Obama (and Biden) Have No Clue About What’s Bothering Their Political Base
by: Rabbi Michael Lerner on September 30th, 2010 | 4 Comments »
Crossposted from The Huffington Post
Shortly before the California Democratic primary in 2008, the San Francisco Chronicle invited me to write a short article explaining why I, chair of the interfaith Network of Spiritual Progressives, was supporting Barack Obama. Like most other progressive activists, I understood that a president is limited in what s/he can accomplish in limiting the power of America’s economic and political elites and in restraining the military-industrial complex, the pharmaceutical and health care profiteers, the oil industry’s relentless destruction of the environment, or the selfishness and materialism that had become the hallmark of Wall Street and increasingly the “common sense” that was conveyed by the media and advertising into the consciousness of many Americans.
But what a president can do is to challenge the ideas of the powerful and rally those who have become aware that the current system is not only destructive to the future of the planet, but also to the possibility of constructing lives that have a sense of higher meaning than accumulating money and things, or building families and friendships that are about love and not dominated by the self-interest “what’s in it for me” consciousness of the capitalist marketplace.
President Obama is now traveling the country seeking to rebuild the enthusiasm he generated in 2008, and seems clueless as to why it is not there. And the Democrats who followed his lead seem similarly clueless. They imagine that we, their political base, must have had unreasonable expectations that somehow a Democratic majority in Congress and a Democratic president could overcome the Republican party of “no” and the powerful institutional constraints built up over many decades. So they try to explain to us why they failed to pass the legislation that we, their political base, would have wanted.
It’s easier for them to believe that their liberal and progressive base is naïve than to acknowledge that we are not alienated for their failure to pass appropriate legislation, but for their failure to fight for such legislation. And our upset with Obama is not that he didn’t accomplish what he couldn’t accomplish, but that he didn’t do the one thing he could do: consistently speak the truth, tell us and the country what was really happening in the corridors of power and what the constraints are that he was facing.
It’s one thing to make compromises after you’ve struggled for something you believe in, another to make the compromises without ever trying. Liberals and progressives had already been deeply disillusioned after the Democratic sweep of Congress in 2006, continued to fund the war in Iraq despite overwhelming popular opposition to that war. So when Obama entered the primaries and spent much of his time distinguishing himself from Sen. Clinton on precisely the grounds that he had opposed the war from the beginning, he gave his base the impression that he would be a leader who would challenge the war makers. Similarly, when he challenged the selfishness and materialism that pervaded Wall Street, we felt we had a candidate who would be willing to speak truth to power.
So what happened? Massive bailouts for Wall Street while almost nothing for the millions of unemployed or those losing their homes to avaricious financial lenders; escalation of the war in Afghanistan and leaving 50,000 troops as “advisors” in Iraq; refusing to consider a “public option” for health care and supporting a plan that forces tens of millions of people to buy health insurance without putting any restraints on insurance companies’ continuing escalations of the amount we have to pay for health care; repression against immigrants; allowing continued drilling in the oceans for oil even after the Gulf disaster, and substituting the empty promise of “cap and trade” for the tax on carbons that is the only plausible way to reduce carbon emissions; refusal to punish those engaged in torture in the US intelligence community; and the list goes on.
The president has a bully pulpit that could have rallied the American public to an alternative worldview. Reagan did that while facing a hostile Democratic Congress; Roosevelt did that while facing a hostile Republican Congress – and that is what made them the most significant presidents of the 20th century.
Many of us will vote Democratic in November, despite all this. But don’t expect us to be able to rally others when the best we can say is that the Democrats and their national leader are better than the plausible alternatives. That is not a rallying cry likely to produce many votes or move us beyond our deep disappointments. And many others, feeling humiliated at allowing themselves to have opened to the hope Obama elicited, now find themselves either totally uninterested in politics or wishing to strike back at the Democrats for making fools of those who trusted. Obama and the Democrats remain clueless.
Rabbi Michael Lerner is editor of Tikkun Magazine and author of 11 books, most recently a national best-seller The Left Hand of God: Taking Back our Country from the Religious Right ( Harper, 2006). For a fuller presentation of these ideas see Rabbi Lerner’s editorial in the September/October issue of Tikkun, “2010 Elections: Why Have the Democrats Lost Popular Support?“



I do agree that Obama has falied to take the bully pulpit, but it has still be a remarkable legislative year. Yes, we have health care reform and initiated a degree of bank reform sorely needed. Bank bailouts could not be avoided. Most experts agree that it prevented an all out depression.Unfortunately banks have not opened up their pockets, having healed from the excesses.
As for Afghanistan, he did exactly what he promised in his campaign. He ramped up pressure on the Taliban. In the end this drew my support for him in the primaries. We cannot just pick up and leave, yet we are not staying there forever. There are plans to exit, but not before putting a hurt in AQ and the Taliban. Remaining engaged has already produced valuable intel on terror plots at the very heart of where they are hatched. As a German diplomat told me when I was in Armenia this past Spriing, the Afghan Pakistani border remains one of the most dangerous regions in the world.
Yes, I want to see a more agressive president who will show the GOP what real leadership is.
In several cities in the country, especially Minneapolis and Chicago, many peace activists were awoken by the FBI knocking on — or breaking down — their doors, quite early in the morning. Many papers and documents, computers and hard drives and miscellaneous items were taken away by the FBI agents. They were also served with subpoenas to appear before a grand jury which is investigating “terrorism.”
I, for one, will not vote for anyone supported by Obama, or supporting Obama, while his administration, in the person of the FBI, is harassing my comrades in the Peace Movement.
I’ve read and reread Rabbi Lerner piece. I agree with most of it.
President Obama’s worst failure was taking so long to get back to the bully pulpit. He and the Democrats let the GOP dominate the political discussion for about 20 months.
Now they have sucessfully defined Obama and the Democrats and people are believing all sorts of absurdities.
In the process they whipped up a massive storm of political fundamentalism, not unlike what swept Germany in the 1930s. It is so great that, as Bill Clinton remarked, facts no longer matter in this political era. Media people cannot be fact checkers or truth tellers without angering millions of angry and confused citizens.
Today, I attended a very good lecture on the genocides of the last hundred years or so. But I thought the speaker should have drawn some parallels to the Tea Baggers. Right now, they are not threatening to harm anyone. But there language isso filled with violence and they seem to wish the “social death” of liberals, Hispanics, Muslims, and African Americans.
Writing about what he calls eliminationism, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen saw stages. It is unlikely that this American exclusionism will ever get very far. I cannot prove it, but I suspect that som social scientists know how to generate this frenzy and also how to curb it enough so that real violence will not erupt.
It might be bad politics, but Obama and the Democrats have sworn to uphold the Constitution. This talk about the “Second Amendment option” is seditious and dangerous. Likewise, all the talk about nullification flies in the face of at least a century and a half of established constitutional law.
I am also bothered that no one is talking about how much damage is being done to our political system. It was not just a strategy of “No,” it was a deliberate strategy of abusing the filibuster and the rules on holds, and non, the rule that permits sending all pending nominations back to the Executive Branch after 30 days.
When this election is over, the constant use of the Big Lie technique will have proven wildly successful and it will become part of normal politics.
If the Democrats are to go down the tube in November, as appears likely, I would like to see them doing so in defense of our system.
The president has a bully pulpit that could have rallied the American public to an alternative world view.representative democracy is a “trust” relationship. That is, we elect them in trust that they will serve our interests. If they betray us and we don’t punish that betrayal by (at least) withholding our vote, they benefit from the betrayal and the whole system breaks down.
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Shane ping
Caravan Insurance