With
two weeks left in the national campaign season and the political
balance of Congress on the line, voters are going to have
to make some gut-wrenching, nose-holding choices this November.
Including myself. Now that the President Obama is out on
the campaign trail, and the issues become more clear as
the spotlight is put more on him than on partisan commercial
ads, we can be assured that gridlock will be returning to
Washington if the Republicans takeover the House.
Not
only will we see a formulated attempt to repeal health care
reform, but we will see a radicalization of Republican ideology,
controlled by the extreme right, that will seek to implement
a radical policy platform similar to that of the 1990s.
We can�t possibly let history repeat itself. I�m not a Democrat,
nor am I a Republican, so I don�t have a �party stake� in
this election. But, as an Obama Independent, I do have a
stake in helping the administration carry out the change
we voted for two years ago. That means I�m taking my cues
from the President. As ugly as it is out there for some
Democrats, one in particular-in California-y�all know who I�m talking about, I�m
going to have to trust the President on this election.
The
political realities are what they are. Keep the Democratic
majority or prepare for two years of stonewalling going
into the election of 2012, where they (the Republicans)
will try to paint the word �failure� on President Obama�s
first term. Never mind that they did nothing to help him
get the country out of this economic ditch their party got
us in.
The
economy buried us deeper than the coal miners in Chile,
and President Obama has led an economic rescue that was
just as improbable and painstaking. If only the Republicans
had the patience of the 33 coal miners, we�d be celebrating
the economy�s recovery this season. However, to give Obama
and the Democrats credit for economic recovery would not
serve the political interests of the Republican Party nor
their takeover ambitions. So, they continue to ignore results,
juxtapose results with projections, play �he said-she said�
and do everything to impede the progress. If America were a drowning victim, the Republicans
would be arrested for interfering with a lifesaving rescue.
The
partisan media, and the mainstream media follow suit, highlighting
voter dissatisfaction because the change has taken longer
than expected. But let�s be truthful�Who (in their right
mind) expected us to have a total economic recovery in less
than two years? Okay, in my crystal ball, I see two hands
out there�so the rest of us were hopeful, but realistic,
in our cautious optimism about change. It was foolish to
expect an economy in freefall to be reversed in such a short
time. Its inertia is against the laws of nature.
This
economy was the worse since the Great Depression (even though
they refused to call it what it was [is]), and the Great
Depression lasted ten years. It took President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt THREE of his four elected terms to turn
the economy around. It�s insane to believe President Obama
can turn around a much larger economy with a nation twice
the size of Roosevelt�s in a fifth
of the time. But the partisan pundits and the radical fringe,
in this instance - the Tea Party - confuse the public by
making them think what we all know is impossible, even remotely
possible. Why are they expecting Obama to do it in less
than two years? That�s the sum total of this political landscape
- unreasonable expectations by unreasonable people.
So,
why should we, the public, buy into unreasonableness? And
I almost bought into it. I am so disappointed in my U.S.
Senator I don�t know what to do. California Senator, Barbara
Boxer, is a poor representation of a Senator. I�m sure you�ve
been following my eight month rant against her. I DID NOT
VOTE for her in this year�s primary. She has not served
my community nor my community�s interests in the 18 years
she�s been Senator. We�ve seen her less than five times.
In 18 years�I almost hosted her Republican opponent, Carly
Fiorina, (operative term here is ALMOST) at my Urban Issues
Breakfast Forum. Not because I�m all that impressed with
her, but because I�m tired of my community being ignored
by Barbara Boxer. But then I heard House Majority Whip,
James Clyburn, who I did host at the Urban Issues Forum.
And then I listened to my President, who is back in L.A.
this week to help Democrats hold on in Congress. Now is
not the time to make a statement on Boxer. We�d actually
hurt the President more than we�d be hurting Boxer. So,
I�ma have to hold my nose�Yeah, I know. It stinks, doesn�t
it? But we�ll all have to hold our noses when we go to the
polls in California.
I�m sure many communities have similar stinky choices they
have to. But that�s politics�it stinks until it works. Right
now, we need it to work.
That
brings us to the tough choices we have to make this November.
The Republicans haven�t shown they deserve a chance to run
Congress on a warmed over soup called �Pledge to America.� All it represents
is a made-over 1994 Contract with America
platform to impede and obstruct any change in Washington. We cannot, in good conscience, participate in sending ideological
obstructionists to Congress. That�s the only thing I feel
will save Barbara Boxer, and the likes of Barbara Boxer
in all the other states.
We
cannot afford a repeat of the 1994 Contract with America. Yeah, I know. It stinks, but hold your
nose and help our President complete the non-violent political
revolution we started in this country to change the face
and tenor of American politics.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, PhD is a national columnist
and author of
Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is
AnthonySamad.com.
Click here
to contact Dr. Samad. |