Are Liberal Netroots Groups Helping Obama Fail?
Thursday 30 July 2009
by: Jeff Cohen, t r u t h o u t | Report

Obama responds to a reporter's question during a press conference on health
care last week. (Photo: Getty Images)
I've started deleting them as spam.
I'm not talking about the enlarge-your-penis emails or "You've Won the Lottery" notices. I'm talking about the increasingly urgent emails coming for weeks from liberal netroots groups calling for a "public option" for health care - a government insurance plan citizens could choose to PAY FOR instead of private insurance.
Never has so much passion been so misdirected. If what these liberal groups ultimately wanted out of President Obama and corporate-funded Democrats in Congress was a topnotch public plan to compete with the first-rate private plans, the wrong way to get it was to make that THE demand. Especially of a president whose instinct is toward conciliation and splitting the difference with big business and the right wing.
Sure, Obama was a community organizer once. That was decades ago when Russia was still our mortal enemy, Nelson Mandela was still an official State Department terrorist threat and the White House was still funding Islamist fanatics in Afghanistan.
For the last dozen years Obama has been a politician - and a consummate compromiser at that. Have we failed to notice?
Activists must recognize the surest way to get a strong public option that could compete with the Cadillac of health plans. We needed to mobilize millions of netroots people, almost every union and 150 members of Congress to endorse a maximum demand: National health insurance ... enhanced Medicare for All. In other words, a cost-effective, single-payer system of publicly financed, privately delivered health care that ends private health insurance (and its waste, bureaucracy, ads, sales commissions, lavish executive salaries, profiteering).
Had liberal groups sent out millions of emails building a movement that posed an existential threat to the health insurance industry, Senator Baucus and Blue Dog Democrats and their corporate health care patrons might well be on their knees begging for a comprehensive public option - to avert the threat of full-blown Medicare for All.
As things stand now, as writers like Bob Kuttner and Norman Solomon have warned, a weak public option would institutionalize a two-tiered system with healthier, wealthier citizens getting the best (private) plans, and sicker, harder-to-treat people getting an inferior (public) plan. Newt Gingrich couldn't dream up a better scenario to discredit an enhanced government role in health care.
To win serous reforms, we need activist leaders who are tough-minded progressives making maximum demands for reforms that truly address our nation's problems. Leave the inside-the-Beltway deal-making to the politicians, properly frightened and moved by the roar of mass movements.
We need activist leaders who have a clearer idea of who Obama is. He's not one of us. He's one of them - a politician bent on placating corporate interests. We knew all we needed to know about his current world view from all the corporatists he put in top jobs. And from the fact that he felt the need - six weeks into his administration, after the middle-class bailed out Wall Street - to call up The New York Times and assure the world that his policies were NOT socialist but were "entirely consistent with free market principles." At a time the corporate greedsters and free-market ideologues had been exposed as having threatened the economic well-being of the world, they weren't the ones on the defensive. They weren't doing the apologizing. Obama was on the defensive; he was apologizing to them!
When Democratic leaders start borrowing right-wing rhetoric, we know our activism has not been strong or progressive enough. At the AARP town hall on Tuesday, Obama described a public option as "controversial, I understand people are worried about that." He went on to assure his audience that "nobody is talking about ... government-run health care" or "a Canadian-style plan." At one point, he further assured seniors that no "bureaucratic law in Washington" would interfere in their health care decisions - seeming to adopt the faux populism of anti-government rightists. Yet, he seems incapable of anti-corporate populism, even with despised industries like Wall Street and health insurance.
I have huge respect for the smart young activists who built up the netroots, unleashing all sorts of progressive possibilities for our country. But I'm bothered by their often ineffectual, Beltway-originated, halfway demands.
I became active during the Vietnam War. We might still have troops in Vietnam if - instead of militantly demanding "All Troops Home Now" - we'd organized behind polite Beltway initiatives like: "Let's begin negotiations" or "Let's set a timeline for phased withdrawal."
I fear that netroots leaders are doing the same dance with Obama today that they did with Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid in 2007 to 2008. Instead of demanding that Democrats in Congress bring our troops home by using the power of the purse to defund the war, netroots leaders rallied behind weak, nonbinding timelines and other halfway measures cooked up with Congressional leaders.
Without a loud, clear demand for "troops home" from the huge online, out-of-Iraq forces, Democratic leaders started retreating and succumbing to Republican rhetoric. Reid proclaimed: "We will never abandon our troops in a time of war." Pelosi declared, "We will have legislation to fund the troops!"
And the corpses kept piling up.
Great social reforms have occurred in our country not when social movements took their lead from what the White House deemed possible, but when the White House was pushed by powerful movements demanding reforms bolder than what the president was comfortable with. Leading abolitionists pushed Lincoln toward ending slavery by demanding immediate abolition. Socialists' and workers' movements in the '30s sufficiently scared elites so that FDR could pass New Deal reforms far short of socialism. Martin Luther King and civil rights activists continuously pushed and prodded JFK and later LBJ.
And these movements didn't have the Internet.
In 1993, a National Health Insurance bill gained 100 co-sponsors in the Democrat-led House, plus endorsements from many unions, even Consumers Union. There was, unfortunately, no Internet then when the Clinton White House undermined this growing movement by proposing an incredibly complex plan that left big insurers dominating the system. Clinton's plan inspired few and confused many. After it went down in flames, talk radio host Jim Hightower asked President Clinton why he didn't back an easily-explained Medicare for All approach that had so much support in Congress. Clinton said he'd thought it was politically too difficult, but now wondered about that judgment.
Here we are 16 years later. Neglected by large netroots groups, John Conyers today has 85 House co-sponsors for HR 676, the Expanded Medicare for All Act , as well as the endorsement of many unions and Obama's longtime personal physician. If all those emails I've received lately had been about building the HR 676 movement and a public system instead of a "public option," the bill would have many more co-sponsors and could be pressuring Democrats to stand tough today.
For Obama to feel secure about reform and standing up to the right, he needs to feel that he's in the center pushed by noisy forces to his left. He's admitted as much. The way to help him succeed is to mobilize seriously to his left.
The way to help Obama fail is for netroots and liberal groups to collapse toward him from the get-go.
And if Obama does fail, we can quit laughing at a Republican Party in disarray due to Bush, religious extremism, hypocrisy and anti-intellectualism.
Because, in this period of crisis and fear, unless a progressively-prodded White House delivers reforms that actually improve lives soon, right-wing reaction could rebound more dangerous than ever in 2010 and/or 2012.



Comments
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Cohen is dead on. In April I
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:10 β Steve Blank (not verified)I totally agree with this
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:22 β Anonymous (not verified)Mr. Cohen, I think the
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:29 β BillyDoc (not verified)Mr. Cohen, I think the
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:35 β BillyDoc (not verified)Mr. Cohen, I think the problem lies in the fact that Progressives are Progressives exactly because they care about other people, and that makes them fair-minded and polite. Right-wingers apparently aren't burdened with the empathy gene. So, while Progressives are trying hard to be polite and fair and improve the lot of everyone right-wingers are sneaking around doing everything they can to thwart any "liberal" progress in any way possible. Lies, trickery, any despicable behavior, and the right-winger thinks his actions morally defensible because he has been manipulated into viewing himself as serving moral principles. The end justifies the means for these people. Ironically these "moral principles" generally involve the "worship" of Jesus Christ, arguably the most liberal human to have ever lived, by suppressing all semblance of rational thought. Until Progressives realize that their enemies cannot be dealt with politely or rationally any more than an attacking mad dog can be dealt with politely or rationally --- they will continue to lose. Snarling aggression and snapping teeth will always trump good intentions, fairness, and a polite demeanor.
Jeff Cohen is right. When
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:39 β MyLeftOne (not verified)Those of us who are either
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:53 β Anonymous (not verified)A national single payer
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:54 β sonofthewest (not verified)I clicked on this link with
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:56 β Cyberfarer (not verified)The all-or-nothing crowd
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:56 β stokescorrales (not verified)Good article. I haven't
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 16:57 β Anonymous (not verified)Liberals: Here, I want the
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:09 β Anonymous (not verified)A lot of words that say
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:13 β Anonymous (not verified)We already have a PROVEN
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:15 β Allan J Krueger (not verified)Jeff is right! Obama is a
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:16 β Anonymous (not verified)Obama doesn't need help
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:18 β NIH Epidemiologist's Son (not verified)This critique expresses
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:23 β Nancy Tobi (not verified)The left certainly put their
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:23 β Adam (not verified)I agree absolutely, but . .
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:25 β =Eric (not verified)This is not new.
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:25 β Anonymous (not verified)Indeed, the so called roots
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:27 β Anonymous (not verified)"make me do it", said Harry
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:30 β herbr (not verified)All the US can hope for in
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:31 β fred schueler (not verified)Mr. Obama starts an idea.
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:41 β Anonymous (not verified)Jeff, you are so right!
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:57 β lulu (not verified)Thanks Jeff Cohen for an
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 17:57 β Michael (not verified)I agree wholeheartedly with
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:08 β drlissa (not verified)Jeff is spot on! I am
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:09 β Paul Hochfeld (not verified)Watching the so-called
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:11 β R. M. (not verified)From the beginning my issue
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:12 β Saje Williams (not verified)At last, a gusty,
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:17 β Murray Suid (not verified)This is exactly why the
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:21 β mysterioso (not verified)Cohen has it right. Obama
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:27 β Komodo (not verified)Absolutely agree, and thank
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:30 β Anonymous (not verified)A progressive is one, in my
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 18:48 β Anonymous (not verified)Yes, right on on every
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 19:22 β Anonymous (not verified)@BillyDoc: If progressives
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 19:22 β Joel Rosenblum (not verified)Single payer is MUCH better
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 19:52 β Anonymous (not verified)Obama made a novice
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 20:02 β Jackie Giles (not verified)Amen! It's time to put
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 20:56 β James P. Marquart (not verified)As a member who worked with
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 21:27 β Gio (not verified)Even the Public Option is
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 21:48 β Anonymous (not verified)What most people are getting
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 22:04 β Leshak (not verified)THIS IS JUST HOW IAM STARING
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 22:05 β Anonymous (not verified)Most of those who have been
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 22:15 β joe brown (not verified)Let's have a reality check,
Thu, 07/30/2009 - 23:20 β Don (not verified)Remember: Obama is not a
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 00:20 β Anonymous (not verified)Wake up advocates of the
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 00:59 β frances griffin (not verified)Finally! Some one -- Jeff
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 03:28 β Anonymous (not verified)It's a sad day when it
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 10:15 β Anonymous (not verified)Let's ask and the Blue Dog
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 14:10 β Anonymous (not verified)We're all backseat drivers,
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 16:24 β RoughAcres (not verified)Mr Cohen I think you are
Fri, 07/31/2009 - 21:53 β Anonymous (not verified)Thank you for this
Sun, 08/02/2009 - 10:42 β Sally G (not verified)Cohen is so right. This
Sun, 08/02/2009 - 18:17 β Sallyport (not verified)You refer to Obama as the
Sun, 08/02/2009 - 18:38 β stop7997 (not verified)If anyone has worked with
Mon, 08/03/2009 - 00:02 β Lauren Serven (not verified)Many good ideas here! I
Mon, 08/03/2009 - 15:35 β Uppity Woman (not verified)I think a good start would
Tue, 08/04/2009 - 20:04 β Anonymous (not verified)the need is health care, not
Wed, 08/05/2009 - 04:43 β Anonymous (not verified)Ha! Ha! The absurdity of
Wed, 08/05/2009 - 13:40 β NYCartist (not verified)Here Here. Considering that
Wed, 08/05/2009 - 20:08 β elizabeth (not verified)Hey, mysterioso: I love the
Wed, 08/05/2009 - 22:19 β Frances in California (not verified)Healthcare is a serious
Thu, 08/06/2009 - 05:38 β Henry (not verified)