Unfortunately
what too few leftists and progressives
have been prepared to accept is that the
polarization is to a great extent centered
on a revenge-seeking white supremacy;
on race and the racial implications of
the moves to the right in the US political
system. It is also focused on a re-subjugation
of women, harsh burdens on youth and the
elderly, increased war dangers, and reaction
all along the line for labor and the working
class. No one on the left with any good
sense should remain indifferent or stand
idly by in the critical need to defeat
Republicans this year.
U.S.
Presidential elections are not what progressives
want them to be
A
large segment of what we will call
the ‘progressive forces’ in US politics
approach US elections generally, and Presidential
elections in particular, as if: (1) we
have more power on the ground than we
actually possess, and (2) the elections
are about expressing our political outrage
at the system. Both get us off on the
wrong foot.
The
US electoral system is among the most
undemocratic on the planet. Constructed
in a manner so as to guarantee an ongoing
dominance of a two party duopoly, the
US electoral universe largely aims at
reducing so-called legitimate discussion
to certain restricted parameters acceptable
to the ruling circles of the country.
Almost all progressive measures, such
as Medicare for All or Full Employment,
are simply declared ‘off the table.’ In
that sense there is no surprise that the
Democratic and Republican parties are
both parties of the ruling circles, even
though they are quite distinct within
that sphere.
The
nature of the US electoral system--and
specifically the ballot restrictions and
‘winner-take-all’ rules within it--encourages
or pressures various class fractions and
demographic constituency groups to establish
elite-dominated electoral coalitions.
The Democratic and Republican parties
are, in effect, electoral coalitions or
party-blocs of this sort, unrecognizable
in most of the known universe as political
parties united around a program and a
degree of discipline to be accountable
to it. We may want and fight for another
kind of system, but it would be foolish
to develop strategy and tactics not based
on the one we actually have.
The
winner-take-all nature of the system discourages
independent political parties and candidacies
on both the right and the left. For
this reason the extreme right made a strategic
decision in the aftermath of the 1964
Goldwater defeat to move into the Republican
Party with a long-term objective of taking
it over. This was approached at
the level of both mass movement building,
e.g., anti-busing, anti-abortion, as well
as electoral candidacies. The GOP
right’s ‘Southern Strategy’ beginning
in 1968 largely succeeded in chasing out
most of the pro-New Deal Republicans from
the party itself, as well as drawing in
segregationist Democratic voters in the
formerly ‘Solid South.’
Obama never pretended
that he was anything other than Black
Efforts
by progressives to realign or shift the
Democratic Party, on the other hand, were
blunted by the defeat of the Mississippi
Freedom Democratic Party in 1964, and
later the defeat of the McGovern candidacy
in 1972, during which time key elements
of the party’s upper echelons were prepared
to lose the election rather than witness
a McGovern victory. In the 1980s
a very different strategy was advanced
by Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow
insurgencies that aimed at building—at
least initially—an independent, progressive
organization capable of fielding candidates
within the Democratic primaries. This
approach—albeit independent of Jackson
himself—had an important local victory
with the election of Mayor Harold Washington
in Chicago. At the national level,
however, it ran into a different set of
challenges by 1989.
In
the absence of a comprehensive electoral
strategy, progressive forces fall into
one of three cul-de-sacs: (1) ad
hoc electoralism, i.e., participating
in the election cycle but with no long-term
plan other than tailing the Democrats;
(2) abandoning electoral politics altogether
in favor of modern-day anarcho-syndicalist
‘pressure politics from below’; or (3)
satisfying ourselves with far more limited
notions that we can best use the election
period in order to 'expose' the true nature
of the capitalist system in a massive
way by attacking all of the mainstream
candidates. We think all of these
miss the key point.
Our
elections are about money and the balance
of power
Money
is obvious, particularly in light of the Citizens
United Supreme Court decision.
The balance of power is primarily at the
level of the balance within the
ruling circles, as well as the level of
grassroots power of the various mass movements.
The party that wins will succeed
on the basis of the sort of electoral
coalition that they are able to assemble,
co-opt or be pressured by, including but
not limited to the policy and interest
conflicts playing out within its own ranks.
The
weakness of left and progressive forces
means we have been largely unable to participate, in
our own name and independent of the two
party upper crust, in most national-level
elections with any hope of success. In
that sense most left and progressive interventions
in the electoral arena at the national
level, especially at the Presidential
level, are ineffective acts of symbolic
opposition or simply propaganda work aimed
at uniting and recruiting far smaller
circles of militants. They are not aimed
at a serious challenge for power but rather
aim to demonstrate a point of view, or
to put it more crassly, to 'fly the flag.'
The electoral arena is frequently
not viewed as an effective site for structural
reforms or a more fundamental changing
of direction.
Our
politics, in this sense, can be placed
in two broad groupings—politics as self-expression
and politics as strategy. In an overall
sense, the left needs both of these—the
audacity and energy of the former and
the ability to unite all who can be united
of the latter. But it is also important
to know the difference between the two,
and which to emphasize and when in any
given set of battles.
Consider,
for a moment, the reform struggles with
which many of us are familiar. Let's say
that a community is being organized to
address a demand for jobs on a construction
site. If the community is not entirely
successful in this struggle, it does not
mean that the struggle was wrong or inappropriate.
It means that the progressives were
too weak organizationally and the struggle
must continue. The same is true
in the electoral arena. The fact
that it is generally difficult, in this
period, to get progressives elected or
that liberal and progressive candidates
may back down on a commitment once elected,
does not condemn the arena of
the struggle. It does, however,
say something about how we might need
to organize ourselves better in order
to win and enforce accountability.
In
part due to justified suspicion of the
electoral system and a positive impulse
for self-expression and making our values
explicit, too many progressives view the
electoral realm as simply a canvass upon
which various pictures of the ideal future
are painted. Instead of constructing
a strategy for power that involves a combination
of electoral and non-electoral activity,
uniting both a militant minority and a
progressive majority, there is an impulsive
tendency to treat the electoral realm
as an idea bazaar rather than as one of
the key sites on which the struggle for
progressive power unfolds.
The
Shifts within the Right and the Rise of
Irrationalism
Contrary
to various myths, there was no 'golden
age' in our country where politicians
of both parties got along and politics
was clean. U. S. politics has always
been dirty. One can look at any
number of elections in the 19th century,
for instance, with the Hayes-Tilden election
of 1876 being among the more notorious,
to see examples of electoral chicanery.
Elections have been bought and
sold and there has been wide-spread voter
disenfranchisement. In the late 19th century
and early 20th century massive voter disenfranchisement
unfolded as part of the rise of Jim Crow
segregation. Due to gains by both the
populist and socialists is this era, by
the 1920s our election laws were ‘reformed’—in
all but a handful of states—to do away
with ‘fusion ballots’ and other measures
previously helpful to new insurgent forces
forming independent parties and alliances.
What
is significant about the current era has
been the steady move of the Republican
Party toward the right, not simply at
the realm of neoliberal economics (which
has also been true of much of the Democratic
Party establishment) but also in other
features of the ‘ideology’ and program
of the Republicans. For this reason
we find it useful to distinguish between
conservatives and right-wing populists
(and within right-wing populism, to
put a spotlight on irrationalism).
Right-wing populism is actually a radical
critique of the existing system, but from
the political right with all that that
entails. Uniting with irrationalism,
it seeks to build program and direction
based largely upon myths, fears and prejudices.
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Right-wing
populism exists as the equivalent of the
herpes virus within the capitalist system.
It is always there--sometimes latent,
at other times active—and it does not
go away. In periods of system distress,
evidence of right-wing populism erupts
with more force. Of particular importance
in understanding right-wing populism is
the complex intersection of race, anti-immigrant
settler-ism, ‘producerism,’ homophobia
and empire.
In
the US, right-wing populism stands as
the grassroots defender of white racial
supremacy. It intertwines with the
traditional myths associated with the
“American Dream” and suggests that the
US was always to be a white republic and
that no one, no people, and no organization
should stand in the way of such an understanding.
It seeks enemies, and normally enemies
based on demographics of ‘The Other’.
After all, right-wing populism sees itself
in the legacy of the likes of Andrew Jackson
and other proponents of Manifest Destiny,
a view that saw no inconsistency between
the notion of a white democratic republic,
ethnic cleansing, slavery, and a continental
(and later global) empire. ‘Jacksonian
Democracy’ was primarily the complete
codification and nationalization of white
supremacy in our country’s political life.
Irrationalism
is rising as an endemic virus in our political
landscape
Largely
in times of crisis and uncertainty, virulent
forms of irrationalism make an appearance.
The threat to white racial supremacy that
emerged in the 1960s, for instance, brought
forward a backlash that included an irrationalist
view of history, e.g., that the great
early civilizations on Earth couldn’t
have arisen from peoples with darker skins,
but instead were founded by creatures
from other planets. Irrationalism,
moreover, was not limited to the racial
realm. Challenges to scientific theories
such as evolution and climate change are
currently on the rise. Irrationalism
cries for a return to the past, and within
that a mythical past.
A component of various right-wing ideologies,
especially fascism, irrationalism exists
as a form of sophistry, and even worse.
It often does not even pretend to hold
to any degree of logic, but rather simply
requires the acceptance of a series of
non sequitur assertions.
Right-wing
populism and irrationalism have received
nationwide reach anchored in institutions
such as the Fox network, but also right-wing
religious institutions. Along with
right-wing talk radio and websites, a
virtual community of millions of voters
has been founded whose views refuse critique
from within. Worse, well-financed
and well-endowed walls are established
to ensure that the views are not challenged
from without. In the 2008 campaign
and its immediate aftermath, we witnessed
segments of this community in the rise
of the ‘birther’ movement and its backing
by the likes of Donald Trump. Like
many other cults there were no facts that
adherents of the ‘birthers’ would accept
except those ‘facts’ which they, themselves,
had established. Information contrary
to their assertions was swept away. It
didn’t matter that we could prove Obama
was born in the US, because their real
point, the he was a Black man, was true.
The
2012 Republican primaries demonstrated
the extent to which irrationalism and
right-wing populism, in various incarnations,
have captured the Republican Party.
That approximately 60% of self-identified
Republicans would continue to believe
that President Obama is not a legitimate
citizen of the USA points to the magnitude
of self-delusion.
The
Obama campaign of 2008 at the grassroots
was nothing short of a mass revolt
The
energy for the Obama campaign was aimed
against eight years of Bush, long wars,
neoliberal austerity and collapse, and
Republican domination of the US government.
It took the form of a movement-like embrace
of the candidacy of Barack Obama.
The nature of this embrace, however, set
the stage for a series of both strategic
and tactical problems that have befallen
progressive forces since Election Day
2008.
The winner-take-all
nature of the system discourages independent
political parties and candidacies on both
the right and the left
The
mis-analysis of Obama in 2007 and 2008
by so many people led to an overwhelming
tendency to misread his candidacy.
In that period, we—the authors of this
essay—offered critical support and
urged independent organization
for the Obama candidacy in 2008 through
the independent ‘Progressives for Obama’
project. We were frequently chastised
by some allies at the time for being too
critical, too idealistic, too ‘left’,
and not willing to give Obama a chance
to succeed. Yet our measured skepticism,
and call for independence and initiative
in a broader front, was not based on some
naïve impatience. Instead, it was based
on an assessment of who Obama was and
the nature of his campaign for the Presidency.
Obama
was and is a corporate liberal
Obama
is an eloquent speaker who rose to the
heights of US politics after a very difficult
upbringing and some success in Chicago
politics. But as a national figure,
he always positioned himself not so much
as a fighter for the disenfranchised but
more as a mediator of conflict, as someone
pained by the growth of irrationalism
in the USA and the grotesque image of
the USA that much of the world had come
to see. To say that he was a reformer
does not adequately describe either his
character or his objectives. He
was cast as the representative, wittingly
or not, of the ill-conceived ‘post-Black
politics era’ at a moment when much of
white America wanted to believe that we
had become ‘post-racial.’ He was
a political leader and candidate trying
to speak to the center, in search of a
safe harbor. He was the person to
save US capitalism at a point where everything
appeared to be imploding.
For
millions, who Obama
actually was, came to be secondary to
what he represented for them.
This was the result of a combination of
wishful thinking, on the one hand, and
strongly held progressive aspirations,
on the other. In other words, masses
of people wanted change that they could
believe in. They saw in Obama the representative
of that change and rallied to him.
While it is quite likely that Hillary
Clinton, had she received the nomination,
would also have defeated McCain/Palin,
it was the Obama ticket and campaign that
actually inspired so many to believe that
not only could there be an historical
breakthrough at the level of racial symbolism—a
Black person in the White House—but that
other progressive changes could also unfold.
With these aspirations, masses of people,
including countless numbers of left and
progressive activists, were prepared to
ignore uncomfortable realities about candidate
Obama and later President Obama.
There
are two examples that are worth mentioning
here. One, the matter of race.
Two, the matter of war. With regard
to race, Obama never pretended that he
was anything other than Black. Ironically,
in the early stages of his campaign many
African Americans were far from certain
how ‘Black’ he actually was. Yet
the matter of race was less about who
Obama was—except for the white supremacists—and
more about race and racism in US history
and current reality.
Nothing
exemplified this better than the controversy
surrounding Rev. Jeremiah Wright, followed
by Obama's historic speech on race in
Philadelphia. Wright, a liberation
theologian and progressive activist, became
a target for the political right as a
way of 'smearing' Obama. Obama
chose to distance himself from Wright,
but in a very interesting way. He
upheld much of Wright's basic views of
US history while at the same time acting
as if racist oppression was largely a
matter of the past. In that sense
he suggested that Wright's critique was
outdated.
Wright's
critique was far from being outdated.
Yet in his famous speech on race,
Obama said much more of substance than
few mainstream politicians had ever done.
In so doing, he opened the door to the
perception that something quite
new and innovative might appear in the
White House. He made no promises,
though, which is precisely why suggestions
of betrayal are misplaced. There
was no such commitment in the first place.
With
regard to war, there was something similar.
Obama came out against the Iraq
War early, before it started. He opposed
it at another rally after it was underway.
To his credit, US troops have been withdrawn
from Iraq. He never, however, came
out against war in general, or certainly
against imperialist war. In fact,
he made it clear that there were wars
that he supported, including but not limited
to the Afghanistan war. Further,
he suggested that if need be he would
carry out bombings in Pakistan. Despite
this, much of the antiwar movement and
many other supporters assumed that
Obama was the antiwar candidate in a wider
sense than his opposition to the war in
Iraq. Perhaps ‘assumed’ is not quite
correct; they wanted him to be
the antiwar candidate who was more in
tune with their own views.
With
Obama's election, the wishful thinking
played itself out, to some degree, in
the form of inaction and demobilization.
Contrary to the complaints of some
on the Left, Obama and his administration
cannot actually be blamed for this. There
were decisions made in important social
movements and constituencies to (1) assume
that Obama would do the 'right thing,'
and, (2) provide Obama 'space' rather
than place pressure on him and his administration.
This was a strategic mistake. And when
combined with a relative lack of consolidating
grassroots campaign work into ongoing
independent organization at the grassroots,
with the exception of a few groups, such
as the Progressive Democrats of America,
it was an important opportunity largely
lost.
There
is one other point that is worth adding
here. Many people failed to understand
that the Obama administration was not
and is not the same as Obama the individual,
and occupying the Oval Office is not the
same as an unrestricted ability to wield
state power. ‘Team Obama’ is certainly
chaired by Obama, but it remains a grouping
of establishment forces that share a common
framework—and common restrictive boundaries.
It operates under different pressures
and is responsive--or not--to various
specific constituencies. For instance,
in 2009, when President Zelaya of Honduras
was overthrown in a coup, President Obama
responded--initially--with a criticism
of the coup. At the end of the day,
however, the Obama administration did
nothing to overturn the coup and to ensure
that Honduras regained democracy. Instead
the administration supported the 'coup
people.' Did this mean that President
Obama supported the coup? It does
not really matter. What matters
is that his administration backtracked
on its alleged opposition to the coup
and then did everything in their power
to ensure that President Zelaya could
not return. This is why the focus
on Obama the personality is misleading
and unhelpful.
No
Struggle, No Progress
President
Obama turned out not to be the progressive
reformer that many people had hoped. At
the same time, however, he touched off
enough sore points for the political Right
that he became a lightning rod for everything
that they hated and feared. This
is what helps us understand the circumstances
under which the November 2012 election
is taking place.
The US electoral
system is among the most undemocratic
on the planet
As
a corporate liberal, Obama's strategy
was quite rational in those terms. First,
stabilize the economy. Second, move
on health insurance. Third, move
on jobs. Fourth, attempt a foreign
policy breakthrough. Contrary to
the hopes of much of his base, Obama proceeded
to tackle each of these narrowly as a
corporate ‘bipartisan’ reformer rather
than as a wider progressive champion of
the underdog. That does not mean
that grassroots people gained nothing.
Certainly preserving General Motors
was to the benefit of countless auto workers
and workers in related industries. Yet
Obama's approach in each case was to make
his determinations by first reading Wall
Street and the corporate world and then
extending the olive branch of bi-partisanship
to his adversaries on the right. This,
of course, led to endless and largely
useless compromises, thereby demoralizing
his base in the progressive grassroots.
While
Obama's base was becoming demoralized,
the political right was becoming energized
It
did not matter that Obama was working
to preserve capitalism. As far as the
right was concerned, there were two sins
under which he was operating: some
small degree of economic re-distributionism
and the fact that Obama was Black. The
combination of both made Obama a demon,
as far as the right was concerned, who
personified Black power, anti-colonialism
and socialism, all at the same time.
The
Upset Right and November 2012
We
stress the need to understand that Obama
represents an irrational symbol for the
political right, and a potent symbol that
goes way beyond what Obama actually stands
for and practices. The right, while
taking aim at Obama, also seeks, quite
methodically and rationally, to use him
to turn back the clock. They have
created a common front based on white
revanchism (a little used but
accurate term for an ideology of revenge),
on political misogynism, on anti-‘freeloader’
themes aimed at youth, people of color
and immigrants, and a partial defense
of the so-called 1%. Rightwing populism
asserts a ‘producer’ vs. ‘parasites’ outlook
aimed at the unemployed and immigrants
below them and ‘Jewish bankers and Jewish
media elites’ above them. Let us emphasize
that this is a front rather
than one coherent organization or platform.
It is an amalgam, but an amalgam
of ingredients that produces a particularly
nasty US-flavored stew of right-wing populism.
Reports
of declining Obama support among white
workers is a good jumping off point in
terms of understanding white revanchism.
Obama never had a majority among
them as a whole, although he did win a
majority among younger white workers.
White workers have been economically declining
since the mid-1970s. This segment
of a larger multinational and multiracial
working class is in search of potential
allies, but largely due to a combination
of race and low unionization rates finds
itself being swayed by right-wing populism.
Along with other workers it is insecure
and deeply distressed economically, but
also finds itself in fear—psychologically—for
its own existence as the demographics
of the USA undergoes significant changes.
They take note of projections that
the US, by 2050, will be a majority of
minorities of people of color. They perceive
that they have gotten little from Obama,
but more importantly they are deeply suspicious
as to whether a Black leader can deliver
anything at all to anyone.
Political
misogynism—currently dubbed ‘the war on
women’---has been on the rise in the US
for some time. The ‘New Right’ in
the 1970s built its base in right-wing
churches around the issue in the battles
over abortion and reproduction rights,
setting the stage for Reagan’s victory.
In the case of 2012, the attacks on Planned
Parenthood along with the elitist dismissal
of working mothers have been representative
of the assertion of male supremacy, even
when articulated by women. This
in turn is part of a global assault on
women based in various religious fundamentalisms
that have become a refuge for economically
displaced men and for gender-uncomfortable
people across the board.
The
attack on ‘slacker,’ ‘criminal’
and ‘over-privileged’ youth, especially
among minorities, is actually part of
what started to unfold in the anti-healthcare
antics of the Tea Party. Studies
of the Tea Party movement have indicated
that they have a conceptualization based
on the "deserving" and "undeserving" populations.
They and many others on the right
are deeply suspicious, if not in outright
opposition, to anything that they see
as distributing away from them any of
their hard-won gains. They believe
that they earned and deserve what they
have and that there is an undeserving
population, to a great extent youth (but
also including other groups), who are
looking for handouts. This helps us understand
that much of the right-wing populist movement
is a generational movement of white baby-boomers
and older who see the ship of empire foundering
and wish to ensure that they have life
preservers, if not life-boats.
The
defenders of the 1% are an odd breed.
Obviously that includes the upper
crust, but it also includes a social base
that believes that the upper crust earned
their standing. Further, this social
base believes or wishes to believe that
they, too, will end up in that echelon.
Adhering to variations of Reaganism,
‘bootstrapping’ or other such ideologies,
they wish to believe that so-called free
market capitalism is the eternal solution
to all economic problems. Despite
the fact that the Republican economic
program is nothing more or less than a
retreading of George W. Bush's failed
approach, they believe that it can be
done differently.
Empire,
balance of forces and the lesser of two
evils
The
choice in November 2012 does not come
down to empire vs. no-empire. While
anyone can choose to vote for the Greens
or other non-traditional political parties,
the critical choice and battleground continues
to exist in the context of a two-party
system within the declining US empire.
The balance of forces in 2012 is
such that those who are arrayed against
the empire are in no position to mount
a significant electoral challenge on an
anti-imperialist platform.
To
assume that the November elections are
a moment to display our antipathy toward
empire, moreover, misses entirely what
is unfolding. This is not a referendum
on the “America of Empire”: it is
a referendum pitting the “America of Popular
Democracy”—the progressive majority representing
the changing demographics of the US and
the increasing demands for broad equality
and economic relief, especially the unemployed
and the elderly—against the forces of
unfettered neoliberalism and far right
irrationalism. Obama is the face
on the political right’s bull's eye, and
stands as the key immediate obstacle to
their deeper ambitions. We, on the
left side of the aisle, recognize that
he is not our advocate for the 99%. Yet
and quite paradoxically, he is the face
that the right is using to mobilize its
base behind irrationalism and regression.
That’s
why we argue that Obama's record is really
not what is at stake in this election
Had
the progressive social movements mobilized
to push Obama for major changes we could
celebrate; had there been progressive
electoral challenges in the 2010 mid-term
elections and even in the lead up to 2012
(such as Norman Solomon's congressional
challenge in California, which lost very
narrowly), there might be something very
different at stake this year. Instead
what we have is the face of open reaction
vs. the face of corporate liberalism,
of ‘austerity and war on steroids’ vs.
‘austerity and war in slow motion.’
This will be one
of the most polarized and critical elections
in recent history
This
raises an interesting question about the
matter of the "lesser of two evils," something
which has become, over the years, a major
concern for many progressives. Regularly
in election cycles some progressives will
dismiss supporting any Democratic Party
candidate because of a perceived need
to reject "lesser evil-ism", meaning that
Democrats will always strike a pose as
somewhat better than the GOP, but remain
no different in substance. In using
the anti-‘lesser evil-ism’ phraseology,
the suggestion is that it really does
not matter who wins because they are both
bad. Eugene Debs is often quoted—better
to vote for what you want and not get
it, than to vote for what you oppose and
get it. While this may make for strong
and compelling rhetoric and assertions,
it makes for a bad argument and bad politics.
In
elections progressives need to be looking
very coldly at a few questions:
-
Are
progressive social movements strong
enough to supersede or bypass the
electoral arena altogether?
-
Is
there a progressive candidate who
can outshine both a reactionary and
a mundane liberal, and win?
-
What
would we seek to do in achieving victory?
-
What
is at stake in that particular election?
In
thinking through these questions, we think
the matter of a lesser of two evils is
a tactical question of simply voting for
one candidate to defeat another, rather
than a matter of principle. Politics
is frequently about the lesser of two
evils. World War II for the USA,
Britain and the USSR was all about the
lesser of two evils. Britain and
the USA certainly viewed the USSR as a
lesser evil compared with the Nazi Germany,
and the USSR came to view the USA and
Britain as the lesser evils. Neither
side trusted the other, yet they found
common cause against a particular enemy.
There are many less dramatic examples,
but the point is that it happens all the
time. It’s part of ‘politics as strategy’
mentioned earlier.
It
is for these reasons that upholding the
dismissal of the 'lesser evil-ism' is
unhelpful. Yes, in this case, Obama
is aptly described as the lesser of two
evils. He certainly represents a
contending faction of empire. He
has continued the drone attacks in Afghanistan
and Pakistan. His healthcare plan
is nowhere near as helpful as would be
Medicare for All. He has sidelined
the Employee Free Choice Act that would
promote unionization. What this tells
us is that Obama is not a progressive.
What it does not tell us is how
to approach the elections.
Approaching
November
The
political right, more than anything, wishes
to turn November 2012 into a repudiation
of the changing demographics of the US
and an opportunity to reaffirm not only
the empire, but also white racial supremacy.
In addition to focusing on Obama
they have been making what are now well-publicized
moves toward voter suppression, with a
special emphasis on denying the ballot
to minority, young, formerly incarcerated
and elderly voters. This latter
fact is what makes ridiculous the suggestion
by some progressives that they will stay
home and not vote at all.
The
political right seeks an electoral turn-around
reminiscent of the elections at the end
of the 19th century in the South that
disenfranchised African Americans and
many poor whites. This will be their
way of holding back the demographic and
political clocks. And, much like
the disenfranchisement efforts at the
end of the 19th century, the efforts in
2012 are playing on racial fears among
whites, including the paranoid notion
that there has been significant voter
fraud carried out by the poor and people
of color (despite all of the research
that demonstrates the contrary!).
What too few
leftists and progressives have been prepared
to accept is that the polarization is
to a great extent centered on a revenge-seeking
white supremacy
Furthermore,
this is part of a larger move toward greater
repression, a move that began prior to
Obama and has continued under him. It
is a move away from democracy as neo-liberal
capitalism faces greater resistance and
the privileges of the "1%" are threatened.
Specifically, the objective is to
narrow the franchise in very practical
terms. The political right wishes
to eliminate from voting whole segments
of the population, including the poor.
Some right-wingers have even been
so bold as to suggest that the poor should
not be entitled to vote.
November
2012 becomes not a statement about the
Obama presidency, but a defensive move
by progressive forces to hold back the
‘Caligulas’ on the political right. It
is about creating space and using mass
campaigning to build new grassroots organization
of our own. It is not about endorsing
the Obama presidency or defending the
official Democratic platform. But it is
about resisting white revanchism and political
misogynism by defeating Republicans and
pressing Democrats with a grassroots insurgency,
while advancing a platform of our own,
one based on the ‘People’s Budget’ and
antiwar measures of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus. In short, we need
to do a little ‘triangulating’ of our
own.
Why
do we keep getting ourselves into this
hole?
Our
answer to this question is fairly straight
forward. In the absence of a long-term
progressive electoral strategy that is
focused on winning power, we will find
ourselves in this "Groundhog Day"
scenario again and again. Such a
strategy cannot be limited to the running
of symbolic candidates time and again
as a way of rallying the troops. Such
an approach may feel good or help build
socialist recruitment, but it does not
win power. Nor can we simply tail
the Democrats.
The
central lesson we draw from the last four
years has less to do with the Obama administration
and more to do with the degree of effective
organization of social movements and their
relationship to the White House, Congress
and other centers of power. The
failure to put significant pressure on
the Obama administration--combined with
the lack of attention to the development
of an independent progressive strategy,
program and organizational base--has created
a situation whereby frustration with a
neo-liberal Democratic president could
lead to a major demobilization. At bottom
this means further rightward drift and
the entry into power of the forces of
irrationalism.
Crying
over this situation or expressing our
frustration with Obama is of little help
at this point. While we will continue
to push for more class struggle approaches
in the campaign’s messages, the choice
that we actually face in the immediate
battle revolves around who would we rather
fight after November 2012: Obama
or Romney? Under what administration
are progressives more likely to have more
room to operate? Under what administration
is there a better chance of winning improvements
in the conditions of the progressive majority
of this country? These are the questions
that we need to ask. Making a list
of all of the things that Obama has not
done and the fact that he was not a champion
of the progressive movement misses a significant
point: he was never the progressive
champion. He became, however, the
demon for the political right and the
way in which they could focus their intense
hatred of the reality of a changing US,
and, indeed, a changing world.
We
urge all progressives to deal with the
reality of this political moment rather
than the moment we wish that we were experiencing.
In order to engage in politics,
we need the organizations to do politics
with, organizations that belong
to us at the grassroots. That ball is
in our court, not Obama’s. In 2008 and
its aftermath, too many of us let that
ball slip out of our hands, reducing us
to sideline critics, reducing our politics
to so much café chatter rather than real
clout. Let’s not make that mistake again.
Note:
This commentary was originally published
on Alternet.org.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member and Columnist,
Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar
with the Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate
past president of TransAfricaForum,
and the author of “They’re
Bankrupting Us” - And Twenty Other Myths
about Unions. He is also the
co-author of Solidarity
Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor
and a New Path toward Social Justice,
which examines the crisis of organized
labor in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Carl Davidson is a political
organizer, writer and public speaker.
He is currently co-chair of Committees
of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism,
a board member of the US Solidarity Economy
Network, and a member of Steelworker Associates
in Western Pennsylvania. His most recent
book is New
Paths to Socialism.
Click here
to contact Mr. Davidson.