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Some Things Even Obama Can't Transcend
I admit it. For a moment I believed. Walking down Sumter Street during Charleston's Martin Luther King Day parade, the overwhelmingly white coterie of Barack Obama volunteers chanted: "Obama '08! We're ready. Why wait?" Among them was a young man who was "so depressed" after Obama's New Hampshire defeat that he had dropped everything he'd been doing in Guatemala and flown back to help out. There was also an elderly woman from Florida who had read his book Dreams From My Father two weeks earlier and was so inspired she felt she needed to do something.
Local African-Americans lined the sidewalks, cheering encouragement. Obama's victory in Iowa had proved that a black candidacy was not a pipe dream. Now a significant number of white people had come to the parade calling for them to make common cause. And every now and then the volunteers went to the sidewalk, shook hands, handed out leaflets and even hugged the locals.
The Mississippi Freedom Summer it wasn't. But it was something. A moment. A political moment that produced hopeful human engagement. Within half an hour it had evaporated. The parade was over. The white volunteers would not talk to the media without approval, even to explain their excitement. When authorization came through for them to speak their minds, the guy from Guatemala gushed about the coming of a postracial America. Meanwhile, the black people went back to their homes in the poorest parts of town and waited for change.
It is easy to be cynical. But it is the potency and potential of these moments--as fleeting and fatuous as they may seem--that form the basis for much of Obama's appeal. He points out the ways America is riven and then calls on his audience to take the country to a higher level. Every time his multigenerational, multiracial crowds get together, it seems like they are creating a new reality from whole cloth. "In lines that stretched around schools and churches, in small towns and big cities," he told the jubilant crowds in Iowa, "you came together as Democrats, Republicans and independents to stand up and say that we are one nation, we are one people, and our time for change has come."
A few days later, at a conference on bipartisanship at the University of Oklahoma attended by Michael Bloomberg, Obama's victory dampened discussion of the New York mayor launching an independent presidential bid. "I believe [Obama] is demonstrating, in the support he is getting, that the American people share this concern about excessive partisanship," said Bob Graham, a former Democratic senator from Florida, who attended.
In and of itself, bipartisanship is a goal that is both inarguable and insubstantial. It is treated as a matter of orthodoxy that Americans crave a more bipartisan approach to national politics. But polls show that on issues they care about, just about half want politicians to seek solutions through compromise. Their ambivalence is not surprising. As a means to an end, bipartisanship makes sense. But as an end in itself, it is a hollow notion unless you define who you want to join forces with and why.
Nonetheless, it is not difficult to see why it has caught on as a campaign slogan in both parties. For the past seven years this country has been run on the basis of crude majoritarianism by a President brazen enough to treat 48 percent of the popular vote as an endorsement and 51 percent as an overwhelming mandate. George Bush did not create this partisan split; he inherited it, just as Al Gore would have if he had won the Supreme Court case in 2000. But while the split was broad, it was Bush who made it deep and rancorous by ramming through his neoconservative agenda and war.
The failure of this agenda, and the attendant collapse of America's self-confidence, made the case both for a more consensual political culture and against the current political class. The economy is tanking, the war is dragging, the country's international reputation is in tatters and the inability of Congress or the White House to do anything about it has given rise to despondency. But the partisanship in Washington that has disillusioned people is in fact "partysanship"--the support not of one idea or program over another but of one party over another. Democrats backed the war and have refused to stop its funding, impeach Bush or protect civil liberties because they believe that to do otherwise would be bad for the party, regardless of the country's interests.
While the Democratic Party's interests may at times coincide with that of the American people, they are clearly not synonymous. The party's raison d'être is to win elections, not to change America. Depending on the time, place and candidate, it may well stand for office but little else. The right understands these limits of electoral politics only too well. Its victories have ended in Washington, but they didn't start there and were not sustained there. The terrible truth about the past seven years is not that the country has been divided but that the wrong side has been winning. The right has fought for its agenda and has never been in doubt about who its enemy is.
It's high time the left did the same. Arguing for policies that eradicate poverty, confront racism and homophobia, tackle economic and gender inequality and corporate excess, normalize the status of millions of undocumented immigrants and address the ballooning prison-industrial complex is about being progressive, not divisive. It does, however, mean recognizing that divisions exist and that to resolve them we have to take sides and fight for our beliefs. Unity is not forged by fiat but by struggle. Candidates can talk about "transcending" race, gender, region and party all they like. But before we can talk sensibly about transcending difference, we must first transform the conditions that give these differences meaning. To get beyond race, for example, we must first get rid of racism. Then every day can be like Martin Luther King Day, and black people won't have to watch from the sidelines.
Gary Younge, the Alfred Knobler Journalism Fellow at The Nation Institute, is the New York correspondent for the Guardian and the author of No Place Like Home: A Black Briton's Journey Through the Deep South (Mississippi) and Stranger in a Strange Land: Travels in the Disunited States (New Press).
Copyright © 2008 The Nation



14 Comments so far
Show AllGary Younge is awfully interested in US elections for a British citizen. Remember Christopher Hitchens, all I'm saying. That and when Younge wrote about Darrell Anderson last year he refused to write about Anderson being a war resister. Left that whole part out. One more stooge for The Nation, coming around to distract us from the Iraq War.
Gary YOunge has done some wonderful reporting for the Guardian, which is his beat. I trust him and that's not something I say about many people.
James,
Gary Younge is in no way like Christopher Hitchens. Period.
Younge is right.
Racism is alive and well. It defies reason, and attempts to "transcend it."
Racism is alive and well and the Clintons are using it in South Carolina to diminish O'bama's white vote and it is working well according to the latest poll.
The Clintons have sunk so low, it is hard to imagine that they were doing the right thing for this country(mainly anyways, compared to Bushturd.)
Hilary looks like a Republican Attack Dog in all the debates.
This is good priming for Obama and Edwards, if either win the nomination, they will be facing this against their republican rivals on a regular basis.
For Bill Clinton, considered by Blacks as the first Black President, to be jackknifing the race card in his support speeches, is bringing out his worst side. We are all familiar with how wiley he can be, but this is lowest of the low.
All we have left is to give Obama or Edwards a chance.
Things are not looking good for the democrats right now.
"As a means to an end, bipartisanship makes sense. But as an end in itself, it is a hollow notion unless you define who you want to join forces with and why."
EXACTLY.
The issue I have with Obama's bipartisanship talk is it implies there is some acceptable compromise the other side would be willing to make. Has anyone here seen anything from the Right - particularly in the past 14 years - to suggest they would be willing to agree to anything liberals should support? Recent history - including 2007 - clearly shows the only way to reach agreement with these people is to capitulate.
Seems to me the biggest threat facing the Democrats this year is the anger they have engendered by continuing to fold to the Republicans since they have gained control of Congress. Sorry, but I don't see the attraction of a candidate that bases their campaign on more of that.
The thing is, unless they screw this election up - and I don't discount that possibility - the Democrats will not NEED to capitulate to or compromise with the Republicans. The policies they should be looking to enact have the support of the majority of Americans in pretty much every poll.
James06, your suspicions about Younge would be a lot more credible if you noted which of his ideas you take issue with or presented a plausible reason (i.e., other than he is a Brit, like Hitchens)to suspect his motives.
1 obama inspires people to participate who wouldn't participate otherwise (people leaving their projects in c america to participate in the campaign)
2. "The Mississippi Freedom Summer it wasn't. But it was something. A moment. A political moment that produced hopeful human engagement. Within half an hour it had evaporated"
............reminded me of dozens of anti war rallies i've attended throughout my life.
3. bi-partisanship and unity ---
"For the past seven years this country has been run on the basis of crude majoritarianism by a President brazen enough to treat 48 percent of the popular vote as an endorsement and 51 percent as an overwhelming mandate."
The dems just gained control of the congress in 2006 (largely b/c of a growing realization that the Iraq war was a mistake), but they didn't gain enough control to do anything substantive. a simple majority is not enough to override a veto. therefore the best the dems could do was stymie bush2. obstruct legislation by keeping it in committee, or tweak it with amendments to irritate the right. the democratic party is not a monolithic institution (as the greens are not a monolithic institution some are focused on economics and others are obsessed -rightfully so- with environmental issues ). in the same vein, there are dems of every stripe, some have to flock to the right to keep their seats in suburban areas and poor rural 'white' areas where many of the voters are wiling (b/c they're brainwashed? b/c they have vested interests in the status quo? of course) to return to the center-right .these seats may have been won by republicans if bush2 didn't put the match beneath the tinderbox (iraq) in 2003. the rules of the congress are arcane and catered to a 2 party system. it forces the 2 parties to discuss/plan etc... The war has dragged out (and war criminals like rumsfeld and bush should be prosecuted in US courts), the economy is teetering on collapse (b/c of systemic problems class; inequality, globalization, deregulation) and our moral sensibilities are questioned increasingly as time goes by to bizarre incidents like the noose in the tree in Jena LA and the murderous actions of blackwater employees in iraq.
an overwhelming majority in the congress - coupled with a president who, from experience knows how to approach people and listen. it's our best hope. it maybe ambiguous and vacuous but if we actually played a greater role in the democratic party . it's all relative, but there's no point in having a stroke, jumping up and down like rumpelstiltskin saying my idea good, my idea good when nobody seems to understand or hear what your saying - remember how attentive the average american is to anything, a person who watches like 4 hours of tv a day, {kill your TV}.
so many at this point are saying, hey man i'm going with the greens - the 3rd party. well how would that work? your saying i'm tripping b/c of the realpolitik, but unless the greens capture 1/2 the congress (50 sen/ 218 hse) the new green president will work with who? repubs, dems? i don't think this is going to happen and i don't see how coalescing around a single figure, in 3rd party realpolitik, will achieve anything. the key is to gradually introduce new prog's in 3rd partys to the congress (go ralph, get a congressional seat, go cindy). then they'll have political clout to convince people who do not even recognize that alberto gonzalez was the attorney general or that cheney is our vp (the uneducated masses). who's dreaming?
an example of how independents work in congress comes from VT, first with jeffords then with sanders.
jeffords, a republican who crossed over to the dem's to prevent a 51/49 majority for the repubs. a hero who stymied bush2.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Jeffords
"Jeffords made a deal with the Democrats according to which he would vote with them on all procedural matters except with permission of the whip, which would be rarely asked and rarely granted, in exchange for the committee seats that would have been available to Jeffords had he been a Democrat during his entire Senate tenure. He was free to vote as he pleased on policy matters, but more often than not he voted with the Democrats. Even before his party switch, his voting record was moderate-to-liberal, which has long been typical of Republicans from New England. By the time of his switch no Republican Senator had a lower lifetime score from the American Conservative Union."
and the one who succeeded him sanders (socialist ind.)
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/21/magazine/21Sanders.t.html
"While he has generally championed liberal Democratic positions over the years — and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee endorsed his Senate campaign — Sanders has strenuously resisted calling himself a Democrat. And he has clung to a mantle — socialism"
"Sanders calls himself as a "democratic Socialist." When I asked him what this meant, as a practical matter, in capitalist America circa 2007, he did what he often does: he donned his rhetorical Viking's helmet and waxed lovingly about the Socialist governments of Scandinavia. He mentioned that Scandinavian countries have nearly wiped out poverty in children — as opposed to the United States, where 18 to 20 percent of kids live in poverty. The Finnish government provides free day care to all children; Norwegian workers get 42 weeks of maternity leave at full pay.
But would Americans ever accept the kinds of taxes that finance the Scandinavian welfare state? And would Sanders himself trade in the United States government for the Finnish one? He is curiously, frustratingly non-responsive to questions like this. "I think there is a great deal we can learn from Scandinavia," he said after a long pause. And then he returns to railing about economic justice and the rising gap between rich and poor, things he speaks of with a sense of outrage that always seems freshly summoned."
it's a legitimate strategy, introducing independents (greens/socialists) into congress so leftist ideas could have a format. it seems more effective than having a green president trying to oversee a dem/reb congress (who will be uncooperative). Oh right this has never happened in this country -- {last legitimate 3rd party candidate, finished 2nd in 1912}.
Both Obama and Clinton are bad for the country to begin with. Both are for more war.
iowablackbird,
Agreed for the most part.
However, the Dems DO have the power to force the Republicans to actually filibuster instead just caving every time they object to something. Similarly, they have the power to force Bush to veto. This would make it clear who is being obstructionist.
They had enough votes to present the anti-immunity based FISA bill instead of the one including immunity.
Taking impeachment off the table was inexcusable and has emboldened Bush/Cheney and their co-conspirators. It may be debatable whether impeachment and conviction could have actually happened but they owe us, the rule of law, 250 years of Constitutional Government in this country and future generations an honest attempt. There was less support for Nixon'x impeachment prior to the hearings than there already is for Bush and, especially, Cheney. The information that would be made public in such a hearing would have been the key. But, we'll never know.
I recognize there are limits on what they can accomplish with the relatively small majority they have but, the Democratic "Leadership" has sold themselves - as well as us, not to mention the Constitution - far too short.
brissot January 25th, 2008 5:16 pm
i agree, i'd like to see more filibustering (especially on financing war).
thank you for bringing my attention to the fisa vote, about the fisa vote.
http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/005133.php
"Among the Democrats voting to kill the SJC bill were Sens. Mark Pryor (AK), Daniel Inouye (HI), Claire McCaskill (MO), Mary Landrieu (LA), Ken Salazar (CO) and Tim Johnson (SD). Update: The final tally was actually 60-36, not 60-34, and the full list of Dems voting to kill were: Sens. Evan Bayh (D-IN), Tom Carper (D-DE), Daniel Inouye (D-HI), Tim Johnson (D-SD), Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Claire McCaskill (D-MO), Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), Bill Nelson (D-FL), Ben Nelson (D-NE), Mark Pryor (D-AR), Jay Rockefeller (D-WV), and Ken Salazar (D-CO)."
what's interesting is the dems who did not vote to kill the bill (kennedy, kerry, byrd, feinstein, murry, fiengold leahy, sanders )
http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=110&session=2&vote=00002
there was a point made earlier (on these CD posts) justifying edwards abysmal voting record in the senate (national league of conservation voters), edwards represented a conservative part of the country and consequently he had to be held (to a degree) to his constituents, who elected a republican in his place R Burr. I would just point out that the senators who voted for fisa are from conservative parts of America and at least three of these senators (pryor, rockefeller and landrau) will have to answer to the constituents this fall. if the dems had a convincing majority in the congress these politicians would be more inclined to support rational legislation.
there is a culture war in America. the greens have an opportunity in progressive cities to ride the coattails of a dem victory in the fall (esp if candidate is edwards or obama). spending precious resources to garner these seats would be more constructive then jeopardizing a repub win (a situation the clintons could create with their imperial designs and vociferous campaign language) for the presidency.
in other words the obstructionists in the party (dem) represent real people who fought difficult campaigns. Does it justify their vote?. No it doesn't………….
Good points, blackbird. I agree that, in some cases, it is more important to have the seat than the vote on particular issues. On the other hand, I tend to think a lot of Democrats - especially lately - tend to overestimate the depth and breadth of the conservatism of their districts.
I think it often boils down to the fact that Republicans have been much more efective at framing issues in a way that gets people to vote against their own self interest AND society's interests. (Obviously, voting against one's own self interest in support of societal good would be altruistic.) Time after time we see people vote Republican even though the views they express on the specific issues in polls are consistently significantly more liberal than the Republican position.
This fear of the mighty Conservatives becomes a self fulfilling prophecy because Democratic candidates are too timid in projecting liberal values. They come off as timid and calculating and lose because they can not win the confidence of the voters. The conservatism of the district is "proven" by the outcome.
(Of course, one can not discount the role of the media in discouraging liberal campaigns.)
Eventually, we need to start boldly supporting Democratic (Liberal) ideals. If you contnually sacrifice your ideals to get elected and then refuse to act upon your ideals to stay elected, what is the point of getting elected?
I tend to draw the ire of many on this site because I refer to them as purists that get so hung up on principles that nobody (viable) is good enough for them but, watching Reid and Pelosi, it is easy to understand how people can become frustrated. It is maddeningly frustrating.
I'm willing to give them one more chance - truthfully, I don't see any alternative - by voting Democrat regardless of who wins and hoping there is a significant Democratic majority. But, if they don't accomplish something after 2008 ...
"I think there is a great deal we can learn from Scandinavia,"
Give Bernie Sanders a bit of a break . He knows that introducing the merits of socialism to Americans necessitates re-programming their pre-concieved notions that socialism means communism .
He also probably knows that Scandinavia along with France . England , Holland , in fact all of the
European Union members spent much of their respective histories under the rule of unitary monarchs and lesser royals who encouraged the status quo of dualism of extreme poverty and wealth.
In the study of genetics " hybrid vigour " has been the guiding principle behind developing wheat varieties that are drought resistant , rust resistant , high yielding...
Each criterium is manifested better in ancestors but the hybrid is superior all round .
Pick the features of Scandinavian socialism that Americans might "buy". Introduce a corresponding bill and wait for colleague approval or condemnation . Eventually , voters hopefully will approve or condemn the audacity of your bill at the next mid-term elections.
Don't worry for it appears you'll receive exactly what you're asking for,but by the time you realize it..it will be to late to change it.Racism and malice has many faces and hatred of anykind breeds contempt.I see the enemy and he is in our own camp.Proper education will reveal the source of our problems and also if we're willing to work toward solutions or stay in a fifth grade mentality and play the "blame game"..as for me I'm sick to death of fighting a battle I did not create and know nothing about since I was raised in the deep south country where blacks are no different then myself and have been my friends,neighbors and co-workers all my life.If we are to survive and move toward growth we'll all have to be willing to humble ourselves and live in hope,not doubt and defeat.I believe 2008 will reveal more then most people want to know!