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Note to GOP Candidates: Obama is No Socialist
Asked whether Barack Obama was a socialist—as Texas Governor Rick Perry, Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich have all agreed is most certainly—former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney tried to talk his way around the most predictable question of Thursday night's Fox News/Google debate.
But he more or less "went there."
"What President Obama is, is a big-spending liberal," Romney replied. "He takes his political inspiration from Europe and from the socialist democrats in Europe. Guess what? Europe isn't working in Europe. It's not going to work here."
A few minutes later, Gingrich went all in, decrying "Obama's socialist policies."
So there you have it. Obama's a socialist, right? Wrong.
The president rejects the title, explicitly.
When he began talking deficit reduction last summer—with a proposal for a little bit of tax fairness combined with a suggestion that he was open to negotiations with regard to the future of Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security—Obama went out of his way to explain that his was not “some wild-eyed socialist position.”
Agreed.
Obama is no socialist.
Indeed, he has made the point again and again that he rejects the socialist and social-democratic solutions that have worked in countries such as Germany, Sweden, Britain and Canada. He has rejected “socialized medicine” in favor of a health care reform plan that requires uninsured Americans to buy policies from for-profit insurance companies. He has refused to get tough on Wall Street and the big banks, allowing “too big to fail” private institutions to threaten the US economy. He has chosen not to respond to the unemployment crisis with the sort of jobs programs that Franklin Delano Roosevelt implemented during the New Deal era, and that Hubert Humphrey made central to his advocacy as a senator and presidential candidate in the 1960s and 1970s.
So Obama is right. He is no socialist.
But his determination to distance himself from socialist ideas and socialist thinkers also distances him from past Democratic presidents and party leaders—as well as past Republican presidents and party leaders.
Socialism is not a foreign concept. Socialist ideas have been a part of the American discourse and American policymaking for the better part of two centuries. The Republican Party was founded in 1854 by, among others, followers of the French utopian socialist Charles Fourier and radical land reformers who proudly promoted the ideal of redistribution of the common wealth. Horace Greeley employed Karl Marx as the European correspondent for the great newspaper of the Republican movement, the New York Tribune. And Abraham Lincoln employed Marx’s editor and friend, Charles Dana, as a presidential assistant.
Seventy-five years later, Franklin Roosevelt consulted with the Socialist Party presidential candidate, Norman Thomas, before assuming the presidency and launching the New Deal. First lady Eleanor Roosevelt announced that, had her husband not been a candidate in 1932, she would have voted for Thomas on the Socialist ticket.
During the Cold War, cities as diverse as Milwaukee and Bridgeport, Conn., elected socialist mayors.
As president, John F. Kennedy read and praised the writings of Michael Harrington, a Socialist Party member who would go on to lead the Democratic Socialists of America. Lyndon Johnson’s administration brought Harrington into the fold as a consultant on the development of “war on poverty” programs and invited veteran socialist union leader A. Philip Randolph (the organizer of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom) to present his “Freedom Budget” for ending poverty at the White House.
Randolph made that presentation along with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who in that same year, 1966, would explain to his staff: “You can’t talk about solving the economic problem of the Negro without talking about billions of dollars. You can’t talk about ending the slums without first saying profit must be taken out of slums. You’re really tampering and getting on dangerous ground because you are messing with folk then. You are messing with captains of industry. ... Now this means that we are treading in difficult water, because it really means that we are saying that something is wrong ... with capitalism. ... There must be a better distribution of wealth and maybe America must move toward a democratic socialism.”
It is certainly true that Barack Obama is not an advocate for any “wild-eyed socialist position.” Nor is he an advocate for any sober and sound socialist position.
Obama’s explicit and frequent rejection of the word “socialist” parallels his rejection of the ideals and ideas associated with that word.
But distancing himself from socialist and social democratic ideals does not make Obama or his policies any more “American”—or any more in sync with the approaches of the country’s great presidents.
Quite the opposite.
Great American presidents, from at least the time of Lincoln, have respected and engaged with socialists and social-democratic ideas. They have not always embraced those ideas. And even when they have borrowed from the socialist toolkit, the act of doing so did not make them socialists—any more than Jimmy Carter’s openness to drug law reform made him a libertarian or Obama’s intriguing with those who would begin the gutting of Medicare makes him a Barry Goldwater Republican.
When Obama goes out of his way to declare that his is no “wild-eyed socialist position,” the president tells us what everyone except Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann, Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney knows. Obama also buys into the right-wing rhetoric that tells us America needs a narrower and more listless debate.
Obama and the conservatives he echoes are wrong. Now, more than ever, America needs more ideas, more debate, and a wider range of options.
Rejecting whole ideologies—conservatism or liberalism, libertarianism or socialism—is unhealthy, especially in so dynamic a country as the United States. And doing so reinforces the notion that the false choices peddled by corrupt politicians and convoluted thinkers are all that we have available to us.


23 Comments so far
Show AllGOP candidates, in their quiet self-reflective moments (assuming any of them actually have such moments), know Barack Obama isn't really a socialist. Calling him that brings them back the glory days of Conservative red-baiting. "Communist" is their bottom line name-call, the one it feels best to them to use.
It energizes them to call him that and, for them, keeps it from being "a narrower and more listless debate."
In a couple sentences you explained perfectly what calling Obama "a socialist" is all about. What I don't get is how supposedly professional commentators like this author can't see this. Instead of his endless "proof" that Obama isn't a socialist, which is obvious even to the moronic right, how about spend that time exposing the Republicons gimmick of calling him that, as you've started to do.
Every time the GOP calls Obama a socialist, Obama rewards the GOP with additional regressive legislation.
Unlike progressives and liberals, the GOP understands that you need to demand a pound to end up with an ounce.
Although none of the GOP candidates believes Obama is a socialist, they will continue calling him a socialist as long as he keeps moving further to the right every time they call him a socialist.
LOL! - Love that part about doubting whether GOP'ers have any quiet self-reflective moments --- we might have world peace if they did.
About this "socialist" title, I say BRING IT ON! Not in regards to Obama, but to me. When Repukes accuse me of socialism, I now say, "And being a Nazi Fascist like you is better?" They usually looked stunned. They can't even see themselves.
They are stunned because most of them do not know the difference between a fascist and a socialist. The propaganda eating Fauxos think these polar opposite ideologies are one and the same. I am not being derisive. They really do not know the difference between the two. You see it on plain display in their protest signs. On one sign Obama is a Nazi on the next a Commi. Sometimes a single sign carries both insults. To these people Nazi=Evil Commi.
When they call him a Nazi, they are on to the truth but they have no idea as to why that is so. Their ignorance makes propaganda so easy. I expect it wasn't much different in Germany and Italy. The realities of fascism are so vile that nobody, not even the dimmest red neck would ever buy into in on it merits. Only the sociopathic 1% who control the world's wealth will ever support fascist ideologies. Fascism will always come in the back way through deceit.
I am sure those with an inkling of what socialism is, or the as-of-yet unrealized ideal of socialism, are as offended as Obama seems by the misapplied label of socialist.
Calling Obama a 'socialist" illustrates how Republicans use language to 'frame" the issues.
It immediately puts democrats on the defensive and simultaneously paints all socialists as bad people.
Framing is actually a general technique that the republicans have used very effectively.
Whenever anyone tries to raise the txes on the rich, they claim "Class war" and again the Democrats get all defensive and say "No it's not", (since class war is always an evil thing, even when one class is exploiting another, right?)
Whenever anyone tries to get the US to sign a treaty with other countries to deal with climate change (or to get the US to go through the UN before attacking a country), Republicans cry "World Government" and Democrats say "No it's not" at the same time that they are distancing themselves from the UN.
As long as the Democrats allow the language (and themselves) to be used (indeed abused) in this way, they will never acomplish any of their claimed goals (I say "claimed" because I'm not sure they actually believe in them themselves)
JIMBO: While your point--about framing is valid, the larger issue is who controls the media. It makes the difference in what frames get covered or heard at all. A good example is the way that principled Progressive protests get almost no media time or print coverage, whereas a tea party member can fart, and it will merit a front page news analysis. It IS that bad. It's about who controls the message... IF there were a level playing field where ALL ideas got heard, then the issue of framing would be more on target and relevant.
If it weren't defunct in contemporary political discourse, even as an epithet, the same rhetorical function and dynamic you and Paranoid Pessimist discuss could also be achieved by calling Obama a "pacifist".
I guess it's just as well that Obama's receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize was so egregiously bogus that even GOP demagogues can't use it to try and put some extra stink on him.
Have to agree with the author that the notion that this capitalist thug and his 'party' are anything but 'socialists'.
They do however pander to public service unions by legislating large sums of taxpayer money and way too many bennies to them (socialism for a selected few). I hate to stick it to them as I think we need some sort of basic public postal service and they are our neighbors, family and friends. I mean, who can blame them for keeping their sticky little fingers in the cookie jar? Its only human. We are all prone to do it. But look at the USPS: Look how slow they move (literally) vs say, UPS or FedEx. They're like molasses. They don't (and won't) move it up a notch. They don't have to. That's what happens when you have 'protection'. It alienates them from the rest of the working class. It makes them 'special'. And people resent paying them with their own hard earned money.
Speaking of unions, looks like MM is getting ready to shake down companies with the threat of union violence instead of rallying the overall working class to fight Corporate.
Its getting clearer by the day that instead of regrouping, rethinking, and ponying-up an alternative candidate, the democratic operatives/playaz are going to circle the wagons, use division, point-and-blame, hate and shake-downs to protect their 'people' and try to limit on oncoming devastating damage as the strategy for '12.
I see acres and acres of Triage Tents beyond the looming '12 Event Horizon.
Yes'ur Masur, you makes a good point. Shells I bents over nows?
Well, now there is an unabashed right wing rant.
UPS and FedEx do not deliver to every residence in the United States. I know this because they drop off parcels that I deliver on my route. Why? Because it's more cost efficient to have the Post Office deliver it, they are going to that address anyway.
I am a letter carrier and a shop steward for the NALC. I am grateful for the union because with all the abuse we get on the job, atleast I have some protection from the incompetent managers who are mis-mananging the service. If you ever got your mail late it's because of under staffing and not wanting to bring in carriers to work over time. Managment doesn't care about service, they care about hours. The less they use the more bonus money for them. Go the the Nalc website and get a little education on something you are not familiar with.
As for moving slow. How fast do you move when it's 90 degrees with 100% humidity? How fast can you move when some pasty,doughie,cubicle monkey couldn't be bother to spend a few minutes outdoors clearing his sidewalk of snow so I can deliver his Netflix and Boy's Life magazine? Think about it.
This BS about the Tea Party president being a socialist is getting old. When oh when is this going to end. Oh might we say November next year with the Tea Party president's defeat. That will mean a rebirth for all progressive movements and this nation.
it always amuses me that the Pledge of Allegiance was written by a socialist.
Remember, what existed under the Soviets was State Capitalism.
According to Bachman, some 50 thousand American
Factories have moved to China and other parts of the world. All because of Nafta, the deal that was signed into law by Bill "Slick Willie" Clinton. Obama like the rest does not dare mention Nafta or the loss of our industrial base to China, it is simply to profitable to the GOPers and
the Corporatists...Obama is one of them. He is not one of us and he is to young and to inexperienced to handle the Job...
What's most frightening here, is that all the right wing easily led authoritarian followers will take from the rants of their favorite Republican LIARS a completely tainted view of what socialism is. Also, by putting Obama on the defensive when ALL of his policies already favor the well-to-do (and/or corporations), the entire staged political debate moves seamlessly further and further to the right; and in this process, the true interests of citizens become yet further eroded.
Well. To laugh or cry, that is the ???
Are we finally beyond the era of red-baiting, but only by subtlety of a shade?
Obama promotes the corporate interest. He chose insurance corporation profits over health care for all. He chooses never-ending conflict and all the associated mayhem and death over peace because war creates opportunity for corporate profit. Obama chose corporate profit over the environment when he quashed clean air regulations proposed by his own EPA. So no, Obama is no socialist.
Obama is a corporate-owned and created capitalist. He is just about as far from socialist as you can possibly get.
These institutions are, at their conceptual foundation at least, SOCIALIST:
1) public schools
2) the military
3) the police
4) fire departments
5) public roads
6 )national parks and monuments
7) libraries
8) Medicare
9) museums
10) symphonies, dance, opera, public art in general
and on and on and on.
The ideas that socialists and their rainbow of rosy-shaded brethren have struggled and died to establish here in our country are the institutions that support a decent quality of life. They are what nurture humanity at its finest and we would be a sadder, lesser people without them.
I am convinced that the people of the US are hard-core socialists at heart. They just don't realize it due to a lifetime of censorship and mis-education.
During Vietnam we organized 'teach-ins.' We need to do it again, teach-ins about economics and politics and community. When our neighbors are able to shed their political blinders, calling someone a socialist will be a compliment.
Obama's about as capitalistic as they come -- part of his problem with the far left. On the other hand, the GOP seems more oligarchic -- not the free market, but the monied market is what counts.
This is off topic--but not really. Today Obummer man chastised blacks to stop wining and to put on their marching shoes and follow him into a fight for jobs. HA, ha, ha, ha! FIGHT? What fight? His own advisers rolled him in the mud (Emanuel and Summers and Geitner--the Robert Rubin twins). He is incompetent! A wet noodle!
Where were Obama's marching shoes in Wisconsin, Ohio and everywhere else? No where. He has shagged the whole labor movement! He was playing golf with the Boner Heads of the world. And kissing Wall Streets butt.
Obama is such a joke!
The single biggest problem with Obama is that he's not a socialists. He's a fascist, plain and simple. That's why he'll lose in 2012. I'd rather have a Republican capitalist in office than a badly performing fascist.