcing ultimate accountability to any politician or party.

That, and not attempting to put a positive gloss on inappropriate compromises, is the way forward. That's the right path, and the pragmatic path, for liberals to take - this year, and in the years to come.

 

Follow Richard (RJ) Eskow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rjeskow

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Recently my friend and colleague Bill Scher challenged progressive critics of President Obama's conciliatory approach toward corporations with a New York Times op-ed entitled "How Liberals Win." Far ...
Recently my friend and colleague Bill Scher challenged progressive critics of President Obama's conciliatory approach toward corporations with a New York Times op-ed entitled "How Liberals Win." Far ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tuxter
The only thing we have to fear is, fear itself!
01:07 PM on 07/09/2012
Ding Ding Ding! You sir are correct! We have a winner! Thank you, Mr. Eskow, Keep up the good fight!
03:02 PM on 07/07/2012
Loved the post. I have been saying these things to my progressive friends for a year now. Obama has said that he admires Reagan for how he changed politics. I understand this point of view. When Reagan said, "Govenment can't solve the problem, government is the problem", he gave republicans their marching orders for a generation. 30 years later, we still can't shake that one. People reelected Reagan by a landslide because they believed in what he was selling and his leadership even created "Reagan Democrats." Democrats with Obama as leader on the other hand, certainly don't believe in traditional democratic values and I wonder if they even know what they believe anymore. Many progressives will vote for Obama not because they are inspired by the thought of another Obama administration but because there is no other alternative - have you seen any "Obama Republicans?" The point is - with these Republicans and this congress in general, we expect Obama to lose some battles - Reagan did - but we wanted him to at least honestly try. A couple of defeats would have galvanized progressives with an urgency not seen since - well, 8 years of Bush. Instead, even in an apparent Supreme Court victory on health care, progressives are running around in circles trying to figure out what's next while republicans are even more galvanized in the wake of what they perceive as a defeat. I will vote for Obama - I'm just not excited about it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alientotech
Twilight Zoning on "Bermuda Grass"
07:26 AM on 07/07/2012
well now that the president has found out how trying to play decent with everyone has been much of a no go, he can during his 2nd term go LBJ on them, however if Rom Rom and the Gigglys get it...oh well....stock up on the cannon balls
06:46 AM on 07/07/2012
Obama's corporate friendly approach???????

Look, Richard, I don't know what bottle you are drinking from, but it might be best to put it down.
04:23 AM on 07/07/2012
Excellent critique of an incredibly inadequate White House and "Liberal" leadership. Let me offer another example of the horrendous failure that is today's Liberal "victory": Obama supporters crowing about how Republicans wouldn't even support Obama's awful Grand Bargain/Catfood Commission even when he offered $10 in spending cuts for every $1 in tax increases. Think about that. You so-called Liberals saying this nonsense aren't listening to what you are even saying. You should be enraged that any such deal was even offered and should be loudly questioning the competency of any self-described Democrat offering said deal, not preening because you think you proved something! What is wrong with you??!! Obama is a weakling who has caved to corporate and Republican demands at every turn. Would you be crowing about Obama's "victory" today if they said "yes" and your safety net benefits were slashed for upper class tax cuts like his Catfood Commission wants?
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09:32 AM on 07/07/2012
F&F
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vincent Van Der Hyde
The truth will set you free.
01:23 AM on 07/07/2012
Liberalism is dead.
It was a creature of a form of capitalism, and capitalism has mutated into a new form, finance capitalism. The term 'Progressive' is meaningless; nobody can define what it means. It certainly is the old Progressivism of the 1920's and 1930's. And, what little real socialism existed in the U S from about 1875 to 1935 is also long gone. Now we have people who call themselves Democrats who are really Republicans, and people who call themselves Republicans who are really either religious fanatics or cretins.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
08:08 PM on 07/06/2012
"Youth voters helped propel Obama into office". WRONG, WRONG, WRONG. Obama won by 7M votes, and got a higher percent of white male voters than Kerry. Nader got 2.8% of the vote, that's the size of Progressives in the US.
Progressives didn't elect Obama, they can't elect anybody. And they are not the Dem party. Progressives ran Henry Wallace again Truman in '48, you ran Nader against Gore. Dems are the not the party of the Left, or Dems would hold no offices. Americans reject liberalism, this is a conservative nation. I voted for McGovern who ran on peace, Nixon on law and order. Nixon won every state but mine, MA. Stop living in a dream world. The US had segregation when I was a kid. This is a right-wing nation. Pretend otherwise, elect Repubs.

Independents elected Obama, who won because he promised to retain Bush tax cuts for all but top 2%, and because he promised to escalate the war in Afghanistan. Obama won because he's a centrist. Two Dems served only 12 of 40 years before Obama: Carter and Clinton. Both conservative, both from the Deep South. The liberals all lost, and always will.

The young don't elect anybody, old people do. And they don't like radical change, or liberals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
02:05 AM on 07/07/2012
Chazet2 Commented 2 hours ago
"Oh my. What you fail to see is how successful, as a movement,
and how mainstream, in values Progressivism is. And the
Democratic Party and US public have benefited from it. This,
when it comes to issues, isn't a conservative nation. We like a
5 day work week, Social Security, Medicare, and other
progressive programs. As for the Democratic Party, it has not
represented Progressive or mainstream values for some time.
Clinton was clearly not a Progressive, and set us up for the
economic collapse we now suffer by pursuing conservative
economic policies, something that the DNC believes is the right
path to ensure corporate sponsorship. I suggest your
revisionist rendition of what happened in 2008 is delusional."
04:35 AM on 07/07/2012
You have no idea what you are talking about. People vote for the man who looks like he believes in what he says. Republicans are full of beliefs, even if they are wrong or faked. Democrats don't seem to believe in anything and are willing to trade everything away for hollow victories in name only. One side picks the wrong direction and heads toward it with all due speed. The other side goes back and forth and in circles, hedging its way sideways. Like it or not, people like a direction. It's about time the Democrats decided on the right one and moved deliberately. Most discouraged voters are former Democrats tired of having to vote for a party that will never actually fight for its interests or those it says it represents. When you all decide to fight for real Democratic principles and hold people accountable for contradicting those principles, you'll have landslides.
jdave1
Mind like parachute: works best when open.
07:33 PM on 07/06/2012
I think that in good part what happened to President Obama was that he went into office honestly believing that people would work with him in good faith if he acted in good faith. Believing that the people would support him, not turn out in record numbers to elect him, then turn away. He let us down because we let him down. We can't let it happen again.
President Obama will be re-elected, I am sure of it. Whether you believe in him or not, you can't possibly believe in Mitt Romney. Mr. Obama has made mistakes and sometimes fallen short; he is after all, only a human being. But he believed in us and we let him down. He needs our help. Get the facts, be informed, write letters, make phone calls, vote. And don't stop after the election! Poll after poll says that the majority of us all want the same things. That's not surprising, good people want the same things. Fight for them, they won't be handed to you. Insist on them, claim your birthright as Americans. The Founders were so careful to protect freedom of speech because it is the best tool we have, the only tool we have. The few may be able to out spend us, but they can never out speak us. We only lose if we quit. Americans are not quitters.
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10:35 PM on 07/06/2012
U say, "Mr. Obama has made mistakes and sometimes fallen short; he is after all, only a human being. But he believed in us and we let him down."

Wow. Would have been so kind to Mr. W. Bush? Clearly W also made mistakes. But, he too is a human being.

BTW, before you attack me using the usual line of attack, I am not a Republican. I am a true progressive and am ashamed to call myself a Democrat anymore. Mr. Obama has converted the erstwhile Democratic party into a moderate Republican party.
jdave1
Mind like parachute: works best when open.
08:38 AM on 07/07/2012
Had no thought of attacking you. Of course it's BS.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
marco01
11:16 PM on 07/06/2012
He let us down first. Strong majorities of the public supported the Public Option, but the health insurance corporations won that argument - over the will of the people with the help of Obama. Members of Congress were fighting the good fight, even the leader of the Senate. He had over 70% of the people supporting the Public Option but he still went with the corporations!

That shattered my Obama love pretty good.
jdave1
Mind like parachute: works best when open.
08:39 AM on 07/07/2012
Disappointing? Yes. Less dangerous than Mitt Romney? Yes.
PROGRESSISGOOD
Without Economic Justice, There Is No Justice!
07:24 PM on 07/06/2012
This is one progressive who thinks corporate taxes should be completely eliminated. Corporations are not people, they should not receive political representation; and, therefore, they should not be taxed. Corporations waste more time and money trying to avoid taxes than they actually pay (9% of toal federal revenues comes from corporate taxes).

Instead, all of those taxes would flow through to the business owners who should be taxed on those monies at regular income tax rates. Fedral tax revenues would be higher, even the filthy rich like Romney pays a higher % on his capital gains income than do corporations on their profits; and, the corporations could put the time and money they previously wasted into productive activities.

The Republicans will not go along with this because they only claim to care about business. They really only care about protecting the wealth of the filthy rich. They would not take this bargain that completly eliminates corporate taxes if it means an increase in taxes for the filthy rich.
08:04 PM on 07/06/2012
dude, you have NO idea what you are talking about
PROGRESSISGOOD
Without Economic Justice, There Is No Justice!
01:44 PM on 07/09/2012
That is your rebuttal?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blackraisin
Life, Liberty, Property.
06:17 PM on 07/06/2012
Please Dems, please run more George McGoverns, more Jimmy Carters, more Walter Mondales, more Michael Dukakises, more Al Gores, more John Kerrys, more Bernie Sanders and more Nancy Pelosis. Clearly they are what the public demands.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
marco01
12:26 AM on 07/07/2012
You're right, we need more Nixons and Republicans running up the debt and increasing the wealth gap like Reagan, Bush l, and W did.

BTW, those guys and gal you listed rock; if we followed Carter's advice on renewable energy, we'd be in a renewable energy boom right now. It'd be great for the economy, all that energy wealth would be spread out and not going to just a few of the most obscenely rich and profitable corporations on the planet - corporations who also happen to find the science of global warming presents a severe threat to their bottom line. But it’s not these guys, no, it’s those greedy corrupt scientists, bunch of Dr Evils. Al Gore, he's a hero for trying to wake up the world about the very real threat of global warming. Anyone who denies the science of global warming is plain ignorant, you have no idea what you are talking about. You don’t know much about the process of science and you know nothing of the knowledge and professionalism of scientific field. Nothing but ignorant foolz spouting off about something you don't have the first clue about really. But conservatives like to do that a lot, your gut knows all apparently
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
06:08 PM on 07/06/2012
Corporations provide us with jobs, credit cards, mortgages, gasoline, cars, iPhones.
Obama is pro-corporate because voters are pro-corporate. Only socialists here can't see that.
08:06 PM on 07/06/2012
Corporations sell us all those things at a profit, and they operate to extract as much as possible from you and everyone else in so doing. Left unchecked, they would leave all of us destitute, and the planet a burnt out shell.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stanley Bonk
"mad, bad, and dangerous to know"
05:52 PM on 07/06/2012
Perhaps we need to get together with one another and make a political party that espouses our views and our views alone. European countries have explcitly named Labor Parties. We might go with that. A socialist party might also be accurate, but I have no doubt the corporate media would hunt us down and kill us if we tried. Look at what they did to the kids in OWS.

I like the idea of a Labor Party: A political party dsigned to have the best interests of working Americans of all stripes at its core. If you hold down a job or want to hold down a job, we're on your side. We should support the unions, which are the only real voice that American workers have, and they've been kneecapped in recent months, and work to strengthen them. We should also go after corporate malfeasance and criminal actrivity in the banking community and advocate for stiffer penalties and criminal convictions for such criminals. I'd suggest we push for a progressive income tax and get the 1% back to paying their fair share of the costs of running this government..
05:23 PM on 07/06/2012
Nope it won't.

Corporatists like the President have hijacked the Democratic party and are destroying it.

I want this election over, so REAL Democrats can start taking thier party back, or start a new party, either way, this will be the last election win for the Coprorate Party canidates.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert SF
03:15 PM on 07/06/2012
By viewing "corporate power as a force to be bargained with," Obama chose instead to sacrifice the principle of "one law for all."
===

I hope someone some day, perhaps Obama himself, will explain what happened. How did Obama go from revolutionary firebrand that had everyone convinced he was going to impose socialism to corporate poodle who can't do enough for the wealthy?
08:07 PM on 07/06/2012
He didn't. He was always a corporate poodle. And to be the best poodle he can be, and thereby extract maximum personal advantage, he had to get elected. So he did a lot of fancy talking, none of which he meant.
04:15 AM on 07/07/2012
Thank you. Took the words right out of my mouth. And at every turn, Obama has actually admitted he'll say anything to get elected but will tow the corporate line when in office. Remember his little lies about renegotiating NAFTA while telling Canada and Mexico he was just sayin' stuff? Or how about the Public Option we were told he supported while he traded it away and then afterward said he never supported?
JEP57
To the right of Genghis Khan
03:00 PM on 07/06/2012
"A Romney Presidency and increased Republican control on the Hill would endanger much they hold dear, including representative democracy, our social safety net, and workplace rights."

I notice the author didn't name any names of Republicans who want to tamper with of our democracy, gut our social safety net, or endanger workplace rights. Nor did he provide any actual quotes from them stating they wanted to do this. There may be some fringe politicians making radical statements somewhere but common sense budget cuts and not letting public unions soak the taxpayer isn't going to endanger anything except the status quo.
jdave1
Mind like parachute: works best when open.
07:14 PM on 07/06/2012
Karl Rove? Dick Cheney? Are those big enough names for you? Both have expressed the desire and intent to establish a "permanent Republican majority" in the nation. Republican Congressmen and state legislators all over the country as a whole have banded together to attempt to discredit and destroy anything proposed by the Obama administration. It is the obligation of everyone in government to work in good faith with whomever we the people send them. To refuse to do so is to abrogate their oath of office, and in many countries would be called treason.
08:08 PM on 07/06/2012
Uh, he did name Romney. I can name a Republican who wanted to gut our social safefy net: Bush, who announced he intended to privatize social security at the start of his second term.
04:24 AM on 07/07/2012
When Obama does it, I'm sure the same "liberals" will be telling us about how smart it really is.