Sep 13, 2010
Christine O'Donnell, a candidate in Delaware's Republican senatorial
primary, is against masturbation and believes that her opponent's
supporters follow her home at night and hide in her bushes. For her,
last Thursday was a day of mixed fortunes.
First, she won the endorsement of Sarah Palin, who told Fox News's Sean Hannity: "[O'Donnell] is the real conservative in the race."
Then
came word that her own party had filed a formal complaint against her
with the Federal Election Commission for collaborating with the Tea
Party Express in ways that are illegal. "Sadly, Christine's just not really a legitimate candidate in Delaware," the Republican state committee chairman, Tom Ross, said recently. "She makes a decent presentation until you know the facts."
Propelled
by conservatives from afar and repelled by her party establishment at
home, O'Donnell is the latest Tea Party candidate to surf a late tide of
insurgent support that could clinch her the party's nomination
tomorrow. Democrats, like O'Donnell's supporters, are praying for her
victory. Polls show that against her their candidate would have
a nine-point lead; against her more moderate opponent, Mike Castle, the
Democrat would trail by 11 points. Their precarious control of the
Senate will hinge on precisely these outcomes.
The fact that the
best hope for the Democrats in November's midterm elections is for
Republicans to select candidates so ridiculous and reactionary that
voters have no choice but to vote Democrat lays bare the parlous state
of American electoral politics.
After Bush's second term, which
infuriated liberals and embarrassed conservatives, came a brief rush of
enthusiasm among at least half the country over the potential of Barack
Obama's presidency. After that brief, euphoric rally, the political
class is now double-dipping back in cynicism and desperation and taking
the country with them.
Democrats should be careful what they wish
for. Just because Republicans are becoming more extremist doesn't mean
they can't win. Two Tea Party candidates have already been selected in
safe Senate seats and five are on the ticket in tight races. Of these,
two hold double-digit leads and the remaining three are in dead heats.
Indeed,
the first of two certainties come November is that the Congressional
Republican caucus in both houses will emerge even further to the right
than it went in. For the foreseeable future, the republicanism of George
Bush Jr will be understood as a period of relative moderation. The birthers and Ground-Zero mosquers
who use "Muslim" as a slur and compare Obama to Hitler have broken
through. Their politics may not be credible, but their potency as an
electoral force certainly is.
The second is that the Democrats
will emerge with less seats than they went in with. The current
prognosis is that they are likely to lose the House of Representatives
and could possibly lose the Senate.
Either way, when it comes to
advancing progressive legislation this is about as good as it gets for
Obama until 2012. The last two years he has had to scrape around
cajoling votes out of politicians one by one to cement wafer-thin
majorities for his landmark achievements like healthcare reform and the
stimulus package. He won't have to do that anymore for the simple reason
that the wafer will be gone. Whatever he achieves after November will
be both incremental and inoffensive to a resurgent and radicalised right
wing.
The most convenient explanation for this would be to blame
Republicans. The only route map they have been able to imagine for their
own success has been through Obama's failure. To that end they have
conducted themselves, for the most part effectively, as a solid,
obstructive bloc to virtually every measure Obama has put forward,
including some that they actually believe in.
But the truth is the
Democrats really only have themselves to blame. For the best part of a
year they had a veto-proof majority in the Senate and still boast a
sizeable majority in the House. They could have passed any legislation
they wanted. But what they have had in numbers they lacked in solidarity
and conviction. The votes Obama went scavenging for were usually
Democratic ones.
For some Democrats this was an electoral
calculation that they could not get re-elected if they supported Obama's
agenda. Unfortunately for them, they got their sums wrong. According to
the non-partisan Cook Political Report, 23 of the 39 Democrats who voted against the healthcare bill are in seats the Republicans have a good chance of winning.
So
having made an enthusiastic pitch for power four years ago and been
handed it, the Democrats now appear to be unable to wield it and unclear
as to what they would use it for. This is not a particularly strong
position from which to go back to the electorate and ask for more power.
While this is not primarily Obama's fault, it has certainly been his
problem.
The greatest defence of his presidency so far can be
summed up thus: things were terrible when I came to power, are much
better than they would have been were I not in power, and are more
likely to improve faster because I am in power. These assertions are
basically true. But they are also problematic on three crucial fronts.
First,
given the high ideals of his campaign, they set the bar too low.
Second, they primarily hinge on how bad Republicans are rather than how
well Obama has done. And third, they represent a justification about the
past and a promissory note about the future that fails to address what
people are going through now.
Obama can list considerable
achievements: a version of healthcare reform, so elusive for so long, is
now in place; most of the troops that were in Iraq are now out; a
stimulus package was passed; a Latina is on the supreme court - quite a
lot for any president to show for a whole term let alone the first 18
months, and will likely have more positive lasting effects than Bill
Clinton's entire presidency.
The trouble is that, on almost all
counts, while these are impressive they are also insufficient. The
stimulus package was not big enough; improvements in healthcare coverage
will be slow and are anything but comprehensive; the occupation in Iraq
has been downsized and rebranded but US soldiers are still dying there.
In Afghanistan, where he has escalated troops, the situation is
deteriorating. During his first year in office, the poverty rate leapt
by 1.8% to 15% - the steepest annual increase since records began.
Unemployment is 9.6%; when he came to power it was 7.6%. The foreclosure
rate has also increased.
People can't eat hope. And at this point
to insist that it was Bush who made them hungry is an argument
relatively few will swallow, even if there is considerable truth to it.
The electoral cycle demands more positive answers than the economic
cycle will allow, and more than Obama or the Democrats can provide.
That
the victory of a fantasist and fundamentalist like O'Donnell is even
possible is indicative of the ideological decline of and division within
the Republican party. That such a victory would also represent the
Democrats' best hope illustrates a descent into despondency that makes
the excitement of two years ago seem like it belonged to another
country.
Join Us: News for people demanding a better world
Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place. We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference. Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. |
© 2023 The Guardian
Gary Younge
Gary Younge was editor-at-large for the Guardian. He was based in the U.S. for 12 years before recently returning to London. In November 2019, Younge was appointed as professor of sociology at the University of Manchester. He is the author of "Another Day in the Death of America: A Chronicle of Ten Short Lives" (Nation Books), "No Place Like Home: A Black Briton's Journey Through the American South," and "Stranger in a Strange Land: Encounters in the Disunited States."
Christine O'Donnell, a candidate in Delaware's Republican senatorial
primary, is against masturbation and believes that her opponent's
supporters follow her home at night and hide in her bushes. For her,
last Thursday was a day of mixed fortunes.
First, she won the endorsement of Sarah Palin, who told Fox News's Sean Hannity: "[O'Donnell] is the real conservative in the race."
Then
came word that her own party had filed a formal complaint against her
with the Federal Election Commission for collaborating with the Tea
Party Express in ways that are illegal. "Sadly, Christine's just not really a legitimate candidate in Delaware," the Republican state committee chairman, Tom Ross, said recently. "She makes a decent presentation until you know the facts."
Propelled
by conservatives from afar and repelled by her party establishment at
home, O'Donnell is the latest Tea Party candidate to surf a late tide of
insurgent support that could clinch her the party's nomination
tomorrow. Democrats, like O'Donnell's supporters, are praying for her
victory. Polls show that against her their candidate would have
a nine-point lead; against her more moderate opponent, Mike Castle, the
Democrat would trail by 11 points. Their precarious control of the
Senate will hinge on precisely these outcomes.
The fact that the
best hope for the Democrats in November's midterm elections is for
Republicans to select candidates so ridiculous and reactionary that
voters have no choice but to vote Democrat lays bare the parlous state
of American electoral politics.
After Bush's second term, which
infuriated liberals and embarrassed conservatives, came a brief rush of
enthusiasm among at least half the country over the potential of Barack
Obama's presidency. After that brief, euphoric rally, the political
class is now double-dipping back in cynicism and desperation and taking
the country with them.
Democrats should be careful what they wish
for. Just because Republicans are becoming more extremist doesn't mean
they can't win. Two Tea Party candidates have already been selected in
safe Senate seats and five are on the ticket in tight races. Of these,
two hold double-digit leads and the remaining three are in dead heats.
Indeed,
the first of two certainties come November is that the Congressional
Republican caucus in both houses will emerge even further to the right
than it went in. For the foreseeable future, the republicanism of George
Bush Jr will be understood as a period of relative moderation. The birthers and Ground-Zero mosquers
who use "Muslim" as a slur and compare Obama to Hitler have broken
through. Their politics may not be credible, but their potency as an
electoral force certainly is.
The second is that the Democrats
will emerge with less seats than they went in with. The current
prognosis is that they are likely to lose the House of Representatives
and could possibly lose the Senate.
Either way, when it comes to
advancing progressive legislation this is about as good as it gets for
Obama until 2012. The last two years he has had to scrape around
cajoling votes out of politicians one by one to cement wafer-thin
majorities for his landmark achievements like healthcare reform and the
stimulus package. He won't have to do that anymore for the simple reason
that the wafer will be gone. Whatever he achieves after November will
be both incremental and inoffensive to a resurgent and radicalised right
wing.
The most convenient explanation for this would be to blame
Republicans. The only route map they have been able to imagine for their
own success has been through Obama's failure. To that end they have
conducted themselves, for the most part effectively, as a solid,
obstructive bloc to virtually every measure Obama has put forward,
including some that they actually believe in.
But the truth is the
Democrats really only have themselves to blame. For the best part of a
year they had a veto-proof majority in the Senate and still boast a
sizeable majority in the House. They could have passed any legislation
they wanted. But what they have had in numbers they lacked in solidarity
and conviction. The votes Obama went scavenging for were usually
Democratic ones.
For some Democrats this was an electoral
calculation that they could not get re-elected if they supported Obama's
agenda. Unfortunately for them, they got their sums wrong. According to
the non-partisan Cook Political Report, 23 of the 39 Democrats who voted against the healthcare bill are in seats the Republicans have a good chance of winning.
So
having made an enthusiastic pitch for power four years ago and been
handed it, the Democrats now appear to be unable to wield it and unclear
as to what they would use it for. This is not a particularly strong
position from which to go back to the electorate and ask for more power.
While this is not primarily Obama's fault, it has certainly been his
problem.
The greatest defence of his presidency so far can be
summed up thus: things were terrible when I came to power, are much
better than they would have been were I not in power, and are more
likely to improve faster because I am in power. These assertions are
basically true. But they are also problematic on three crucial fronts.
First,
given the high ideals of his campaign, they set the bar too low.
Second, they primarily hinge on how bad Republicans are rather than how
well Obama has done. And third, they represent a justification about the
past and a promissory note about the future that fails to address what
people are going through now.
Obama can list considerable
achievements: a version of healthcare reform, so elusive for so long, is
now in place; most of the troops that were in Iraq are now out; a
stimulus package was passed; a Latina is on the supreme court - quite a
lot for any president to show for a whole term let alone the first 18
months, and will likely have more positive lasting effects than Bill
Clinton's entire presidency.
The trouble is that, on almost all
counts, while these are impressive they are also insufficient. The
stimulus package was not big enough; improvements in healthcare coverage
will be slow and are anything but comprehensive; the occupation in Iraq
has been downsized and rebranded but US soldiers are still dying there.
In Afghanistan, where he has escalated troops, the situation is
deteriorating. During his first year in office, the poverty rate leapt
by 1.8% to 15% - the steepest annual increase since records began.
Unemployment is 9.6%; when he came to power it was 7.6%. The foreclosure
rate has also increased.
People can't eat hope. And at this point
to insist that it was Bush who made them hungry is an argument
relatively few will swallow, even if there is considerable truth to it.
The electoral cycle demands more positive answers than the economic
cycle will allow, and more than Obama or the Democrats can provide.
That
the victory of a fantasist and fundamentalist like O'Donnell is even
possible is indicative of the ideological decline of and division within
the Republican party. That such a victory would also represent the
Democrats' best hope illustrates a descent into despondency that makes
the excitement of two years ago seem like it belonged to another
country.
Gary Younge
Gary Younge was editor-at-large for the Guardian. He was based in the U.S. for 12 years before recently returning to London. In November 2019, Younge was appointed as professor of sociology at the University of Manchester. He is the author of "Another Day in the Death of America: A Chronicle of Ten Short Lives" (Nation Books), "No Place Like Home: A Black Briton's Journey Through the American South," and "Stranger in a Strange Land: Encounters in the Disunited States."
Christine O'Donnell, a candidate in Delaware's Republican senatorial
primary, is against masturbation and believes that her opponent's
supporters follow her home at night and hide in her bushes. For her,
last Thursday was a day of mixed fortunes.
First, she won the endorsement of Sarah Palin, who told Fox News's Sean Hannity: "[O'Donnell] is the real conservative in the race."
Then
came word that her own party had filed a formal complaint against her
with the Federal Election Commission for collaborating with the Tea
Party Express in ways that are illegal. "Sadly, Christine's just not really a legitimate candidate in Delaware," the Republican state committee chairman, Tom Ross, said recently. "She makes a decent presentation until you know the facts."
Propelled
by conservatives from afar and repelled by her party establishment at
home, O'Donnell is the latest Tea Party candidate to surf a late tide of
insurgent support that could clinch her the party's nomination
tomorrow. Democrats, like O'Donnell's supporters, are praying for her
victory. Polls show that against her their candidate would have
a nine-point lead; against her more moderate opponent, Mike Castle, the
Democrat would trail by 11 points. Their precarious control of the
Senate will hinge on precisely these outcomes.
The fact that the
best hope for the Democrats in November's midterm elections is for
Republicans to select candidates so ridiculous and reactionary that
voters have no choice but to vote Democrat lays bare the parlous state
of American electoral politics.
After Bush's second term, which
infuriated liberals and embarrassed conservatives, came a brief rush of
enthusiasm among at least half the country over the potential of Barack
Obama's presidency. After that brief, euphoric rally, the political
class is now double-dipping back in cynicism and desperation and taking
the country with them.
Democrats should be careful what they wish
for. Just because Republicans are becoming more extremist doesn't mean
they can't win. Two Tea Party candidates have already been selected in
safe Senate seats and five are on the ticket in tight races. Of these,
two hold double-digit leads and the remaining three are in dead heats.
Indeed,
the first of two certainties come November is that the Congressional
Republican caucus in both houses will emerge even further to the right
than it went in. For the foreseeable future, the republicanism of George
Bush Jr will be understood as a period of relative moderation. The birthers and Ground-Zero mosquers
who use "Muslim" as a slur and compare Obama to Hitler have broken
through. Their politics may not be credible, but their potency as an
electoral force certainly is.
The second is that the Democrats
will emerge with less seats than they went in with. The current
prognosis is that they are likely to lose the House of Representatives
and could possibly lose the Senate.
Either way, when it comes to
advancing progressive legislation this is about as good as it gets for
Obama until 2012. The last two years he has had to scrape around
cajoling votes out of politicians one by one to cement wafer-thin
majorities for his landmark achievements like healthcare reform and the
stimulus package. He won't have to do that anymore for the simple reason
that the wafer will be gone. Whatever he achieves after November will
be both incremental and inoffensive to a resurgent and radicalised right
wing.
The most convenient explanation for this would be to blame
Republicans. The only route map they have been able to imagine for their
own success has been through Obama's failure. To that end they have
conducted themselves, for the most part effectively, as a solid,
obstructive bloc to virtually every measure Obama has put forward,
including some that they actually believe in.
But the truth is the
Democrats really only have themselves to blame. For the best part of a
year they had a veto-proof majority in the Senate and still boast a
sizeable majority in the House. They could have passed any legislation
they wanted. But what they have had in numbers they lacked in solidarity
and conviction. The votes Obama went scavenging for were usually
Democratic ones.
For some Democrats this was an electoral
calculation that they could not get re-elected if they supported Obama's
agenda. Unfortunately for them, they got their sums wrong. According to
the non-partisan Cook Political Report, 23 of the 39 Democrats who voted against the healthcare bill are in seats the Republicans have a good chance of winning.
So
having made an enthusiastic pitch for power four years ago and been
handed it, the Democrats now appear to be unable to wield it and unclear
as to what they would use it for. This is not a particularly strong
position from which to go back to the electorate and ask for more power.
While this is not primarily Obama's fault, it has certainly been his
problem.
The greatest defence of his presidency so far can be
summed up thus: things were terrible when I came to power, are much
better than they would have been were I not in power, and are more
likely to improve faster because I am in power. These assertions are
basically true. But they are also problematic on three crucial fronts.
First,
given the high ideals of his campaign, they set the bar too low.
Second, they primarily hinge on how bad Republicans are rather than how
well Obama has done. And third, they represent a justification about the
past and a promissory note about the future that fails to address what
people are going through now.
Obama can list considerable
achievements: a version of healthcare reform, so elusive for so long, is
now in place; most of the troops that were in Iraq are now out; a
stimulus package was passed; a Latina is on the supreme court - quite a
lot for any president to show for a whole term let alone the first 18
months, and will likely have more positive lasting effects than Bill
Clinton's entire presidency.
The trouble is that, on almost all
counts, while these are impressive they are also insufficient. The
stimulus package was not big enough; improvements in healthcare coverage
will be slow and are anything but comprehensive; the occupation in Iraq
has been downsized and rebranded but US soldiers are still dying there.
In Afghanistan, where he has escalated troops, the situation is
deteriorating. During his first year in office, the poverty rate leapt
by 1.8% to 15% - the steepest annual increase since records began.
Unemployment is 9.6%; when he came to power it was 7.6%. The foreclosure
rate has also increased.
People can't eat hope. And at this point
to insist that it was Bush who made them hungry is an argument
relatively few will swallow, even if there is considerable truth to it.
The electoral cycle demands more positive answers than the economic
cycle will allow, and more than Obama or the Democrats can provide.
That
the victory of a fantasist and fundamentalist like O'Donnell is even
possible is indicative of the ideological decline of and division within
the Republican party. That such a victory would also represent the
Democrats' best hope illustrates a descent into despondency that makes
the excitement of two years ago seem like it belonged to another
country.
We've had enough. The 1% own and operate the corporate media. They are doing everything they can to defend the status quo, squash dissent and protect the wealthy and the powerful. The Common Dreams media model is different. We cover the news that matters to the 99%. Our mission? To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. How? Nonprofit. Independent. Reader-supported. Free to read. Free to republish. Free to share. With no advertising. No paywalls. No selling of your data. Thousands of small donations fund our newsroom and allow us to continue publishing. Can you chip in? We can't do it without you. Thank you.