Note to progressives for Obama: What happens after Election Day?
By Joshua Frank
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Oct 30, 2008, 00:16
Unless John McCain has a bombshell of a scandal to drop on
Barack Obama at the 11th hour, this election is beginning to look like it’s in
the bag for the Democrats. The Republicans will finally be kicked out of the
White House and peace and calm will slowly return to Washington.
At least that’s the message reverberating across the
progressive landscape these days. One can almost hear a collective sigh of
relief. Darth Cheney will be gone. Karl Rove will be forced to recoil, and
President Bush can retire in ignorant bliss to his ranch in Crawford.
Ahhhh . . .
It is certainly comforting to believe the stars have aligned
and progressive values are about to flood the Beltway. Barack Obama has
campaigned on “Hope” and “Change” and we all but believe the guy is actually
going to deliver on his varied promises.
But believing is what’s caused so many to fall victim to
Obama fever. You know the signs: they send you emails from MoveOn.org (claiming
you’re to blame for Obama’s fictional loss) and hope-filled rants from Norman
Solomon. They talk about Obama as if he’s the next messiah, their wardrobe
consists of more than two Obama shirts that they’ll wear every day leading up
to the election. They have a “Change” sign in their window and one in their
front yard. It’s as if they’ve become more or less Obama-zombies, just in time
for Halloween.
No question the Obama strategists have accomplished what
they set out to do. Just look at all they’ve achieved thus far: antiwar
activists have exchanged their slogans for pro-Obama refrains, despite the fact
that their candidate inflates the alleged threat of Iran, wants to put more
troops in Afghanistan and won’t pull out of Iraq anytime soon.
Environmentalists have come out for Obama in large numbers,
even though he thinks coal can be clean and nuclear energy can be safe. No big
deal that he wants to drill, baby, drill off our coastal shores. At least the
guy believes in global warming.
Or take the civil rights champions who have few qualms about
his rabid support for FISA and the USAPATRIOT Act or social justice activists
who aren’t overly concerned that Obama condones the execution of convicts who
have never murdered.
Economic progressives, who would be the first to say the
economic I.V. pumped into the Wall Street bloodline was hastily passed and rips
off taxpayers, are the first to defend Obama’s economic platform. No matter he
supported the bailout without reservation. No matter his team of economic hit
men includes a whole slew of Clintonite neoliberals like Robert Rubin. Obama is
still their guy.
All of this wouldn’t bother me much if it weren’t for the
overt hypocrisy so many progressives, and a few radicals, are exhibiting with
their blind support for Obama. It’s one thing to embrace pragmatic voting and
lesser-evilism on the grounds that we don’t really live in a true democracy. It’s
quite another to be excited about the prospect of electing a man who doesn’t
stand for the issues you do, and is in fact campaigning against them.
What will happen if Obama wins the election? Progressive
Group Number One seems to believe he’ll magically move left once inaugurated
and is only running to the right in order to win the election. That position is
a non sequitur and not worthy of real discussion as it’s based on wishful
thinking.
Progressive Group Number Two knows Obama is pretty damn
conservative but is planning on voting “strategically,” arguing that change
comes in baby steps, yet they assure us they’ll apply pressure once Obama’s
elected to get the little toddler strolling. A friend, who happens to be a
professor at a large university, recently told me that he plans on coercing
Obama by pressuring elected members of Congress. He’ll be “making a stink” and “scene,”
he assured me.
What a relief.
“The forces arrayed against far-reaching progressive change
are massive and unrelenting. If an Obama victory is declared next week, those
forces will be regrouping in front of our eyes -- with right-wing elements
looking for backup from corporate and pro-war Democrats,” Norman Solomon
recently wrote in an article advising progressives to vote against their
interests. “How much leverage these forces exercise on an Obama presidency
would heavily depend on the extent to which progressives are willing and able
to put up a fight.”
Does Solomon even understand what it means to “put up a
fight”? And what’s with the notion that progressives will “apply pressure” once
Obama wins? They have no cash and he’s already going to receive most of their
votes. What are they going to do to pressure him, poke him in his ribs? Cause a
stink by farting through the halls of Congress? Obama may actually listen to us
if he thought progressives were considering to vote for a guy like Ralph Nader,
which is the point Nader seems to be making by campaigning in swing states this
week. Nader knows how to put up a real fight, one not mired in hypotheticals
and fear-mongering, so he’s pressuring Obama where it matters most.
Of course, such a direct confrontation to Obama’s backward
policies ruffles the slacks of many devout liberals. But that is the point.
Progressives are not flush with cash and as we all should know, flashing the almighty
buck is usually the best way to grab a politician’s attention. But the only
thing we have at our immediate disposal now is votes. These crooks need us to
get elected. Obama already has the majority of left-wing support shored up
despite his resistance to embrace our concerns. Imagine if he had to earn our
votes, instead of receiving our support without having to do a thing for it?
So let’s prepare for what’s ahead. Obama may win next
Tuesday, but what will happen to the movements that have been sidelined in
order to help get the Democrats elected? What will become of the environmental
movement after January 20? Will it step up to oppose Obama’s quest for nuclear
power and clean coal? Will the antiwar movement work to force Obama to take a
softer approach toward Iran?
Will they stop the troop increase in Afghanistan?
These are but a few of the questions I’d like progressive
supporters of Obama to answer. I’ve yet to hear exactly how they will pressure
an Obama administration. In fact, I don’t think they will. George W. Bush will
be gone and that will be enough for most. Progressives faced a similar
confrontation in 1992 when Bill Clinton took office, but without much of a
fight we saw neoliberalism take hold in the form of NAFTA and we endured the Telecommunications
Act, Welfare Reform, a forest plan written by the logging industry, the
dismantling of Glass-Steagall, the Iraq Liberation Act, and much, much more.
What makes the Democrats believe that they even deserve our
support now? President Bush has indeed been bad, but his most egregious
policies were upheld and supported by the majority of Democrats. They gave Bush
the green light to whack Saddam while they controlled the Senate. They
supported the USAPATRIOT Act (Obama voted for its reconfirmation), the War on
Terror, Bush’s increased Pentagon budget, a no-strings Wall Street bailout and
two awful Supreme Court confirmations. You may also remember that two years ago
we ushered Democrats back into office with the belief that they might actually
fight Bush on Iraq.
Instead, we’ve had nothing but complicity, with Democrats time and again
supporting increased war funds.
I hope I’m not alone in saying that we deserve more than
lofty rhetoric about “action” and “hope.” We deserve a program for real progressive
change -- the kind Democrats and Barack Obama will not bring as long as we give
them our unconditional support.
Joshua Frank is the co-editor with Jeffrey St.
Clair of the new book, “Red
State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots Resistance in the Heartland” just published
by AK Press. He can be reached at brickburner@gmail.com. Visit the Red State Rebels site at RedStateRebels.org.
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