The Strange Politics Of The US 2012 Election
Part 1, What Both Parties Are Up To
By Jack A. Smith
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=26467
Global Research, September 10, 2011
When
was it that the most extremely disturbed inmates seized control of the
madhouse known as the American political system? We know they are
wielding decisive influence within the two-party structure by their
destructive antics in Washington and various state capitals, but when
and how did this happen?
Some contend that the takeover was accomplished last
January, when the new Republican House majority assumed office. Granted
that the intransigent buffoonery of the right/far right party is a
substantial factor, but it by no means is the only factor, as the
Democrats suggest.
The Tea Party (TP) phenomenon is a symptom of one of
the more bizarre political moments in American history between the odd
couple that constitutes the two-party system, not the principal
causative agent. It is a new formation but composed of the old hard core
right wing and religious right reinvigorated with conservative
populism, anti-government libertarianism, garnished with an element of
racism in response to a non-white chief executive, and performing the
political equivalent of wilding in the streets.
The larger Republican Party and its leadership may
not be as fanatical but is going along with the far right because it's
producing positive practical gains for conservative ideology and
programs, and seems to have tied the bewildered and misled Democrats
into impotent knots. The big danger for the GOP is going so far to the
right that it gets trounced in the 2012 elections, which is what the
White House is counting on.
Others maintain seizing the asylum was facilitated
when President Barack Obama took office in January 2009 — the argument
being that he is a weak pushover who doesn't understand how to fight for
his beliefs.
Obama, however, is a tough, exceptionally ambitious
politician who knows what he wants and goes after it with cool
precision. How else could have migrated to the U.S. Senate and the
presidency of the United States in five years after an unremarkable
dozen years in academia and the obscurity of the Illinois state senate?
With virtually no record of accomplishments he whipped the formidable
Hillary Clinton electoral machine, then the McCain/Palin opposition, and
then his own party's left wing in the process.
The president does indeed fight for his convictions,
much to the dismay of the liberals and progressives — a prominent sector
of his own party constituency whom he mocked as the "professional
left," then rendered powerless by furling his brows. The problem isn't
the president's "weakness" but his now only partially disguised moderate
conservative convictions that allow him to pull his party to the right
in the name of bipartisanship, even if it takes humiliating his most
fervent supporters.
It wasn't Obama's fear and trembling but
self-confident chutzpah during the deficit debates when he gratuitously
consigned the greatest achievements of the New Deal and Great Society to
the future chopping block, and in House Speaker John Boehner's opinion
gave the Republican leadership 98% of what it actually sought.
In fact there was no real debt crisis or probability
of default. Raising the debt limit is as American as Thanksgiving
dinner, and it's an economic necessity in a recession. Obama had a
perfect right to avoid default unilaterally by invoking his 14th
Amendment obligation to pay the country's bills. He chose to allow the
charade to fester. Wall Street was well aware there would be a last
minute agreement to cut programs and not raise taxes, although the mass
media converted the farce into a potential national calamity until the
end.
Liberal critics and the trade union movement were
appalled by Obama's primary focus on reducing the deficit during a
severe economic crisis as opposed to recognizing that the first priority
should be heavy government investment in creating jobs. The headline
over economist Paul Krugman's New York Times column told it all: "The
President Surrenders."
Continuing high unemployment is one of the main
reasons working class/middle class families may experience a painful
double-dip recession, extending the crisis many years. Officially, 9.1%
or 14 million American workers are jobless. Black unemployment 16.7%.
When the total includes "discouraged workers" who have given up constant
job seeking for lack of success, along with part-time workers who
cannot obtain needed full-time employment, the pool expands to nearly 30
million workers or 16.2% of the labor force.
Obama responded to intense criticism and dismay about
his inattention to unemployment from various quarters by putting
forward a jobs program in a major speech to a joint session of Congress
Sept. 8. The proposal, titled the American Jobs Act, appeared to offer
considerably more breaks and financial incentives to businesses to hire
more employees than to the jobless workers.
The chief executive stressed the bipartisan the
nature of his proposal, maintaining that virtually all of its aspects
were supported by conservatives as well as Democrats, and assuring
Republicans fixated upon deficit reduction that "everything in this bill
will be paid for" through a scheme to increase the amount of money the
to be sliced from future spending. Part of such reductions will derive
from cuts in Medicare and Medicaid, just as the liberals and unions
feared. Much of the $447 billion pricetag will go to tax breaks for
business and a reduction in payroll taxes to employees and companies.
The initial reaction to the plan by liberal
economists was that it will create jobs but hardly cause a serious
reduction in the jobless rate, assuming that it passes Congress without
big cuts. The plan envisioned many jobs would derive from a campaign to
rebuild a portion of America's decaying infrastructure, but it is
extremely doubtful this will get off the ground. More details are
expected next week.
There was also no compelling necessity for Obama to
decide "you have to put everything on the table" for the budget cutters
including Social Security as well as Medicare and Medicaid. That was the
administration's political preference, regardless of bitter howling
from the 83-member Congressional Progressive Caucus, co-chaired by Reps.
Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) and Keith Ellison (D-MN). The House Democratic
Blue Dog coalition of fiscal conservatives has only 26 members but
patently enjoys considerably more influence in the White House than the
marginalized progressives. The GOP controls the House, but the
hyperactive Tea Party Caucus, chaired by Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN),
has 23 fewer members than the Progressive Caucus, and it has been far
more effective because it has leadership support.
The Progressive Caucus has been sharply critical of
what the White House and the Democratic political and funding powers are
giving away to the conservatives, but few dare speak as frankly as Rep.
Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) — the best and boldest of the remaining
center-left House members — during an interview with Truthdig Aug. 4 in
discussing the deficit agreement with the Republicans:
"I think that this idea that somehow the White House
was forced into a bad deal is politically naive. When we saw the White
House signal early on that it was ready for cuts in Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid by actually setting aside bedrock principles that
the Democratic Party has stood on for generations, that signal indicated
that they were ready for a deal that would involve massive cutting of
social spending, and increasing or locking in increases for war, and
helping further the ambitions of the Defense Department, not touching
the Bush tax cuts. And that’s exactly what happened."
During his June 8 speech, Obama justified cutting two
of the three historic Democratic Party achievements in these words: "I
realize there are some in my party who don’t think we should make any
changes at all to Medicare and Medicaid.... But with an aging population
and rising health care costs, we are spending too fast to sustain the
program. And if we don’t gradually reform the system while protecting
current beneficiaries, it won’t be there when future retirees need it."
This is doubletalk, based on catering to conservatism
by refusing to consider a number of available alternatives to program
reduction. But the case appeared closed, according to an analysis of
Obama's speech in the Sept. 9 New York Times: "Republicans and Democrats
are no longer fighting over whether to tackle the popular entitlement
programs — Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security — but over how to do
it."
It should be noted that the Obama White House
routinely shifts to the right on issues that do not necessarily depend
on House votes, undercutting the argument that the Republicans always
tie the president's hands. The administration's dreadful environmental
record, for instance, is largely independent of the antediluvian climate
change deniers in Congress. The White House decision to abandon the
Environmental Protection Agency's tough new air pollution regulations
Sept. 2 was a concession to big business, which could have lost some
excess profits due to reduced emissions of smog-causing chemicals, not
the result of a filibuster or lack of votes.
This "betrayal," as it has been termed by
environmental leaders, follows recent Oval Office decrees to allow more
oil drilling in the Arctic and Gulf of Mexico, approval of the tar sands
Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada to Texas, calls for more nuclear
power plants, and increased drilling for polluting natural gas as well
as utter passivity toward climate change. None of these decisions were
"forced" upon the Obama Administration.
What all this suggests to us is that the White House
is dedicating its principal efforts to imposing a more conservative
economic and political agenda on the American people, and that part of
the process is bending over backward to create an informal but virtual
government of national unity between the center right and right/far
right ruling parties.
The Obama Administration evidences a breezy
willingness to give away the Democratic Party's tattered remnants of
liberalism, to weaken some past attainments achieved after years of
struggle, and forego fighting for new social programs. The result has
been two or three steps to the right, by commission or omission, for
every nebulous step to the "left," such as the administration's health
care plan, which was based on the moderate Republican effort in
Massachusetts.
Much closer political unity with the right wing was
the meaning of the continuing mantra during the 2008 Obama campaign
about extending his hand "across the aisle," governing "as Americans not
as Republicans or Democrats" and insisting that "There is not a liberal
America, or a conservative America, but a United States of America."
As we declared in this newsletter a few days before
Obama was elected almost three years ago: "Does this mean there is no
need for political struggle — that lion and lamb are about to bed down
together, solving the problems of the country and world with some pillow
talk among all us Americans finally freed from the stressful
complications of politics? This notion is preposterous, of course."
Why would President Obama put forward such a policy?
There are several factors, but in our view the main one is an effort to
address America's declining superpower status globally and domestically,
economically and politically. The erosion of U.S. power was hastened
during eight years of Bush Administration mismanagement and imperialism,
two lost wars, record military spending, tax cuts for the rich,
enormous debts and finally the Great Recession.
In his jobs speech Obama emphasized the need to "show
the world once again why the United States of America remains the
greatest nation on Earth." Retaining world "leadership," i.e.,
geopolitical economic and military supremacy, has been a constant
refrain from Obama since at least two years before winning the
presidency, and is obviously a factor in the support he receives from a
large sector of those who rule America.
Domestically, the White House seeks to strengthen the
capitalist sector, reorganize the economy to confer even greater powers
upon the corporations, banks, Wall St. and the wealthy; renegotiate
downward the social contract with the working class and middle class by
further limiting popular spending, entitlements, and government programs
to help the people; and reduce union power even further while mumbling
pro-labor sentiments. In addition, there has been an effort to reassert
the unifying spirit of national chauvinism, militarism, and warrior
worship.
Internationally, the White House policy is to
reinvigorate American global domination; refurbish Washington's
dilapidated international reputation; retain U.S. hegemonic interests in
the Arab world by intervening in the regional uprisings; restore a more
subtle form of U.S. dominion in Latin America; and reverse recent
history by finally winning some wars for the $1.4 trillion Washington
forks out annually for the Pentagon and national security (i.e., the
Afghan "surge" to forestall yet another defeat, extending the war to
western Pakistan, crushing tiny Libya and keeping U.S. troops in Iraq
and Afghanistan long past the deadline for complete withdrawal).
But if the Democrats are right of center these days
and making concessions for functional unity with the right/far right
party why are the Republicans creating dysfunction and saying "no" to
everything and creating political havoc? Because they want a lot more
and think they can grab it. The GOP is obtaining a good political deal
at bargain basement prices. For its part, the White House is selling out
cheaply to clear the shelves of old liberal merchandize to make room
for new more conservative product of its own. Since Republican antics
usefully convey the public impression of "forcing" Obama to make
concessions against his will, the Democrats won't get too much blame for
the even more corporate and unequal, even less generous and forgiving,
America to come.
Conservatives have wanted to destroy the progressive
gains of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Great Depression era New Deal
since their inception in the 1930s, including Social Security. And the
right wing backlash against the activism of the 1960s, focused on hard
fought social and cultural advances as well as the abundant liberal
legislation of President Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society — including
Medicare and Medicaid — has been never ending since the 1970s.
The result is a blanket of conservatism that
gradually began to cover much of the U.S., along with stagnant wages,
the dwindling of the American Dream and the end of significant new
government social programs for the people. Now, in the midst of a
devastating economic breakdown and cutbacks in essential federal and
state government services, the once center left Democratic Party is
offering the to put the three crown jewels of the Roosevelt-Johnson
period "on the table" to be examined by the new bipartisan Joint
Selective Committee for Deficit Reduction, which is due to make
decisions before the new year.
One thing is certain about the 2008 election. The
American people wanted change, big change from their next government.
Candidate Obama promised change they could "believe in." The people were
encouraged to respond in unison by chanting "Yes we can," entertaining
hopes of fewer wars, more secure incomes, greater attention to health,
education, job creation and the environment, some help for the poor, and
perhaps more equality with an African American in the White House. The
Democratic platform was filled with empty generalities, but the campaign
remained intentionally vague about what its "change" was all about.
This was the tip-off to an impending deception that became obvious after
the election, when the changes they hoped for were not what Obama had
in mind.
Now, following several grave concessions to
conservatism before, during and after the early summer deficit fiasco
with more to come, President Obama has began to indulge in populist
rhetoric about jobs and infrastructure to galvanize the faithful into
providing campaign dollars and innumerable volunteer hours to defeat the
"evil doers" in 2012.
Part 2 below will focus on liberal and labor
misgivings about Obama's policies and on what these forces will end up
doing, among other election points.
THE STRANGE POLITICS OF THE U.S. 2012 ELECTION
Part 2, Problems Ahead for Obama?
By Jack A. Smith, Sept 9, 2011
The New Yorker magazine published a memorable front
cover a year after President Barack Obama assumed office. It was a four
panel cartoon-like drawing by artist Barry Blitt of a man walking on
water, a reference to the Apostle Paul. In panel one, the walking
figure, illuminated by a heavenly shaft of light, shows a small
unidentifiable figure in the background. By panel two the tall, thin man
is clearly Obama. By number three, a still walking confident, serious
president dominates the panel, looking sternly at the viewer. And in
panel four he sinks.
He is still sinking today. According to the Pew
Research Center poll released Aug. 25: "For the first time in his
presidency, significantly more disapprove than approve of the way Obama
is handling his job as president (49% vs. 43%), and.... 38% strongly
disapprove of Obama's job performance while 26% strongly approve." The
poll shows that 22% approve of the job performance of Republican
congressional leaders while the figure is 29% for Democratic leaders. At
43%, the Democratic Party is viewed more favorably than the GOP at 34%.
At issue now is what the important and very
disappointed liberal, progressive and labor union sector of the
Democratic constituency is going to do during the 2012 election
campaign, which already seems well under way 14 months before the
voting.
Many Democratic Party supporters, especially those of
the center-left, virtually venerated their candidate during the 2008
campaign. Liberals and unionists not only chanted slogans on cue at
rallies but volunteered and donated money to elect him. The union
movement invested a few hundred million dollars. Obama was not only
viewed as the anti-Bush redeemer but the rescuer who would bring the
party left wing back to relevance after being exiled to the sidelines
when the leadership began its nearly four decade trek to end up right of
center.
During the earlier campaign in Des Moines, Oprah
Winfrey — who is arguably the most influential woman in the world —
declared to a crowd of 15,000 enthusiasts, "I am here to tell you, Iowa,
he is the one. He is the one!" But in her New York Times column Sept. 3
titled "One and Done?," Maureen Dowd devilishly observed, "The One is
dancing on the edge of one term."
Even though Obama will occasionally pretend to
liberal populism to mesmerize selected audiences during this campaign,
his first term record of concrete concessions to conservative ideology
cannot be camouflaged. As viewed from the party center left, and even
from the center, the Obama Administration's record is lamentable when
matched against reasonable Democratic voter expectations in 2008.
Most Democratic voters, liberal or not, expected a
reduction in U.S. military violence, not the increase Obama produced.
They preferred a strengthening of civil liberties, not a continuation of
the Bush Administration's Patriot Act and additional erosions of
rights. They sought progress on reducing environmental despoliation and
global warming, not policies that produce opposite results. Many
anticipated at least moderate efforts to mitigate the appalling
increases in economic inequality, and to alleviate the hyper-inequality
afflicting some national minorities, but nothing has been forthcoming.
So far, it is premature to anticipate how many
defections are expected from the Obama camp due to increasing malaise
and anger from much of the liberal sector and its further left cohorts
who usually end up on the Democratic Party treadmill every four years.
They are caught once again — although by surprise this time for many —
in the familiar lobster-like pincers of the lesser evil/greater evil
dilemma.
Most fear that voting for existing small third party
progressive alternatives will help elect the "greater evil" right/far
right half of the ruling duopoly, so they will vote for the center right
Obama, who occupies political territory once claimed by the now extinct
"moderate" wing of the Republican Party. The White House inner circle,
Democratic Party bigwigs and the main sector of the ruling class are
counting on it, and seek to raise a record-setting $1 billion dollars to
keep their man in the Oval Office.
The Democratic Party strategy for gaining a second
term in the White House seems based on two main assumptions about the
Republicans, as well as blaming the GOP for everything except Hurricane
Irene, and putting forward a popular program that after the elections
may never see the light of day.
(1) The first assumption is that the GOP will be
perceived by much of the electorate as having moved too far to the
right, alienating independent voters who will now vote for Obama in
greater number, and keeping the dissident Democrats in line. There is
also the possibility of splits between the Tea Party stalwarts and the
less doctrinaire parent party as a whole and possibly within the TP
itself.
(2) The second assumption is that the GOP simply does
not have a broadly attractive presidential candidate if the field
remains narrowed to Tea Party favorites such as Texas Gov. Rick Perry,
Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, or
flagrantly opportunist conservative former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt
Romney, backed up by secondary candidates including libertarian Texas
Rep. Ron Paul and longshot mainstream Republican former Utah Gov. John
M. Huntsman. At this point Perry (an aggressive climate change and
evolution denier, who thinks Social Security is a Ponzi scheme) and
Romney (who probably was the last of the "moderate Republicans" until
raw ambition and hypocrisy drove this multimillionaire to the farther
right) have the inside track. Palin hasn't announced yet.
For his part, President Obama will strive to convince
the American people that the Republicans are entirely responsible for
the political gridlock in Washington. He will charge the GOP with
putting petty party interests ahead of "American," not merely
Democratic, interests, intentionally conflating the two to imply the
Republicans are lacking patriotism. The White House will propagate the
notion that Tea Party extremists left Obama with "no choice" but to cut
social programs to lower the deficit instead of fighting harder for
taxing the rich, and "no option" but to put Social Security, Medicare
and Medicaid up for grabs — concessions that were in fact entirely
voluntary. It is highly doubtful for obvious reasons that the Democratic
candidate will repeat his most stirring crowd pleaser from the 2008
campaign — "Our time has come, our movement is real, and change is
coming to America."
The Democratic domestic platform will be a glistening
cornucopia of promises and good intentions for every sector — the
right, center, and even a trifle for the left. In essence, however, it
will tilt toward conservatism. There will be elevating talk about needed
programs, but it is highly doubtful a viable social agenda that serves
the needs of an increasingly desperate American people will emerge from
an Obama triumph, including anything more than token gestures toward
rebuilding infrastructure or protecting the environment. Foreign policy
will remain the same, as will military/national security strategy and
its ruinous price tag. Full spectrum power and global domination remain
the name of the imperial game.
This may keep the bulk of Democrats content and
attract independents. Most rank-and-filers have followed their party
into the center right over the years, consciously or often not even
aware of the political shift, and remain comfortable with Obama even
though the blush has departed the rose. Most liberals are no longer
sanguine and some will fight back within the party and may be able to
wrest small favors.
Obama will be traveling on a bumpy campaign road,
however, and there will be some potential Democratic voters who stay at
home, probably including younger and first time voters who played a big
role in 2008, and Latino voters dismayed by the Obama Administration's
George Bush-like immigration policies, among others.
Several score liberal, progressive and labor
organizations are complaining loudly, from Move-On, Campaign for
America's Future, and Progressive Democrats of America to the AFL-CIO
federation of 56 unions. It is expected that a developing coalition of
such forces will exert considerable pressure on the Democratic Party
leadership to include at least a few key liberal programs in the
platform, although most campaign priorities are ignored or delayed
indefinitely after the election.
Nearly 70 groups that describe themselves as
progressive sent a communication to President Obama Aug. 30 insisting
that he fight for a jobs program "that does not just tinker around the
edges." Similar groups are pushing for a legislative drive to "Restore
the American Dream."
Some groups are threatening to withhold campaign
contributions should Obama ultimately agree to making cuts in federal
entitlement programs. A grassroots group called the Progressive Change
Campaign Committee composed of liberals who raised money for the
Democrats in 2008 brought 200,000 signed pledges to Obama's national
campaign headquarters in Chicago in July with precisely that message.
The most important critic is the 10.5 million-member
AFL-CIO and its new community affiliate, the 2 million members of
Working America. Total U.S. union membership may have suffered a
precipitous decline since its apogee in 1954, when it constituted 33% of
the workforce, compared to 11.9% this year — but the unions are key to
the Democrats' existence, although the party has given very little in
return.
Criticism of the Democrats of any kind is a fairly
new attitude for the AFL-CIO, after many decades of conservative,
pro-war, Cold War, pro-business leadership from former AFL and AFL-CIO
presidents George Meany and Lane Kirkland from 1952 to 1995. The more
militant John Sweeney, federation president 1995-2009, broke with many
of the earlier right wing practices while remaining close to the
Democratic leadership.
Former United Mine Workers leader Richard Trumka, who
was part of the now-retired Sweeney's winning New Voices reform team,
succeeded to the presidency. He has been remarkably vocal this year
about the failure of the Obama Administration to fight the right and to
support progressive programs for jobs, the Employee Free Choice Act, a
public option for healthcare, and raising the minimum wage from $7.25 to
$9.50 an hour as Obama promised in 2008. Free Choice was the labor
movement's key legislative priority. It would have removed several
barriers to increasing union membership — but the White House didn't
even bring the bill to a vote, knowing conservative Democrats would join
anti-union Republicans to defeat the measure, not that Obama twisted
any arms on behalf of labor.
In addition to public criticisms, Trumka has been
suggesting that the AFL-CIO intended to declare a certain independence
from the Democratic Party. In early June he told union nurses meeting in
Washington that “We want an independent labor movement strong enough to
return balance to our economy, fairness to our tax system, security to
our families and moral and economic standing to our nation....We can’t
simply build the power of any political party or any candidate. For too
long we’ve been left after the election holding a canceled check and
asking someone to pay attention to us. No more!"
In the equivalent of aiming a hefty whiff of
grapeshot across the White House lawn, Trumka declared Aug. 25: "This is
a moment that working people and quite frankly history will judge
President Obama on his presidency. Will he commit all his energy and
focus on bold solutions on the job crisis or will he continue to work
with the Tea Party to offer cuts to middle class programs like Social
Security all the while pretending the deficit is where our economic
problems really lie?"
Some other indications of the labor movement's more
active stand include the recent federation announcement that it is
organizing a nationwide week of demonstrations for jobs in 450 locations
in October. On Sept. 4 it was reported that union donations to federal
candidates at the beginning of this year were down about 40% compared
with the same period in 2009. In August, a dozen trade unions, including
the 2.5 million member AFL-CIO building trades division, said they
would boycott next year's Democratic National Convention in Charlotte,
N.C., because of "broad frustration with the [Democratic] Party" and to
protest the event's location in an anti-union right-to-work state.
Despite some unprecedented criticism, and positive
evidence of a tilt toward labor independence, a break with the
Democratic Party is not in cards for the 2012 election. But it is a long
delayed warning that has a powerful potential should it be ignored. A
token of opposition may transpire next year by union refusal to back
selected Blue Dog Democrats; perhaps labor candidates will run against
some conservative Democrats in primaries or in some cases stand as third
party election entries against anti-union candidates of the two ruling
parties. Some money may be withheld and there may be fewer volunteers.
When President Obama took office on Jan. 20, 2009,
the news media often compared him favorably to Dr. Martin Luther King,
suggesting, in effect, he was the fulfillment of King's "Dream," a
reference to the great civil rights leader's "I Have a Dream" speech at
the 1963 March on Washington. On the anniversary of the march Aug. 28,
Rep. John Lewis (D-GA), who was a civil rights fighter in his youth and
who at spoke at the historic event, speculated on what King would say to
Obama were he alive today, in a public statement that was both a plea
and a sad censure:
"Dr. King," Lewis wrote, would tell President Obama "that it is his moral obligation to use his
power and influence to help those who have been left out and left behind. He would encourage him to get out of Washington, to break away from handlers and advisers and go visit the people where they live.... He would urge Obama to feel the hurt and pain of those without work, of mothers and their children who go to bed hungry at night, of the families living in shelters after losing their homes, and of the elderly who chose between buying medicine and paying the rent....
power and influence to help those who have been left out and left behind. He would encourage him to get out of Washington, to break away from handlers and advisers and go visit the people where they live.... He would urge Obama to feel the hurt and pain of those without work, of mothers and their children who go to bed hungry at night, of the families living in shelters after losing their homes, and of the elderly who chose between buying medicine and paying the rent....
"[He would tell him] to do what he can to end
discrimination based on race, color, religious faith and sexual
orientation.... There is no need to put a finger in the air to see which
way the wind is blowing. There is no need to match each step to the
latest opinion poll. The people of this country recognize when a leader
is trying to do what is right.... Let the people of this country see
that you are fighting for them and they will have your back."
This is no doubt true, but fighting for the people is simply not among Barack Obama chief priorities.
The author is editor of the Activist Newsletter
and is former editor of the (U.S.) Guardian Newsweekly. He may be
reached at jacdon@earthlink.net or http://activistnewsletter.blogspot.com/