Now Comes
The Hard
Part
By David
Michael
Green
27/06/08
"ICH"' -- - People
all over the
world – and
certainly no
less
progressive
Americans –
are trying
to take the
measure of
Barack Obama.
The previous
and coming
few weeks
will be a
good, though
not perfect,
moment for
doing so.
I have long
believed
that the
winner of
the
Democratic
nomination
in 2008
would be the
winner of
the
presidency.
With
Newsweek now
reporting a
fifteen
point
polling
spread
between
Obama and
McCain, that
is looking
more and
more true.
Moreover, my
guess is
that this
year, like
most, the
Electoral
College math
will magnify
that gap
even
further. I
have
contended
for some
time that
Democrats
are going to
have a giant
year (or,
more
precisely,
Republicans
are going to
be fiercely
spanked),
all down the
ballot,
ranging from
dogcatchers
up to
senators and
governors. I
expected
that the
presidential
race might
be a bit
closer than
those
others, but
even that
may not be
true.
Of course,
everything
can change
in a day,
let alone
four months.
Just ask
Mike
Dukakis, who
entered his
year’s
summer with
about a
seventeen
point
advantage
over George
Bush the
Elder, and
proceeded to
get stomped.
Dukakis was
one of the
earliest
swiftboat
victims,
back before
there even
were
swiftboater
political
assassins,
per se, and
of course
the
Atwater/Rove
machine
destroyed
him
mercilessly.
He never
seemed to
know what
hit him, and
he certainly
never fought
back.
Neither
condition
seems likely
to apply to
Obama,
however –
particularly
the latter.
That great
hissing
sound you’ve
been hearing
for some
time now is
the energy
going out of
the
regressive
right
movement,
including
the funding
and support
from the
hired guns.
Not only do
these people
see the
freight
train headed
their way,
but they
can’t even
get remotely
excited
about their
standard-bearer,
John McCain.
If your
politics
suck in
America,
it’s getting
harder and
harder to
get out of
bed in the
morning.
Moreover,
there hasn’t
been a
Democrat
like Barack
Obama in the
thirty years
since the
Faux Cowboy
rode into
town and
sent them
all
scurrying
for cover.
Whatever
else one can
say about
Obama, he
doesn’t
stand around
like Dukakis
or Kerry
getting
punch drunk,
watching his
prospects go
down the
drain as
scumbags
relentlessly
punk him
with the
crassest of
tactics.
Obama may
yet lose
this
election,
but it’s
highly
unlikely
that he’ll
do so while
being a
hapless
observer of
his own
demise. For
the pathetic
creature
known as the
Democratic
Party, that
alone is
actually a
giant leap
of progress.
Given that
the
presidency
is within
his reach,
the question
of who he
really is
now comes
into sharper
relief. As I
see it,
there are
basically
two options
to choose
from, with a
host of
permutations
and degrees
of variation
between and
around them.
President
Obama can
either be an
FDR, or he
can be a
Bill
Clinton. He
can either
be a bold
leader who
leverages
crisis and a
sweeping
electoral
mandate into
transformational
policy and
historical
leadership,
or he can be
a caretaker
who cravenly
seeks to
make no
mistakes and
therefore
realizes no
accomplishments.
He can be a
progressive
who comes to
the rescue
of a country
badly in
need, or he
can be
Republican-Lite,
putting
corporate
interests
ahead of the
nation’s.
Many people
are
wondering
which model
we’ll get
with Obama.
Some don’t
really care,
as long as
he is simply
President
Not Bush.
Others have
simply gone
ahead and
made the
leap,
assured that
he is the
Second
Coming. As
he once
said,
himself, for
some reason
people seem
to project
all their
hopes and
aspirations
on this man.
But which is
he? My
guess,
sadly, is
that his
instincts
are more
Clinton than
FDR, at
least when
it comes to
the cautious
inaction
aspect. That
I can
(barely)
bear; the
corporate
shilling I
cannot.
It’s very
much worth
remembering,
however,
that both
FDR and
Clinton were
presidents
of their
time.
Without
serious
crises, FDR
would likely
have been
Clintonesque.
Meanwhile,
with them,
Clinton
could have
arguably
risen into
the pantheon
of great
presidents.
Indeed, he
supposedly
once
lamented
that he got
through
eight years
without such
a crisis on
his watch, a
comment
which for me
always
summed up
the
priorities
of
Clintonism
better than
any other
single
notion.
Quick
pop-quiz
question:
What kind of
person is so
incredibly
self-absorbed
that they
would wish a
deadly
national
crisis on
their own
country
because of
the positive
effect it
might have
on their
personal
legacy?
Answer: A
Clinton.
Right now,
Obama looks
to inherit a
situation
rather
in-between
the 1930s
and the
1990s,
which,
ironically,
is in many
ways
probably
more
unfortunate
than if
things were
palpably
much worse.
On so many
fronts, now
and into the
foreseeable
future,
America is a
slow-motion
train wreck.
That means
it’s coming
apart fast
enough to do
truly
catastrophic
fiscal,
environmental,
economic,
moral,
political
and
international
damage over
a decade or
two, but not
fast enough
to overwhelm
the public’s
fear of
change and
thus
generate
support for
bold action.
This could
well be the
worst of all
worlds.
Nor,
unfortunately,
is Obama
likely to be
compelled to
do the right
thing on
most any of
these
fronts.
Indeed, he
will not
only run
into
resistance
from a
public that
claims to
want change
but probably
really only
wants the
kind that
makes their
pockets
jingle a
little more,
but he will
also
certainly
inherit a
Congress run
by Nancy
Pelosi and
Harry Reid
that is
deeply
devoted to
doing
nothing
other than
serving
corporate
interests.
We
progressives
can try to
pressure
him, but if
history is
any guide,
we tend not
to have much
relative
influence.
Moreover,
almost
anything
that follows
George W.
Bush is
going to be
such a
dramatic
improvement,
and so
deeply
welcomed,
that –
especially
someone like
Obama – will
benefit from
deep
reservoirs
of public
patience and
good will.
Finally, the
regressive
movement
which so
successfully
hobbled
Clinton is
likely to be
in a
complete
crisis
melt-down
mode after
the American
public has
had a little
Come-to-Jesus
conversation
with them on
November
4th. I don’t
expect them
to be very
adept at
pressuring
Obama at
least during
the early
part of his
administration,
and I doubt
he would
allow them
to anyhow.
The long and
the short of
this is that
the
contextual
conditions
don’t bode
well for
Obama to run
a truly
transformational
presidency,
nor does
much of
anything in
his past
suggest that
that is his
ambition. By
my count,
that leaves
only one
remaining
potential
major
motivating
factor,
which is the
question of
legacy, the
factor that
seemed to
motivate
Lyndon
Johnson, for
instance, to
go to the
wall for
civil
rights. But
Obama is a
walking
legacy.
Thirty
seconds
after he is
sworn in
next January
he will
already have
fulfilled
what could
conceivably
become the
bulk of his
historical
significance.
And it’s no
small thing,
either.
American
politics
have been
the
provenance
of elites
for so long
now, just
having a
black man
living in
that White
House is
alone pretty
huge.
But it is
not enough.
If Obama
defaults to
being a
Clintonesque
caretaker,
he’ll get
away with it
for a while,
but not
forever.
Forget about
history. In
the
here-and-now
there is
mounting
impatience
with the
state of
this
country,
particularly
on the
economic
front.
Unfortunately,
this is the
major area
where Obama
has offered
his least
compelling
vision, and
where he
would face
probably the
greatest of
resistance.
I’m not
convinced,
for example,
that it
would
necessarily
be
politically
more
difficult to
withdraw
from Iraq
than to
raise taxes
on the
wealthy.
Recent
events in
the Obama
campaign may
have been
disheartening
to
progressives,
perhaps
signaling
his centrist
tendencies,
perhaps
suggesting
that the
extent of
the real
change he is
offering is
simply to
not be Bush,
perhaps
inferring –
worst of all
– that it
will be Wall
Street which
will have
his ear. The
most recent
and
prominent
example of
this sort of
stuff was
Obama’s
choice to
opt out of
his prior
repeated
promise to
accept
public
financing of
his campaign
and the
limitations
that go with
it. That is,
in some
respects,
disheartening.
And perhaps
will be much
more so if
it convinces
him that he
can lie with
impunity.
And there
have been
other signs
as well. His
choice of
Jim Johnson
as his lead
advisor in
vetting vice
presidential
nominees was
about as
Washington
old school
establishment
as you can
get, and
that was
even before
it blew up
in his face
because of
Johnson’s
skanky
personal
finances.
Much more
ominous have
been the
presumptive
nominee’s
selection of
Wall
Street-leaning
Jason Furman
as the
campaign’s
chief
economic
advisor, and
his
denunciation
of the
Supreme
Court’s
decision
this week to
prohibit the
application
of the death
penalty for
raping a
child.
As
horrifyingly
noxious as
that latter
crime
certainly
is, few
Americans
are better
positioned
than Obama,
the African
American
constitutional
law scholar,
to
understand
just how
twisted is
the use of
the death
penalty in
any case.
His
criticism of
the Court’s
majority
suggests the
worst sort
of pandering
to a
bloodthirsty
public, not
unlike
Governor
Bill
Clinton’s
nauseating
decision to
personally
preside over
the
execution of
mentally
retarded
Ricky Ray
Rector in
order to
attract
centrist
voters in
1992.
But the
Furman
choice may
be the worst
indicator
yet of this
guy’s
intentions.
Furman is
closely
associated
with Robert
Rubin, who
is closely
associated
with
conservative
economic
principles
within the
Democratic
Party, those
favoring
Wall Street
over Main
Street. What
makes that
act
especially
disheartening
is that it
was
essentially
a free
choice for
Obama. He’s
not going to
win or lose
a lot of
votes from a
voting
public
amongst whom
almost none
could
distinguish
Furman from,
say, Joseph
Stiglitz, as
an
alternative.
Using the
death
penalty to
pander for
votes is
truly
sickening,
but at least
if we know
it is
pandering we
can excuse
(I don’t) it
as perhaps
necessary to
be able to
achieve a
greater good
in the
America of
the 21st
century. On
the other
hand,
choosing a
corporate-leaning
economic
advisor when
almost no
one is
looking at
what you’re
doing may
well signal
the
candidate’s
true
politics.
To an
extent, this
can all be
excused –
possibly –
as
pre-election
necessity.
It’s crucial
to win this
year. It’s
crucial for
Obama not to
allow
himself to
be
swiftboated.
It’s clear
that he well
understands
these
principles.
Frankly, I
don’t want
him to
advertise
any
unpopular,
left-of-center
politics he
might have
during the
campaign,
whether or
not he would
pursue those
policies in
office. They
won’t help
him now, and
they’ll very
likely hurt
him. It does
none of us
any good for
John McCain
to become
America’s
44th
president of
the United
States, and
after
watching the
pathetic
performances
of Dukakis,
Gore and
Kerry in
(not)
fighting for
the
presidency,
I for one am
not going to
hold Obama’s
feet to the
political
purity
bonfire of
ideological
self-immolation.
On the other
hand, there
are limits
to what is
tolerable,
even in an
election as
crucial as
this one.
While I
don’t expect
the guy to
be a
socialist,
I’m going to
be
powerfully
disappointed
if he
repeats
Clinton’s
economic
policies,
notwithstanding
that they’re
marginally
better than
McCain’s or
Bush’s. And
I have to
admit that I
find the
death
penalty
comments
revolting,
especially
when he
could have
just chosen
to be silent
on the
issue.
What makes
all of this
even more
troubling is
that Obama
is already
killing
McCain in
the polls,
and
therefore
doesn’t
appear to
need to use
the most
egregious of
these
tactics. To
be sure, he
should be
highly
cautious
about
believing
the election
is all sewn
up. And he
gives every
appearance
of
understanding
– as any
Democrat
long ago
should have
– that these
guys are
going to try
to smear him
mercilessly,
and
therefore
nothing
should be
taken for
granted –
eh, Mr.
Kerry? That
fifteen
point lead –
even
assuming
that it is
accurate –
could
potentially
disappear
rapidly –
eh, Mr.
Dukakis?
Still, is it
really
necessary to
favor the
expansion of
the use of
the death
penalty in
America?
What Obama
appears to
be doing is
following
the standard
American
presidential
script,
which is to
run to your
left (if
you’re a
Democrat)
during the
primaries,
and then to
the center
after
securing the
nomination.
Obama never
got very far
to the left
of the
public at
any point,
but you can
see him
repositioning
now. Perhaps
after the
election
we’ll see
yet a third
version, and
perhaps that
will be more
progressive
than not.
Perhaps.
I don’t
think anyone
knows, which
is why so
many of us
are watching
this guy so
closely.
It’s easy
enough to be
disappointed,
especially
for
progressives,
but mostly
if you’re so
unrealistic
that you’d
rather be
one hundred
percent
politically
pure than
have a
chance to
govern. Some
issues are
worth that
extremely
high price.
Many are
not. What I
can say for
myself is
just this:
I’m looking
for someone
with
sufficient
courage and
vision to be
able to
govern at
the left
edge of what
is
realistically
possible.
While I’d
certainly
prefer more
than that in
a perfect
world, in
the real one
I’m stuck
in, I’ll
generally
take that
over nothing
at all. And
I’ll
certainly
take that
over the
rampant
destruction
of all
things
precious
that will
continue if
the GOP is
allowed to
govern
another four
years. Let’s
face it. If
we’re honest
we’ll admit
that the
only
difference
between
voting for
Ralph Nader
versus
demanding
that Obama
take
electorally
impossible
stands is
that the
latter is an
even surer
path to
political
suicide.
Everyone has
to make
their own
choices, of
course. But,
me? I
generally
recommend
against
suicide.
When it
comes to
Obama, we
have to wait
and see.
What I can
say is that
he used to
be closer to
that
realistically
possible
progressive
edge in
prior months
than he has
been over
the last
couple
weeks. I
might be
happy if
this is the
low point
for him and
it just gets
better from
here on out.
But let’s be
honest, he’s
had better
stretches
than this
last one.
And it
matters,
too. To
choose but
one example,
in the last
week top
NASA
scientist
James Hansen
told
Congress
regarding
global
warming that
“We're toast
if we don't
get on a
very
different
path. This
is the last
chance.” He
predicted
mass
extinction,
ecosystem
collapse,
and dramatic
sea level
rises if we
don’t take
steps to
save the
planet, and
fast.
The same is
true across
so many
domains of
American and
global
society,
even if the
crises
aren’t quite
that
stunningly
acute. We
are in very
deep
trouble, in
so many
ways.
For sure, it
will be
wonderful to
remove from
the body
politic the
cancer
currently
occupying
the White
House.
But it will
not be
enough.
David
Michael
Green is a
professor of
political
science at
Hofstra
University
in New York.
He is
delighted to
receive
readers'
reactions to
his articles
(
dmg@regressiveantidote.net
), but
regrets that
time
constraints
do not
always allow
him to
respond.
More of his
work can be
found at his
website,
www.regressiveantidote.net
.
