The
progressive case against Obama
Bottom
line: The president is complicit in creating an increasingly unequal
-- and unjust – society
BY
MATT STOLLER
Salon,
28
October, 2012
A
few days ago, I participated in a debate with the legendary antiwar
dissident Daniel Ellsberg on Huffington Post live on the merits of
the Obama administration, and what progressives should do on Election
Day. Ellsberg had written a blog post arguing that, though Obama
deserves tremendous criticism, voters in swing states ought to vote
for him, lest they operate as dupes for a far more malevolent
Republican Party. This attitude is relatively pervasive among
Democrats, and it deserves a genuine response. As the election is
fast approaching, this piece is an attempt at laying out the
progressive case for why one should not vote for Barack Obama for
reelection, even if you are in a swing state.
There
are many good arguments against Obama, even if the Republicans cannot
seem to muster any. The civil liberties/antiwar case was made
eloquently a few weeks ago by libertarian Conor Friedersdorf,
who wrote a well-cited blog post on why he
could not, in good conscience,
vote for Obama. While his arguments have tremendous merit, there is
an equally powerful case against Obama on the grounds of economic and
social equity. That case needs to be made. For those who don’t know
me, here is a brief, relevant background: I have a long history
in Democratic and liberal politics. I have worked for several
Democratic candidates and affiliated groups, I have personally raised
millions of dollars for Democrats online, I was an early advisor to
Actblue (which has processed over $300 million to Democratic
candidates). I have worked in Congress (mostly on the Dodd-Frank
financial reform package), and I was a producer at MSNBC.
Furthermore, I aggressively opposed Nader-style challenges until
2008.
So
why oppose Obama? Simply, it is the shape of the society Obama is
crafting that I oppose, and I intend to hold him responsible, such as
I can, for his actions in creating it. Many Democrats are
disappointed in Obama. Some feel he’s a good president with a bad
Congress. Some feel he’s a good man, trying to do the right thing,
but not bold enough. Others think it’s just the system, that anyone
would do what he did. I will get to each of these sentiments, and
pragmatic questions around the election, but I think it’s important
to be grounded in policy outcomes. Not, what did Obama try to do, in
his heart of hearts? But what kind of America has he actually
delivered? And the chart below answers the question. This chart
reflects the progressive case against Obama.
The
above is a chart of corporate profits against the main store of
savings for most Americans who have savings — home equity. Notice
that after the crisis, after the Obama inflection point, corporate
profits recovered dramatically and surpassed previous highs, whereas
home equity levels have remained static. That $5-7 trillion of lost
savings did not come back, whereas financial assets and corporate
profits did. Also notice that this is unprecedented in postwar
history. Home equity levels and corporate profits have simply never
diverged in this way; what was good for GM had always, until
recently, been good, if not for America, for the balance sheet of
homeowners. Obama’s policies severed this link, completely.
This
split represents more than money. It represents a new kind of
politics, one where Obama, and yes, he did this, officially enshrined
rights for the elite in our constitutional order and removed rights
from everyone else (see “The
Housing Crash and the End of American Citizenship”
in the Fordham Urban Law Journal for a more complete discussion of
the problem). The bailouts and the associated Federal Reserve actions
were not primarily shifts of funds to bankers; they were a guarantee
that property rights for a certain class of creditors were immune
from challenge or market forces. The foreclosure crisis, with its
rampant criminality, predatory lending, and document forgeries,
represents the flip side. Property rights for debtors simply
increasingly exist solely at the pleasure of the powerful. The lack
of prosecution of Wall Street executives, the ability of banks to
borrow at 0 percent from the Federal Reserve while most of us face
credit card rates of 15-30 percent, and the bailouts are all part of
the re-creation of the American system of law around Obama’s
oligarchy.
The
policy continuity with Bush is a stark contrast to what Obama offered
as a candidate. Look at the broken
promises from
the 2008 Democratic platform: a higher minimum wage, a ban on the
replacement of striking workers, seven days of paid sick leave, a
more diverse media ownership structure, renegotiation of NAFTA,
letting bankruptcy judges write down mortgage debt, a ban on illegal
wiretaps, an end to national security letters, stopping the war on
whistle-blowers, passing the Employee Free Choice Act,
restoring habeas corpus, and
labor protections in the FAA bill. Each of these pledges would have
tilted bargaining leverage to debtors, to labor, or to political
dissidents. So Obama promised them to distinguish himself from Bush,
and then went back on his word because these promises didn’t fit
with the larger policy arc of shifting American society toward his
vision. For sure, Obama believes he is doing the right thing, that
his policies are what’s best for society. He is a conservative
technocrat, running a policy architecture to ensure that conservative
technocrats like him run the complex machinery of the state and reap
private rewards from doing so. Radical political and economic
inequality is the result. None of these policy shifts, with the
exception of TARP, is that important in and of themselves, but
together they add up to declining
living standards.
While
life has never been fair, the chart above shows that, since World War
II, this level of official legal, political and economic inequity for
the broad mass of the public is new (though obviously for subgroups,
like African-Americans, it was not new). It is as if America’s
traditional racial segregationist tendencies have been reorganized,
and the tools and tactics of that system have been repurposed for a
multicultural elite colonizing a multicultural population. The data
bears this out: Under Bush, economic inequality was bad, as 65 cents
of every dollar of income growth went to the top 1 percent. Under
Obama, however, that number is 93
cents out of every dollar.
That’s right, under Barack Obama there is more
economic inequality than
under George W. Bush. And if you look at the chart above, most of
this shift happened in 2009-2010, when Democrats controlled Congress.
This was not, in other words, the doing of the mean Republican
Congress. And it’s not strictly a result of the financial crisis;
after all, corporate profits did crash, like housing values did, but
they also recovered, while housing values have not.
This
is the shape of the system Obama has designed. It is
intentional, it is the modern American order, and it has a certain
equilibrium, the kind we identify in Middle Eastern resource
extraction based economies. We are even seeing, as I showed in an
earlier post, a transition of the American economic order toward
a petro-state.
By some accounts, America will be the largest producer of
hydrocarbons in the world, bigger than Saudi Arabia. This is just not
an America that any of us should want to live in. It is a country
whose economic basis is oligarchy, whose political system is
authoritarianism, and whose political culture is murderous toward the
rest of the world and suicidal in our aggressive lack of attention to
climate change.
Many
will claim that Obama was stymied by a Republican Congress. But the
primary policy framework Obama put in place – the bailouts, took
place during the transition and the immediate months after the
election, when Obama had enormous leverage over the Bush
administration and then a dominant Democratic Party in Congress. In
fact, during the transition itself, Bush’s Treasury Secretary Hank
Paulson offered a deal to Barney Frank, to force banks to write down
mortgages and stem foreclosures if Barney would speed up the release
of TARP money. Paulson demanded, as a condition of the deal, that
Obama sign off on it. Barney said fine, but to his surprise, the
incoming president vetoed
the deal.
Yup, you heard that right — the Bush administration was willing to
write down mortgages in response to Democratic pressure, but it was
Obama who said no, we want a foreclosure crisis. And with Neil
Barofsky’s book ”Bailout,” we see why. Tim Geithner said,
in private meetings, that the foreclosure mitigation programs were
not meant to mitigate foreclosures, but to spread out pain for the
banks, the famous “foam the runway” comment. This central lie is
key to the entire Obama economic strategy. It is not that Obama was
stymied by Congress, or was up against a system, or faced a massive
crisis, which led to the shape of the economy we see today. Rather,
Obama had a handshake deal to help the middle class offered to him by
Paulson, and Obama said no. He was not constrained by anything but
his own policy instincts. And the reflation of corporate profits and
financial assets and death of the middle class were the predictable
results.
The
rest of Obama’s policy framework looks very different when you wake
up from the dream state pushed by cable news. Obama’s history of
personal use of illegal narcotics, combined with his escalation of
the war on medical marijuana (despite declining support for the drug
war in the Democratic caucus), shows both a personal hypocrisy and
destructive cynicism that we should decry in anyone, let alone an
important policymaker who helps keep a half a million people in jail
for participating in a legitimate economy outlawed by the drug
warrior industry. But it makes sense once you realize that his policy
architecture coheres with a Romney-like philosophy that there is one
set of rules for the little people, and another for the important
people. It’s why the administration quietly pushed Chinese
investment in American infrastructure,
seeks to privatize public education, removed labor protections from
the FAA authorization bill, and inserted a provision into the
stimulus bill ensuring AIG bonuses would be paid, and then lied about
it to avoid blame. Wall Street speculator who rigged markets are
simply smart and savvy businessmen, as Obama called Lloyd Blankfein
and Jamie Dimon, whereas the millions who fell prey to their
predatory lending schemes are irresponsible borrowers. And it’s why
Obama is explicitly targeting entitlements, insurance programs for
which Americans paid. Obama wants to preserve these programs for the
“most vulnerable,” but that’s still a taking. Did not every
American pay into Social Security and Medicare? They did, but as with
the foreclosure crisis, property rights (which are essential legal
rights) of the rest of us are irrelevant. While Romney is explicit
about 47 percent of the country being worthless, Obama just acts as
if they are charity cases. In neither case does either candidate
treat the mass of the public as fellow
citizens.
Now,
it would not be fair to address this matter purely on economic
grounds, and ignore women’s rights. In that debate with
Ellsberg, advocate Emily Hauser insistently made the case that choice
will be safe under Obama, and ended under Romney, that this is the
only issue that matters to women, and that anyone who doesn’t agree
is, as she put it, delusional. Falguni Sheth argued that this is a
typical perspective from a privileged white woman, who ignores much
of the impact that Barack Obama’s policies have on women, and
specifically women of color. And even on the issue of choice, you
could make a good case, as she does, that there’s less
of a difference between Obama and Romney than meets the eye.
Sheth’s
piece is persuasive. Barack Obama is the president who hired as his
lead economic advisor Larry Summers, a man famous for arguing that
women are genetically predisposed to being bad at math.
Unsurprisingly, Anita Dunn, a White House adviser, later called the
Obama White House a “hostile work environment” for women, in
large part because of the boys club of Rahm Emanuel and Larry
Summers. Obama is the president who insisted that women under 17
shouldn’t have access to Plan B birth control, overruling
scientists at the FDA, because
of his position ”as
a father of two daughters.” Girls, he said, shouldn’t be able to
buy these drugs next to “bubble gum and batteries.” Aside from
the obvious sexism, he left out the possibility that young women who
need Plan B had been raped by their fathers, which anyone who works
in the field knows happens all too often. In his healthcare bill,
Obama made sure that government funds, including tax credits and
Medicaid that are the key to expanding healthcare access to the
poor, will
be subject to
the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits their use for abortion. It’s
not clear what will happen with healthcare exchanges, or how much
coverage there will be for abortion services in the future.
As
Sheth also notes, there is a lot more to women’s rights than
abortion. Predatory lending and foreclosures disproportionately
impact women. The drug war impacts women. Under Obama, 1.6 million
more women are now in poverty. 1.2 million migrants have been
deported by the Department of Homeland Security. The teacher layoffs
from Obama’s stimulus being inadequate to the task
disproportionately hit women’s economic opportunity. Oligarchies in
general are just not good for women.
In
terms of the Supreme Court itself, Obama’s track record is not
actually that good. As a senator, Obama publicly chided liberals for
demanding that Sen. Patrick Leahy block Sam Alito from the Supreme
Court. Meanwhile, Obama-appointed Supreme Court Justice Sonya
Sotomayor has in her career already ruled
to limit access to abortion,
and Elena Kagan’s stance is not yet clear. Arguing that Romney
justices would overturn Roe v. Wade is a concession that
Senate Democrats, as they did with Alito and Roberts, would allow an
anti-choice justice through the Senate. More likely is that Romney,
like Obama, simply does not care about abortion, but does care about
the court’s business case rulings (the U.S. Chamber went undefeated
last year). Romney has already said he won’t change
abortion laws, and
that all women should have access to contraception. He may be lying,
but more likely is that he does not care and is being subjected to
political pressure. But so is Obama, who is openly embracing abortion
rights and contraception now that it is a political asset. In other
words, what is moving women’s rights is not Obama or Romney, but
the fact that a fierce political race has shown that women’s rights
are popular. The lesson is not to support Obama, who will shelve
women’s rights for another three years, but to continue making a
strong case for women’s rights.
The
Case for Voting Third Party
So,
what is to be done? We have an election, and you probably have a
vote. What should you do with it? I think it’s worth voting for a
third party candidate, and I’ll explain why below. But first, let’s
be honest about what voting for Obama means. This requires diving
into something I actually detest, which is electoral analysis and the
notion of what would a pragmatist do. I tend to find the slur that
one need be pragmatic and not a purist condescending and dishonest;
no one ever takes an action without a reason to do so. Life is
compromise. Every person gets this from the first time he or she, as
a kid, asks his or her dad for something his or her mom won’t give
him. If you are taking action in politics, you have to assume that
you are doing it because you want some sort of consequence from it.
But even within the desiccated and corroded notion of what passes for
democracy in 2012, the claims of the partisans to pragmatism are
foolish. There are only five or six states that matter in this
election; in the other 44 or 45, your vote on the presidential level
doesn’t matter. It is as decorative as a vote for an “American
Idol contestant.” So, unless you are in one of the few swing states
that matters, a vote for Obama is simply an unabashed endorsement of
his policies. But if you are in a swing state, then the question is,
what should you do?
Now,
and this is subtle, I don’t think the case against voting for Obama
is airtight. If you are willing to argue that Obama, though he has
imposed an authoritarian architecture on the American system, is
still a better choice than Romney, fine. I can respect honest
disagreement. Here’s why I disagree with that analysis. If the
White House were a video game where the player was all that mattered,
voting for Obama would probably be the most reasonable thing to do.
Romney is more likely to attack Iran, which would be just horrific
(though Obama might do so as well, we don’t really know). But video
game policymaking is not how politics actually works — the people
themselves, what they believe and what they don’t, can constrain
political leaders. And under Obama, because there is now no one
making the anti-torture argument, Americans have become more
tolerant of torture, drones, war and authoritarianism in general.
The case against Obama is that the people themselves will be
better citizens under a Romney administration, distrusting him and
placing constraints on his behavior the way they won’t on Obama. As
a candidate, Obama promised a whole slew of civil liberties
protections, lying the whole time. Obama has successfully organized
the left part of the Democratic Party into a force that had
rhetorically opposed war and civil liberties violations, but now
cheerleads a weakened America too frightened to put Osama bin Laden
on trial. We must fight this thuggish political culture Bush
popularized, and Obama solidified in place.
But
can a third-party candidate win? No. So what is the point of voting
at all, or voting for a third-party candidate? My answer is that this
election is, first and foremost, practice
for crisis moments. Elections
are just one small part of how social justice change can happen. The
best moment for change is actually a crisis, where there is actually
policy leverage. We should look at 9/11, Katrina and the
financial crisis as the flip side of FDR’s 100 days or
the days immediately after LBJ took office. We already know that a
crisis brings great pressure to conform to what the political
establishment wants. So does this election. We all know that elites
in a crisis will tell you to hand them enormous amounts of power,
lest the world blow up. This is essentially the argument from the
political establishment in 2012. Saying no to evil in 2012 will help
us understand who is willing to say no to evil when it really
matters. And when you have power during a crisis, there’s no
end to the amount of good you can do.
How
do we drive large-scale change during moments of crisis?
How do we use this election to do so? Well, voting third party or
even just honestly portraying Obama’s policy architecture is a good
way to identify to ourselves and each other who actually has the
integrity to not cave to bullying. Then the task starting after the
election is to build this network of organized people with
intellectual and political integrity into a group who understands how
to move the levers of power across industry, government,
media and politics. We need to put ourselves into the position to be
able to run the government.
After
all, if a political revolution came tomorrow, could those who believe
in social justice and climate change actually govern? Do we have the
people to do it? Do we have the ideas, the legislative proposals, the
understanding of how to reorganize our society into a
sustainable and socially just one? I suspect, no. When the next
crisis comes, and it will come, space will again open up for real
policy change. The most important thing we can use this
election for is to prepare for that moment. That means finding
ways of seeing who is on our side and building a group with
the will to power and the expertise to make the right demands. We
need to generate the inner confidence to blow up the political
consensus, against the railings of the men in suits. If there had
been an actual full-scale financial meltdown in 2008 without a
bailout, while it would have been bad, it probably would have given
us a fighting chance of warding off planetary catastrophe
and reorganizing our politics. Instead the oligarchs took control,
because we weren’t willing to face them down when we needed to show
courage. So now we have the worst of all worlds, an
inevitably worse crisis and an even more authoritarian
structure of governance.
At
some point soon, we will face yet another moment where the elites
say, “Do what we want or there will be a meltdown.” Do we have
enough people on our side willing to collectively say “do
what we want
or there will be a global meldown”? This election is a good
mechanism to train people in the willingness to say that and mean
it. That is, the reason to advocate for a third-party candidate
is to build the civic muscles willing to say no to the establishment
in a crisis moment we all know is coming. Right now, the liberal
establishment is teaching its people that letting malevolent
political elites do what they want is not only the right path, it is
the only path. Anything other than that is dubbed an affront to
common decency. Just telling the truth is considered beyond rude.
We
need to build a different model of politics, one in which
people who want a different society are willing to actually bargain
and back up their threats, rather than just aesthetically argue for
shifts around the margin. The good news is that the changes we
need to make are entirely doable. It will cost about $100
trillion over 20 years to
move our world to an entirely sustainable energy system, and the net
worth of the global
top 1 percent is $103 trillion.
We can do this. And the moments to let us make the changes we need
are coming. There is endless good we can do, if enough of us are
willing to show the courage that exists within every human being
instead of the malevolence and desire for conformity that also exists
within every heart.
Systems
that can’t go on, don’t. The political elites, as much as they
kick the can down the road, know this. The question we need to ask
ourselves is, do we?
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