There
are probably many reasons for the loss in Massachusetts, but what
is so striking was the arrogance of the Coakley campaign taking
a victory for granted in the first place.
Yet
the more important matter, at least for me, is that the anger that
so many people feel in the USA is precisely the anger that the Obama
administration should be tapping into in order to move change.
Instead, the Administration recoils and their instincts--as
many of us knew prior to the election--are to go to the "middle"
and seek compromise with the political Right. Their behavior
is also marked by surrounding themselves with elements of the ruling
elite, as in too many faces from Wall Street.
Immediately
after hearing the results of the election i started thinking about
President Franklin Roosevelt. His first year in office--1933--was
not especially a shining moment for him. In fact, Roosevelt's
instincts were not very different from those of Obama's. So,
what changed? Two things actually. The first is that
Roosevelt faced very stiff opposition to his anti-Depression efforts
by forces to his Right. This surprised Roosevelt who, himself,
was a child of the elite. But the resistance was very stiff.
The second factor was pressure from his political left. In
fact, by 1934 there was an energized unemployment movement AND union
movement at work. In 1934 there were several general strikes
and people were in motion. In 1935, African Americans, disappointed
that the New Deal programs were not sufficiently addressing the
situation facing African Americans, began organizing, part of which
culminated in the formation of the National Negro Congress, a coalition
that played a major role in supporting union organizing in the 1930s,
as well as pressuring the Roosevelt administration regarding racial
policy.
So,
the question is whether Obama will feel the Roosevelt-tug, or whether
he will continue to dive into the middle--or worse--in response
to voter anger. I would suggest that the answer depends less
on Obama and more on us. Will we be in the streets around
war, or will we be sending emails reflecting our despair?
Will the unemployed be organized through groups like ACORN, National
People's Action, and labor unions, or will they simply be a statistic
that is referenced in speeches? Will workers move to organize
despite every obstacle that corporate America puts before them,
or will they cringe awaiting the next pink slip? These are
the sorts of questions that progressives need to be asking and,
more importantly, acting upon.
I
am tired of the complaints; it is time to get moving.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |