In the beginning, Americans Elect said
its purpose was to "Break the gridlock and change
politics as usual - No special interest. No agenda.
Country before party." And now, two years and
many post mortems later, there is plenty on why, after
spending $35 million and getting all the fawning publicity
money could buy, they have called the whole thing
off. I think most of obits are off the mark
A couple of months ago I suggested that
the third party internet candidacy process being fostered
by Americans Elect might be called the Catfood Party
because it seemed to suggest the same approach to
vital social programs for seniors and people with
disabilities as the much ballyhooed Simpson Bowles
scheme. Activists had taken to calling the latter
the Catfood Commission, in reference to the fact that
many seniors succumb to eating pet food when their
meager incomes are depleted.
My thinking was prompted by New York
Times columnist Thomas Friedman’s nomination of former
U.S. Comptroller General David Walker, a former senior
executive at PWC auditing firm and currently the chief
executive of something called the “Comeback America
Initiative,” to be Americans Elect’s standard bearer.
And what does Walker propose to do to “get “America’s
fiscal house in order”? You guess it – “entitlement
reform.”
Walker, apparently a willing candidate,
accuses the Democrats of being “still in denial about
the need to renegotiate our social insurance contract”
and complains that President Obama “is not talking
about the fundamental reforms in Medicare and Medicaid
that we need, and he is not ready to touch Social
Security.”
“We need to re-impose tough budget controls,
constrain federal spending, decide which Bush tax
cuts will stay, and engage in comprehensive reform
of our entitlement, healthcare and tax systems,” Walker
wrote in 2008. “A bipartisan commission that would
make recommendations for an up-or-down vote by Congress
would be a positive step to making this a reality.”
Since that time very little light has
been thrown on the true aims of Americans Elect. Reportage
and commentary has concentrated on the fact that some
Wall Street heavy hitters were financing the operation,
that the list of their names was being kept secret,
and that those running the show reserved the right
to ultimately overrule any choice the online voters
might make.
One person is quite unhappy the Americans
Elect gambit failed. “As a Clinton White House veteran
who has touted the virtues of an independent candidacy
to shake up the system, I’d like to clear up some
confusion,” wrote Washington Post columnist Matt Miller
last week. “The reason I’ve wanted an independent
candidacy has nothing to do with faulting Democrats
and Republicans equally. It has to do with changing
the boundaries of debate,” he continued.
What the Democrats are proposing “are
not nearly equal to the challenges we face,” wrote
Miller, a former Clinton Administration staffer.
“The renewal agenda we need partly involves
reallocating public resources from outsized projected
spending on programs serving seniors to big investments
in the future — a reallocation Democrats won’t pursue,
or won’t pursue on anything like the scale required,
because they’re afraid of how elderly voters will
react (and because they are reluctant to give up the
political club that protecting current arrangements
affords them),” wrote Miller.
“If you think we need to slow the growth
of Medicare and other health-care spending substantially
(by bringing it more in line with other advanced nations’
per capita health spending), and use some of the savings
to shrink tuition at public colleges to an affordable
level (and not just save ten bucks a month on indebted
students’ interest costs, which is what we’re debating
today) — who’s your candidate?” asked Walker, a co-host
of public radio’s “Left, Right & Center,”
“Even if Americans Elect had gotten traction,
there was no certainty that the ideas I’m sketching
would have been given voice,” wrote Miller. “But the
right kind of independent candidacy could have been
a platform to start explaining and building a constituency
for the new policies and trade-offs that an aging
America in a global economy needs.”
Miller says something he calls “the math
of American renewal” requires that we “reallocate
resources from projected outsized growth in programs
serving seniors to future investments.”
Miller’s statement about healthcare spending
is misleading to say the least. The problem is not
the cost of Medicare and Medicaid; it’s the cost of
health care, which consistently increases faster than
the cost of everything else. He’s right that this
differs from the situation in other “advanced” countries,
but that is primarily because all them have some form
of universal healthcare or a “single payer” Medicare
type system that the rightwing and the self-proclaimed
centrists oppose and which most Democrats are too
cowardly to even propose.
Of course, the notion that the choice
we have is either forcing people to work more years
and cutting services to the elderly and disabled or
making education affordable is both silly and outrageous.
One thing is becoming clear to me now.
I have for some time been perplexed as to who some
centrists who prattle on and on about the essential
importance of education – about which there can be
no denial – remain so quiet when school budgets are
being slashed, teachers laid off by the hundreds of
thousands, and college tuition cost skyrocket. It
is because they wish to hoodwink us into thinking
that it’s because resources are being sopped up by
people over 60 years old.
The people behind Americans Elect are
claiming that they folded their tent because the people
they signed up on the net wouldn’t support any candidate.
Of those 2.5 million people who visited their website,
only 5 percent are said to have indicated support
for any candidate. Libertarian/Republican Ron Paul
got the most votes and former Louisiana Governor Buddy
Roemer reportedly came second. One report I saw said
Lady Gaga actually got the most “delegate” votes –
but that’s probably an urban legend.
“So like many dreams, Americans Elect
turned out to be too good to be true,” said the San
Francisco Chronicle in a rater sophomoric editorial
last week. “Perhaps voters were suspicious of an
enterprise that would not disclose the identity of
all of its big donors,” said the paper. “Maybe some
could not shake their fear that the third-party nominee
could not win, but only serve as a spoiler. Or perhaps
the group's many rules and caucus schedule struck
participants as too complicated or too contrived.”
Actually it was a faulty conception from
the start.
It would take more information than I
have to say definitively why Americans Elect went
up in smoke. But my hunch is that people – especially
the most motivated to explore such an option – are
not inclined to support a party when they have no
idea what is stands for, or to name a candidate when
they haven’t the foggiest notion what the campaign’s
platform would be. Did anyone really think the supporters
of Ron Paul would turn around and vote for Michael
Bloomberg if the New York Mayor got the most votes
in the Internet primary?
The best answer I found to the collapse
of Americans Elect came from Thomas E. Mann, a senior
fellow at the liberal leaning Brookings Institution,
and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the
conservative American Enterprise Institute.
“The third-party fantasy is of a courageous
political leader who could persuade Americans to support
enlightened policies to tax carbon; reform entitlements;
make critical investments in education, energy and
infrastructure; and eliminate tax loopholes to raise
needed revenue,” they wrote in the Washington Post
May 17.
“But there is simply no evidence that
voters would flock to a straight-talking, independent,
centrist third-party candidate espousing the ideas
favored by most third-party enthusiasts. Consensus
is not easily built around such issues, and differences
in values and interests would not simply disappear
in a nonpartisan, centrist haze.”
The centrists have an idea they want
to get across and, while scribes like Friedman and
Miller sometime let the cat out of the bag, the centrists
usually don’t want to spell it out loud. They prefer
working in back rooms on some kind of “grand bargain”
and presenting it to the public as if there is no
other choice. Flat earth Friedman spelled it out the
other day: “It’s because we’re leaving an era of some
50 years’ duration in which to be a president, a governor,
a mayor or a college president was, on balance, to
give things away to people; and we’re entering an
era — no one knows for how long — in which to be a
president, a governor, a mayor or a college president
will be, on balance, to take things away from people,”
he wrote.
Which is, of course, hogwash. But that’s
austerity, U.S. style. And it won’t fly.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of
the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and
Socialism and formerly worked for
a healthcare union. Click here to contact Mr. Bloice.
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