Following Martha Coakley’s loss in Massachusetts, Obama will no
doubt get a lot of advice to move to the center, to compromise more, to
give up any hope for the progressive agenda he was elected to deliver.
But that advice is totally wrong-headed! If he wants to be
remembered as anything other than an ineffectual one-term president, he
and his weak-kneed party need to seize the debate, push the agenda, and
present themselves once more as the party of change. Maybe they should
even go back to Spiro Agnew’s “nattering nabobs of negativsim” and pin
that label on the GOP.
It is unconscionable that even the last few months when they’ve had
their precious 60-vote supermajority, they’ve kowtowed to the right and
let the party of intransigence frame and control the debate, and the
votes. Now that they’ve lost that cushion, they’ve got only one hope of
staying viable. Here’s the briefest outline:
Listen to Howard Dean, who used to chair the party: “If you want to win you actually can’t move to the middle and become a
Republican,” former Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean
said on MSNBC Tuesday night. “You have to stand up and stand for the
things that you got elected on and the Democratic Party believes in. We
haven’t seen that on the health care bill and I think that’s part of
the problem.”
THIS strategy will result in one year writing good laws that won’t
get passed, throwing the bums out, consolidating power, and having an
amazing third and fourth year. Franklin Roosevelt used this strategy
successfully in his first term, showed the public that he wanted to
make real change, and swept back into office not just for a second term
but for a third and a fourth.
Obama, as a former community organizer, knows how to do this. He did
it effectively in his campaign. He did it in the first weeks of his
administration, and built a culture of hope. And then he started
back-door dealing, chipping away at the agenda, providing giveaways to
Wall Street, maintaining the worst aspects of the Bush foreign
policy…is it any wonder his constituency feels deserted and abandoned?
And that hope crashed and burned, leaving people bitter, angry, and
unmotivated to vote for weak-kneed scoundrels–which is how they are
perceiving the Democrats.
Otherwise, the issue of leadership is too important to leave to the politicians.
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