White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs has been slapped around silly by commentator after commentator, decrying his anti-Lefty rage. But as I read the battle, it seems to miss a pretty fundamental point:
It's certainly not fair to criticize Obama for not being a Lefty. He wasn't ever a Lefty. He didn't promise to be a Lefty. And there's no reason to expect that he would ever become a Lefty.
But Lefties (like me) who criticize Obama are not criticizing him for failing our Lefty test. Our criticism is that Obama is failing the Obama test: that he is not delivering the presidency that he promised.
When Candidate Obama took on Hilary Clinton, he was quite clear about what he thought about the way Washington works. And he was quite clear about why he was running for President. As he said:
[U]nless we're willing to challenge the broken system in Washington, and stop letting lobbyists use their clout to get their way, nothing else is going to change. And the reason I'm running for president is to challenge that system.
Read it again: "The reason I am running for president is to challenge that system."
Or again:
[I]f we do not change our politics -- if we do not fundamentally change the way Washington works -- then the problems we've been talking about for the last generation will be the same ones that haunt us for generations to come.
Or again:
But let me be clear -- this isn't just about ending the failed policies of the Bush years; it's about ending the failed system in Washington that produces those policies. For far too long, through both Democratic and Republican administrations, Washington has allowed Wall Street to use lobbyists and campaign contributions to rig the system and get its way, no matter what it costs ordinary Americans.
Or again, as he asked, again and again:
Do we continue to allow lobbyists to veto our progress? Or do we finally put our national interests ahead of the special interests and address the concerns people feel over their jobs, their health care and their children's future?
Or again, as he explained:
We are up against the belief that it's OK for lobbyists to dominate our government -- that they are just part of the system in Washington. But we know that the undue influence of lobbyists is part of the problem, and this election is our chance to say that we're not going to let them stand in our way anymore.
Or perhaps put best:
We need to challenge the system... And if we're not willing to take up that fight, then real change -- change that will make a lasting difference in the lives of ordinary Americans -- will keep getting blocked by the defenders of the status quo.
Once Obama clinched the nomination, however, his rhetoric changed. And as he came to office, his focus, as a senior administration official explained, was to clean up the Executive, and leave to Congress the problem of cleaning up Congress (begging the obvious question: Does the president believe the problem with Washington is the presidency, and not Congress?)
Since coming to power, Obama has pushed just one piece of legislation that would have any effect at all on the power of lobbyists over Congress. That bill has not passed, and even if it had, it would have changed nothing in the lobbyists' power. He has not even indicated that he would support the only substantial reform of lobbyists power with support in Congress today -- the Fair Elections Now Act. Indeed, "congressional reform" doesn't even merit a mention on the "Additional Issues" page of whitehouse.gov (though "sportsmen" does).
Obama's strategy as president has not been to "change the way Washington works." Rather, he has pushed reforms in the same old way, with the same old games. As Glenn Greenwald put it, speaking of health care:
The way this bill has been shaped is the ultimate expression -- and bolstering -- of how Washington has long worked. One can find reasonable excuses for why it had to be done that way, but one cannot reasonably deny that it was.
Now I'm not sure whether it is leftist, or rightist, or centerist to govern through special interest deals. It certainly is Clintonist. It's precisely the administration that Hillary "lobbyists are people, too" Clinton promised. And were she president, and had she done exactly what Obama has done, then no one, I included, would have any reason to criticize her.
But beefed up Clintonism is not what Obama promised. He promised to "take up the fight." His failure to deliver on that critical promise -- the promise that distinguished him from his main primary rival -- or even to try, is a failure that everyone, Lefties included, should be free to complain about without suffering the rage of Gibbs.
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Until companies and lobbyists are barred from giving money to candidates, the system will never change.
It appears to me that via his appointments of especially Geitner, Summers, Rubin, Bernanke, and Emanuel, the President effectively displayed at least mild contempt for the People, and implicitly declared he would govern as a corporatist, damned what anyone thinks. Gibbs' comments seem an advanced manifestation of that contempt, directed especially at the voters who put Obama in office.
Ultimately, said contempt likely stems from the administration's recognition that voters no longer elect presidents, corporations elect presidents. As I recall, the moment Obama secured the nomination with his "populist" campaign, he turned immediately to Wall Street to finance his election.
It is quite serious. He's done much, and there's much to do he needs to do and that you might just as soon he not do -- right Mr Right?
To say that 'progressives' are right to feel betrayed and bewildered is beyond question.
As Lessig repeatedly states in this article, Obama is a corporatist -- the diametric opposite of a socialist.
I presume by bringing industry back to the US you refer to the industry Reagan, Clinton, and Bush sent overseas via their reckless and ignorant tax incentives. If you had paid any attention to true news this past week you would know that GM just turned its most profitable quarter in six years. If you had paid any attention to US history over the past 18 months, you would know that Obama stepped in to save GM despite clamorous (look it up) criticism from the right. Isn't saving US industry equal to bringing industry back? I'm sure not to you -- because it decidedly appears you haven't exercised your gray matter for a very long time, and likely also because your messiahs at Fox News deliberately chose not to tell you about GM's record profits in order to conceal their right wing stupidity.
Remember, it was a democratic congress while George Bush was in office!
Denial and belief in twisted truths will not change the fact that Bush and his regime were the ones that put our country on the destructive path it is on now. Increasing the deficit (which now conservatives are 'so worried' about) more than any President before him, launching wars based on lies, stopping or dismantling ecological laws and protections, sending more and more American jobs overseas, and too many other malevolent efforts to list here.
I can only imagine the 'history' books you've been reading. No doubt there the revisionist ones being crafted by the School Board of Texas. Keep drinking the Kool-Aid if you like my friend. It will never change the truth that Bush in office for 8 years, that was hell.
The Democrats didn't have the majority until Jan.2007. The damage was done by then. The GOBP got to enact all of their "dream" policies and what did the American people get?
2 Un-winnable Wars, Economic Collapse, Unemployment, Alienated our Friends and Empowered our Enemies.
Go peddle your bs at redstate==
All of the "failures" of this administration were failures of Congress.
Bills are passed because the public wants them, not because the President "pushes" them.
The "bully pulpit" only works when you are preaching to the converted.
It convinces no one, just focuses pressure. If the people don't want it, it does no good.
Prof Lessing is clearly part of the "BOF" crowd: "Blame Obama First".
BOF spelled backwards is FOB, or "Friend of Bill".
Is the Progressive BOF crowd the same as those who once were FOB? Seems like it.
I'll ask you: WHAT GOOD DID CLINTON EVER DO? Didn't get a health bill passed.
Financial reform? That he did - he signed the repeal of Glass-Steagall, deregulated the big banks, caused the subprime meltdown and crash. Clinton reformed our financial system, all right.
Clinton promised major change, too.
And got nothing out of Clinton except more Reaganomics, but you didn't complain, then or since.
But Obama is a letdown, a failure in your eyes?
I completely reject that premise, the article does not to convince me otherwise.
Why do we excoriate Obama, while Clinton got a free pass?
That's a question to ponder. I don't want a reply, it's going to just be denial anyway.
It's not really relevant. If Progressives are going to talk expectations versus accomplishments, they have only Clinton for comparison. Clinton did nothing, but nobody complained because he tried. Obama does a lot, but he didn't try to get more. People here like those who over-extend, "shoot for the moon" and fail. Not me.
Here's a good example: Clinton's first push was gays in the military. The public universally ridiculed him for making that his signature, first big policy push, it was a joke. He failed, it killed his Presidency, stopped health care reform, and gave Newt Gingrich and the Repubs control of Congress. Noble gesture, ineffective, killed any chance of real reform. Dems were mad that he wasted political capital on it, I suppose gays still think he did the right thing.
Many want Obama to do the same thing, sacrifice everything for gays in the military, despite the fact that they hate what Obama is doing with the military. Odd thing, so many concerned about the right of gays to join straights in killing civilians in imperialistic wars. I would prefer fewer or no soldiers, gay or straight.
Also note, "public option" is not "single payer", not even close. There was no option for states to offer single-payer, meaning everyone gets health insurance but pays based on income, like in Canada or Medicare.
Public option just offers non-profit health insurance at cost, poor people pay the same as rich. I bought COBRA health insurance for my healthy family of four in 2004, paid what my little company paid: $14,500 a year.
Private insurance is about 20% overhead (that's the new max, by law) while Medicare is 5%, so if I bought into Medicare it would be 15% cheaper, or $12325 a year. That's hardly affordable.
The public option was never getting past the Senate, and it would not have helped much anyway. Only national health insurance works, where the well-off pay more like they do for defense and all the other costs of running this country.
That will not happen in my lifetime. Most have insurance through their employers or Medicare, and they will not give that up. They feel they have it better than us uninsured, and people like that, they are selfish.
That WAS well said-the very best analysis I have ever heard. Truth be told, Barack Obama has accomplished more for this country in 20 months than anyone else holding that office has since Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
The Rethugs are so frustrated they can hardly talk and when they do it is a crock of lies and insults and garbage about a man who is doing his best to honor his committment to his country.I cannot believe they have chosen to obfuscate the president's attempts to at least try to improve horrid situations. Very sad days ahead, I am afraid.
Chris Matthews is a self-opinionated blowhard that appears to get off on appearing, at least in his mind, to win arguments.
Keith Olbermann is occasionally self-righteous and is at his best when he is in a good mood, not ranting.
Rachel Maddow is occasionally too mild mannered and doesn't assert herself often enough in arguments.
These are my valid criticisms of these so-called "Professional Leftists"
Now, since Gibbs can no longer whine about unfair treatment.
Gibbs is a condescending personality, prone to gaffes, and has the presence of a goldfish.
Obama is too cautious and too willing to rely on the opinions of his inner circle.
Rahm is... Rahm.
They claim to know how they'll be voting 2 years down the road, without even knowing who the Republican candidate will be.
So those are the people I should look to for thoughtful comment? Hardly.