A
top priority for progressives, regarding next year's presidential
election, should be convincing Barack Obama and John Edwards
to join forces as a ticket and defeat Hillary Clinton.
Were
one of them to drop out, the other would easily take first
place in the polls. But neither of them is likely to
drop out. As a result, unless they join forces, we will
face a choice between a pro-war, pro-corporate Republican and
the pro-war, pro-corporate Hillary Clinton. Jeff Cohen
recently laid out the
case against Clinton.
Together,
Obama and Edwards could announce their candidacy as a ticket
today, take the lead in the polling tomorrow, and keep it through
the primaries. They would also stand a much better chance
of defeating a Republican in the general election than would
Clinton. She is the designated loser, and what's frightening
(and motivating) is the thought of how awful our future would
be even if she were to win. This is a case that ought
to be clear to a wide range of progressives. Even if
you're committed to backing whoever the Democratic nominee
is, as a progressive you have an interest in making sure it
is not Hillary Clinton. And even if you're fed up with
the entire Democratic Party, you can recognize the danger of
Clinton becoming the nominee.
Personally,
I'm a Kucinich supporter. I keep pushing and prodding
and waiting for America to come to its senses and back Kucinich. I'm
not a party loyalist. I believe that when a party fails,
it should be opposed from outside of it for its own good and
for the good of all of us. I'm not a fan of Obama or
Edwards. Were they to gain the nomination as a ticket
for president and vice president, I might or might not vote
for them, depending on their positions at that point and the
other options available. I consider Cynthia McKinney
a true progressive and a hero.
All
of that having been said, I think it is high time we all realized
that the top electoral priority for progressives (other than
instituting honest and credible vote counting) has got to be
preventing Hillary Clinton from gaining the Democratic nomination.
Karl
Rove opposes Hillary for the same reason Osama bin Laden opposes
Bush (in order to give her a boost), but the right really does
despise Hillary Clinton. Nothing would be more divisive
to the party that refuses to challenge Bush-Cheney, discuss
impeachment, end the occupation of Iraq, or undo NAFTA or any
of Bill Clinton's other handiwork (like the media-conglomerating
telecom act).
But
the real problem with Hillary Clinton is that the left cannot
stand her. If anything could revive efforts to push a
third-party candidate or tempt an egocentric billionaire to
jump into the race, it would be nominating Hillary Clinton. If
anything could depress voter turnout to the point where a Republican "victory" was
just barely credible, it's nominating Hillary Clinton.
Getting
Clinton out of the #1 spot might also reduce her influence
on Congress, including on Nancy Pelosi, the person primarily
responsible for Bush and Cheney's free passes and immunity
from impeachment. Even groups like the National Organization
for Women, that flip-flopped from pro- to anti-impeachment
at the end of last year, might start to recover their soul,
were Hillary Clinton's influence reduced.
The
strategy of combining Edwards and Obama ought to be especially
appealing to those who really support Edwards or Obama. It's
even appealing to those, like me, who support some other candidate.
Edwards,
in my view, is a very corporate-friendly, military-friendly
Democrat, but decidedly a huge progressive cut above Clinton. Today's
John Edwards is a candidate whom progressives could promote
without nausea. On many issues he's a candidate of whom
we could be proud. In other areas, he could be worked
on. And he's shown himself capable of changing for the
better. As an added benefit, if an Edwards election is
stolen from him, there is reason to believe that – without
John Kerry around – he might challenge that theft.
Obama
is much more of a blank slate than Edwards, and some of the
bits he's filled in are pretty disturbing. Others are
encouraging. And there is a chance, there is at least
a possibility, that Obama would serve as a better president
or vice president than what he campaigns as. It's a very
slim chance, and this sort of wishful thinking is a very bad
habit for progressives. But here's the thing: we know
for a fact that Hillary Clinton would govern from the right. She
has an established record. And we can be sure she would
choose a running mate to the right of herself.
So,
how do we do it? How do we make Obama-Edwards or Edwards-Obama
a ticket? Well, asking one of them to take the vice presidency
is going to be a heck of a lot easier than asking one of them
to drop out, which is our other option. And we're asking
them to take a likely vice presidency rather than an unlikely
presidency. I doubt they'll need a game theorist to explain
this one to them. Plus, they can't be unaware that Dick
Cheney has turned the vice presidency into the real seat of
power. In fact, these two candidates could work out from
the start an understanding of the role the next vice president
would play.
But
which one of them should take the backseat? In favor
of Obama stepping back, he has less experience governing, he
has less experience campaigning, and his positions are less
progressive. In favor of Edwards stepping back, he is
behind Obama in the polls, and he is horribly handicapped by
his vote to support the Iraq War and the speeches he made in
support of it. Of course, we can and must leave it up
to the two of them, but I would prefer to see Edwards take
the vice presidential nomination, and I think he may have the
humility and understanding needed to approach Obama with such
a proposal. In the meantime, I think we should suggest
it to both of them.
David Swanson
is co-founder of the AfterDowningStreet.org coalition
and a board member of Progressive Democrats of America.
His website is www.davidswanson.org. Click
here to contact Mr. Swanson and BC.