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What A Difference Ten Days Make

by: Isaiah J. Poole  |  The Campaign for America's Future

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(Photo: Lois Stavsky)

    Consider how far we've come since January 20.

    On Thursday, the Senate followed the House in passing a reauthorization of a child health insurance bill that will mean 4 million more children will have access to health insurance. When the Congress passed similar legislation last year, then-President Bush vetoed the legislation - twice. This time, President Obama is expected to sign the bill into law next week.

    Increasing the number of working-class families who have health insurance for their children is just one of the significant victories progressives can lay claim to in just the first 10 days of the Obama administration.

    Struggles over the the administration's economic recovery package, and the brutal snubbing Obama received from House Republicans in spite of what most progressives think were ill-advised compromises, have threatened to overshadow the sea-change that is unfolding inside the Beltway. It's wrong to let that happen. Instead, the change should be celebrated, defended and established as a foundation for the bolder policy steps that this administration must take in the days ahead.

    The Positives So Far Are Sweeping:

β€’ An executive order that commits the United States to closing the international shame that is Guantanamo Bay, and that will finally mean that Guantanamo detainees will receive legal due process - and that the United States has returned to respecting the rule of law.

β€’ An executive order, and a clear statement from Obama's attorney general-designate Eric Holder, that reject the Bush administration's policy on torture.

β€’ Repeal of the Bush administration order that banned funding to international family planning organizations that supported legal abortions, which means that vital women's health services to poor countries will begin flowing again.

β€’ President Obama's signing on Thursday of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which will finally allow victims of wage discrimination a fair chance in the courts to get the justice due them. Ledbetter, who lost a conservative Supreme Court ruling that she could not pursue a wage discrimination claim because of an impractical statute of limitations, was able to witness the White House signing.

β€’ A memorandum that allows California and several other states to impose tough auto-emissions standards, a move that a New York Times analysis suggests is the first step in a relationship with state governments of "progressive federalism."

β€’ Obama's interview with the Al-Arabiya television network, in which he pledged a relationship of mutual respect with the Arab world, backed with the reminder that he has direct Muslim familial ties. The interview has immediately opened possibilities for diplomatic progress with the Arab world on a host of issues.

β€’ Obama's visit to the Pentagon this week to make clear his intention to follow through on his campaign promise of a safe and responsible withdrawal from Iraq and a refocusing of resources on repairing the Bush administration's disastrous handling of the fight against al-Qaida in Afghanistan.

    Then there is the economic recovery bill that dominated the news this week, a bill that my colleague Bernie Horn calls "the biggest and boldest progressive legislation in 40 years," even with its concessions to business interests and conservative whiners. This bill makes a significant down payment toward addressing both the short- and long-term challenges of rebuilding the economy and assuring that prosperity is more broadly spread than it was under President Bush.

    Yes, Obama administration proposals have had to be nudged in a more progressive direction by allies in Congress and by activist groups, and that will continue to be the case. But let's also appreciate how much change is already beginning to happen. Conservatives are certainly noticing, and if we are not careful to guard and build upon the victories that we are winning, it will not take long for us to be dragged back into much darker times.

  

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Comments

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I agree with what Greg

I agree with what Greg Palast said on the other piece on this site, that it's actually a good thing if no Repugs vote on Obama's legislation. Repugs will only be marginalizing themselves in those 178 districts, and the ten Blue Dog districts should be punished by not having any money go to them until they start voting for progress. It's also time for Senators Snowe, Collins, Specter, and Voinovich to do the right thing and vote like Republicans of the past such as Lowell Wiecker and John Chaffey and his son Lincoln, not like Repugnantcans of the present.

Great...so that just leaves

Great...so that just leaves 43 million Americans without health insurance..and the possiblity of the US taxpayers going into another $819 billion in debt for the so-called "stimulus" plan...that even some Dems actually have said they know it's not going to work. But never mind....at least ACORN has a good chance of getting their hands on part of the 4.5 or 5.2 billion in the package as a payback.

But despite these very

But despite these very positive changes, some things stay the same. The Republicans either didn't get the memo on November 4 or they can't comprehend that it was THEIR failed policies that led to the mandate for change. Tax cuts HAVE NOT WORKED, but tax credits tied to specific initiaves have and will work with the proviso that there must be capital to spend before such initiatives work. There is opposition based on principle and then there is the kind that is based on obstinacy and stupidity. Unfortunately, Boehner and his puppets are confusing the former with the latter. It doesn't matter to me if the Republicans want to squander their remaining political capital. I'm fine with bigger majorities after the next election. As far as progressive change is concerned, we're just getting started.

Yes, all very

Yes, all very "progressive"...well, hate to quibble with those persisting in euphoria, but there is the itty bitty matter of his committing to doubling "our" troop presence in Afghanistan, and those pesky drones that he's sending over into Pakistan, and his support for Israel no matter what they do...and the tax cuts in the stimulus plan, and... Well, except for those minor deviations...it's all very progressive.

insurance coverage/card does

insurance coverage/card does not make the availability of good health care a reality. it means some insurance companyh as more money but the children are not guaranteed the care because the facilites are not there. we need to create a system of delivery of health care for kids that uses existing places, like the schools themselves, to have clinics, dental offices, etc that are user friendly to kids. and we know the insurance companies will not provide that. we need health care providers that speak the language of the child not the insurance agent. cards don't mean much.

Give it up, Anonymous

Give it up, Anonymous (1/31/2009 - 1:53). It appears no matter how much this administration improves the situation, you will continue with sour comments against a black president and a Democratic congress--and continue to rank on ACORN, which also in no way deserves your improper comments. Also, missing signatures on comments pretty much speak for themselves.

I agree with Byard Pidgeon.

I agree with Byard Pidgeon. What are we doing bombing Pakistan, doubling our troop levels in Afghanistan, saying Israel has a right to defend herself when they have destroyed Gaza and killed so many civilians (with our weapons eg. white phosphorus)? I had so much hope that this wouldn't be our policy. Now I am discouraged. Let him study history, ours and the Middle East's.

It's very good to see the

It's very good to see the instant change. And it's even better that Obama is staking a claim to middle ground. Governing from the fringe, whether it be left or right is just nor a workable solution. I'm rooting for Obama to create a strong centrist government that forces BOTH fringes to seek consensus instead of bickering and throwing around insulting names (Repugnantcans, e.g.) like schoolyard children. ~~ Rev. Lane Baldwin - lifewithspirit.org

Kudos to Obama. The whole

Kudos to Obama. The whole world is taking notice but everyone is waiting to see if this progressive era gets the full effort needed to succeed. Meanwhile, Republicans are falling back on their old Freidmanite, trickle-down excuse for an economic policy. Obama and the Dems need to stress how disastrous this nonsense is and make sure the people who elected them know that the melt-down we're experiencing now is a direct result of their failed policies. Policies going back at least 25 years. Conservatives are whining so loudly now because they know it's very likely the end of many legislative careers as well as failed business careers. The death of their brand of crony capitalism is a very bitter pill to swallow. The very last thing they want is for Obama to succeed. His success in bring our nation into the 21st century with the challenges of global climate change, resource scarcity and the needs of the rest of the world marks the end of a very pernicious era of consumption, greed and dominance.

Call me an idealist, but

Call me an idealist, but I've always had a feeling that the rhetoric about doubling troops in Afghanistan and the unconditional support for Israel was political posturing deemed to be necessary for the campaign. I wrote Obama's office regarding my disapproval for his applause when US troops killed a major "Al Qaida" leader a few years back, and actually received an interesting response, which essentially satisfied my concerns and led me to feel that it was just necessary positioning. This is one brilliant individual: I am a perennial skeptic but I really believe this is the leader we desperately needed.

The Obamacrats seek healing

The Obamacrats seek healing of society and a world in need. The republicans seek only raw insidious power. The world can't wait for trickle up Justice to envelop the entire Bush admin in stress positions they have so eagerly earned. Time now for healing. Republicans can see themselves as part of the solution or, as usual, continued infection.

No Big Whoop! So far,

No Big Whoop! So far, nothing Obama has done has had any direct effect on me. It's like Bush is still in office!

Slowly but surely, Obama's

Slowly but surely, Obama's well advised "master plan" is being revealed. I had deep concerns about some of his appointments weeks ago, but now I am seeing a clear, strong mind at work. Let the Repugnicants cry. These are but the pathetic whines of the impotent, and unimportant.

Look, this administration is

Look, this administration is not going to be perfect in everyone's eyes - that would be impossible. My hope had been that we'd at least move back to a position of increased respect in the world, undo the obvious illegal actions taken by the former administration and move the emphasis of the executive office to a more progressive place and this (in just 10 days has happened. Are we living in the socialist utopia I dream of? No. Are we immeasurably better off than we were 11 days ago? Yes, we are. Obama was my man before he finished the 2004 keynote and I am happy beyond belief - But there's no way everyone is going to feel he's performing perfectly - Better. Yes the world is much better. Isn't that very good? Oh. By the way... His brother-in-law's OregonState Beavers have not lost a game since he took office and they were 0-16 in the Pac-10 last year - we're smiling in Corvallis!

Well, Sinclair, it isn't all

Well, Sinclair, it isn't all about you. Obama is moving the world in a more humane direction. It won't happen overnight. It won't all to be everyone's liking. But it is progress. After eight years of destruction of our base economy and pitting people, classes, and countries against each other, no one can expect an overnight bottomline effect on himself.

So far we have a series of

So far we have a series of moves that take us back to the Clinton presidency and as yet nothing truly progressive is on the Obama agenda. Reducing casualties in Iraq while increasing them in Afghanistan can hardly be viewed as progress. Let us see what Obama and his people do with regard to New Orleans, and national health care, and restoring public transportation and restore and expand funding for Amtrak before giving Obama or ourselves plaudits. We have already seen his failure to eliminate the tax cuts for the wealthy that were pushed through by his predecessor with the resulting tax burden borne by everyone else, including the cost for the US occupations of the Middle East countries.

The anti-Constitutional

The anti-Constitutional Threat. We would do well not to forget that Republican "legislators" during the last eight years have not really been "Republican" in the sense that they support and defend the Republic. Actually, they have been anti-republican in that they voted time and again for measures that subverted the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Democrats were all too eager to collaborate. The issue has always been Rule of Law and the Constitution is bedrock. Americans are immensely fortunate to have through President Obama the rescue of the Constitution and American citizens with it. We must not forget the anti-Constitutional threat.

β€’ An executive order, and

β€’ An executive order, and a clear statement from Obama's attorney general-designate Eric Holder, that reject the Bush administration's policy on torture. mpcoc