The
October 2nd rallies, sponsored by the One Nation Working Together
Coalition, have received a curious response in both the
mainstream and progressive media. Needless to say,
one can assume a cynical approach by Fox News, but in the
more mainstream media there were a range of views from tepid
to curious to ignoring altogether. In some sections
of the progressive and Left media there was a tendency to
discount the rally as simply a pro-Democratic Party love
fest.
The
actual numbers of people at the DC rally were probably in
the range of 200,000. It was massive. Whether
it was the same size as Glen Beck's seems to be a point
of contention, but there is no question but that people
turned out. It was also one of the most diverse rallies
I have attended in years. It was diverse racially,
ethnically, gender, age, politically, as well as type of
organization. It was also a very optimistic gathering,
a point that is well worth making since there had been a
high degree of skepticism as to whether this rally could
be pulled off at all and whether the turnout would be pathetic.
Yet
the optimism seemed to arise, not only based on the numbers,
but in a certain level of audacity. Specifically,
there was a sense in the crowd that we--whoever "we"
happened to be--were fighting back and were not falling
prey to despair. The speeches echoed this sentiment,
to a great extent. They were also noteworthy for being
relatively brief, and in some cases, quite impassioned.
One
Nation Working Together is a somewhat curious coalition
that may or may not last. Despite the rhetoric, it
is not clear that the Coalition's leaders are thinking of
this as a strategic alliance. Clearly this alliance
is necessary as part of the Get Out The Vote effort as we
face the mid-term elections in November. The Coalition
sought to energize the base, and so it seems to have. But
it also, implicitly, was saying to the Obama administration
and to the Democratic Congressional representatives that
the "change" for which people voted in 2008 has
not appeared on the scale that is necessary.
This
last point regarding the scale of change is of particular
importance in light of several comments offered recently
by the Obama administration, including by President Obama
himself. There should be no question but that there
have been significant reforms introduced during the first
two years of this administration. These have been
statutory, such as healthcare reform, as well as administrative.
Yet what the President and many others seem to miss
is the matter of scale. The Obama administration,
through its initial efforts at so-called bi-partisanship
and by various premature compromises (such as eliminating
single payer/Medicare for all from the debate over healthcare
reform), weakened the base. Additionally, Obama demobilized
the base, quite literally, with the transformation of his
campaign into Organizing for America, which basically became
a one-way electronic communications mechanism. It
was not just reforms that people were voting for, but a
different means of governing, particularly in a time of
crisis.
The
One Nation Working Together coalition has a sense of this
problem and believes that it is pushing the Obama administration
and the Democrats while at the same time focusing on the
danger from the political Right. What is missing,
however, is a more comprehensive and audacious strategic
vision as to what this Coalition could quite possibly inspire.
In particular, what is necessary at this very moment
is a progressive, populist initiative that is both decentralized
as well as united through a common narrative or theme. In
that sense, it would be a mirror of the Tea Party movement
that has emerged on the Right. A progressive, populist
initiative would need to be one that is not one national
organization but, rather, something to which various organizations
and social movements could affiliate. It would need
a broad program--which the One Nation Working Together has--but
also a story line about what has happened to the average
person in the USA, including the fact that the living standard
has been dropping and the rich are getting richer. To
this i would add a punch-line: it needs to be prepared
to go after both the political Right as well as the right-wing
within the Democratic Party. To do the latter it must
be prepared to find itself at odds with the administration,
and unapologetically so.
Will
the leaders of the One Nation Working Together coalition
embark on this course? Time will only tell but most
likely that will NOT be their tendency. In fact, a
good guess is that they will have to be pushed because the
stakes are quite high. To generate a political movement
that pushes from the left side of the aisle means going
against some elected leaders who have often paraded themselves
as friends of the people. It means that the leaders
of this coalition will not necessarily be invited to various
political events to share coffee, tea and a bit of brandy.
It may mean that they are excluded from meetings where
in the past they were in attendance, though it was never
clear that their views were taken into account. In
other words, it means that the leaders may feel that they
are being marginalized in mainstream circles.
It,
then, becomes the job of forces on the Left to push the
envelope. The unions, community-based organizations,
student groups, etc., that were in attendance in the various
rallies across the country have a base in 21st century USA.
This stands in utter contrast to the Glen Beck white
bread rally we saw in late August. We saw in the rallies
a sparkle that needs to be enhanced, but it can only be
enhanced if it is tied to a longer-term strategy that moves
from the rhetoric of change to the practice of social transformation.
In that sense, some of the commentaries that have
written off the rally are not only premature but actually
myopic in not seeing the possibilities. Of course,
it is certainly easier to mourn the lack of rain than it
is to develop an irrigation system.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar
with the Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate past president ofTransAfrica 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. |