After
President Obama�s announcement of an escalation of the Afghanistan
war, I received an email from an outraged colleague of mine.� She
was outraged not only with Obama, but also with me, given that I
had been an advocate of critical support for then Senator
Obama in his Presidential campaign.� She called upon me to denounce
President Obama and to admit that I had allegedly misled people.
I
was a bit taken aback by the note.� I responded by indicating that
I had been critical of Obama before his election and after his election.�
I stood by my position of critically supporting him in his election
for all the reasons indicated in earlier columns for BlackCommentator.com,
not the least of which being the possibility of utilizing the energy
that emerged around his campaign in order to galvanize broader progressive
change.
Leaving
aside, however, the suggestion of my denouncing President Obama�as
if that were a meaningful act�I found myself thinking about this
colleague�s note and her� suggestion that I was being sentimental
in not being harsher in my criticisms.
You,
the readers of BlackCommentator.com will have to be the judge of
whether I have been sufficiently �harsh� in my criticisms, but there
is actually a more important question here:� how should one criticize
the Obama administration?� This may seem like a very simple
question, but let me expand on my question a bit.� How should
one criticize the Obama administration in light of the fact that
the political Right launched an irrationalist campaign against the
first African American President of the United States and his administration
that is so obviously racist, anti-progressive, fear-based, and demagogic?
Part
of the difficulty for many liberals, progressives and leftists is
that the context in which we are struggling is different from anything
that we have addressed, at least at the national level.� The political
Right, with all of its symbolism, is tapping or attempting to tap
into the most racist sentiments among white Americans as a means
of defeating the Obama administration.� In addition, and very ominously,
the political Right, or at least sections of it, plays with the
idea of the need for a military coup to oust the President.
This
setting has led many liberals, progressives and leftists to remain
relatively if not totally silent in the face of Obama administration
policies that should receive absolutely no support.� This setting
has led large sections of Black America to refuse anything close
to a public criticism of the Obama administration for fear of being
viewed as a traitor and a collaborator with the devils of the political
Right.
The
fact of our complicated political circumstance means, among other
things, that we on the Left cannot act as if nothing has changed
since November 2008.� Obama is not George Bush in black-face, even
when there are policies that overlap, and despite the fact that
he leads an empire.� There is a different political alignment, and
for that matter certain very definite openings.� But it is also
not illogical to recognize that the political Right will attempt
to take advantage of criticisms of the Obama administration that
come from the Left in order to further their own objectives.
This
is not a new scenario, though it is different for most of us.� A
similar situation existed in the early years of the Franklin Roosevelt
administration in the 1930s, a point I tried to briefly make in
one of my commentaries from last week.� Roosevelt was criticized
by both the Right and the Left.� How did the Left criticize Roosevelt?�
That is where things get interesting.� The criticism was
largely through mass action in support of progressive causes and
legislation, some of which was advanced by the Roosevelt administration.��
Workers took advantage of what, by today�s standards, may appear
to have been a miniscule change in the law that gave them the right
to organize unions.� They began a process of organizing across the
country, an effort, by the way, which followed upon several years
of organizing by unemployed workers who were seeking jobs and relief.
The
example I keep coming back to, however, and one that I believe remains
deeply relevant, was the formation of the National Negro Congress
in 1936.� This, initially very broad effort, emerged out of discussions
among African Americans regarding how the New Deal was not sufficiently
benefiting African Americans.� Roosevelt had made a series of compromises
with white supremacist Democrats in the South in order to get legislation
passed.� The NNC, as part of its agenda, challenged these and other
compromises.
Progressives,
whether African Americans or non-African Americans, need to be advancing
an agenda that serves the needs of masses of people.� This will
mean that there will inevitably be clashes with the Obama administration,
whether over foreign or domestic policy.� Denunciations of Obama
and/or his Administration are secondary to mobilizing forces that
can press for change.� We have to be the ones that point out what
needs to be done, whether in the form of a demand for Medicare for
All or getting the USA out of Afghanistan.
Neither
despair nor rhetorical denunciations are relevant in genuine mass
politics.� The point is that it falls upon us to make the change
possible that we believe in�and know needs to happen.
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. |