Forum Post: Robert Reich: A Passionless Presidential Race?
Posted 13 years ago on Nov. 12, 2011, 7:49 p.m. EST by looselyhuman
(3117)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement
Polls show Americans angrier and more polarized than at any time since the Vietnam War. That's not surprising. We have the worst economy since the Great Recession and the worst politics in living memory. The rise of the regressive right over the last three decades has finally spurred a progressive reaction. Occupiers and others have had enough.
Yet, paradoxically, the presidential race that officially begins a few months from now is likely to be as passionless as they come.
President Obama will be supported by progressives and the Democratic base, but without enthusiasm. His notorious caves to Republicans and Wall Street - failing to put conditions on the Street's bailout (such as demanding the Street help stranded homeowners), or to resurrect Glass-Steagall, or include a public option in healthcare, or assert his constitutional responsibility to raise the debt limit, or protect Medicare and Social Security, or push for cap-and-trade, or close Guantanamo, or, in general, confront the regressive Republican nay-sayers and do-nothings with toughness rather than begin negotiations by giving them much of what they want - are not the stuff that stirs a passionate following.
Mitt Romney will surely be the Republican presidential candidate - and Romney inspires as little enthusiasm among Republicans as Obama does among Democrats. The GOP will support Romney because, frankly, he's the only major Republican primary candidate who does not appear to the broader public to be nuts.
But Republicans don't like Romney. His glib, self-serving, say-whatever-it-takes-to-win-the-primaries approach strikes almost everyone as contrived and cynical. Moreover, Romney is the establishment personified - a pump-and-dump takeover financier, for crying out loud - at the very time the GOP (and much of the rest of the country) are becoming more anti-establishment by the day.
At this point neither the Republican right nor the mainstream media wants to admit the yawn-inducing truth that Mitt will be the GOP's candidate. The right doesn't want to admit it because it will be seen as a repudiation of the Tea Party. The media doesn't want to because they'd prefer to sell newspapers and attract eyeballs.
The media are keeping the story of Rick Perry's cringe-inducing implosion going for the same reason they're keeping the story of Herman Cain's equally painful decline going - because the public is forever fascinated by the gruesome sight of dying candidacies. With Bachmann, Perry and Cain gone or disintegrating, the right wing-nuts of the GOP have only one hope left: Newt Gingrich. His star will rise briefly before he, too, is pilloried for the bizarre things he's uttered in the past and for his equally bizarre private life. His fall will be equally sudden (although I don't think Gingrich is capable of embarrassment).
And so we'll be left with two presidential candidates who don't inspire - at the very time in American history when Americans crave inspiration.
Instead of a big debate about the basics (how to truly restore jobs and wages, financial capitalism versus product capitalism, the place and role of America in the world, how to rescue our democracy), we're likely to have a superficial debate over symbols (the budget deficit, the size of government, whether we need a "businessman" at the helm).
This means political passions are likely to move elsewhere - finding their voices in grass-roots movements, social media, demonstrations, boycotts, and meet-ups - on the Main Streets and in the backwaters, and only episodically in the mainstream media or in normal election-year events.
In some ways this may not be such a bad thing. The regressive right has had thirty years to build itself into a political power. Newly-energized progressives (Occupiers and others) need enough time to develop concrete proposals and strategies. What's the rush? If polls are to be believed, most of the nation is progressive, not regressive (witness last Tuesday's results in Wisconsin and elsewhere). So it is, after all, only a matter of time.
Yet, viewed another way, a passionless presidential race may be dangerous for America. The nation's problems may not wait. They require bold action, and soon.
Apparently some folks thought I wrote this (I'm flattered). I put his name in the title but didn't mention explicitly this was Robert Reich. It's the entire piece, from: http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/8367-focus-robert-reich-a-passionless-presidential-race
I think that the only way to stop the Corporate Empire, at this point, is to make this, and all elections from now on, a one issue campaign. "Are you going to Remove Money from Politics?" Yes is stay, No is GTFO.
I twiited him this two weeks ago after reading his G-S Act Story: http://robertreich.org/post/11930107240
Sent him this:
Million People March to WDC to Reinstate Glass-Steagall Act. When? 6/16/12, 79th Anniv of G-S Act.
http://occupywallst.org/forum/its-time-for-a-million-people-march-to-capitol-hil/
Cool :o)
you should share you Forum with RR, it may help draw him in further. For example, to let everyone know what we (at least some of us) are up to, I have reached out to by email to almost everyone that either wrote a story on the Forum, or was Featured on a youtube link; such as Public Citizen, James Galbrath (nice guy), Marcus Mabry, Matt Taibbi, Senator Byron Dorgan, Senator Maria Cantwell, Sam Stein, Eric Lipton, and my main man for reform, Professor Michael Greenberger. Last week, I also Twitted this to the following:
Million People March to WDC to Reinstate Glass-Steagall Act. When? 6/16/12, 79th Anniv of G-S Act. http://occupywallst.org/forum/its-time-for-a-million-people-march-to-capitol-hil/
Ralph Nader, OWS, OWS Times, The Other 99, Matt Taibbi, Senator Maria Cantwell, Senator Ted Kaufman, Senator Sanders, Dylan Ratigan Show, Ed Show, Keith Oblermann Show, Rachel Maddow Show, Jon Stewart Show, Finance Reform Org, RB Reich, People's Congress, POPVOX.com
Cheers
Let's get this Done first, than we will have the Power to move on to....And as far as the Date 6/16/12 is concerned, it started TODAY! Hopefully, we will have in the bag by then...
forgot, also sent him this last night:
Three Forums in one to help achieve our 1# Victory: Reinstating the G-S Act & Our Old CFTC Act: http://occupywallst.org/forum/the-day-the-gramm-leach-bliley-act-of-1999-came-up/ Please be there
right on! Robert can help us get our house of cards in order, someone get him on board, now!
He spoke to Occupy San Francisco at one point. He's in, at least in spirit... What do we expect of him?
I feel he would make a great ally, and consultant in helping us restore the financial regulation we had in place in 1999, which work fine from 1933 to 1999, until they shattered it! http://occupywallst.org/forum/its-time-for-a-million-people-march-to-capitol-hil/
I hate to state the obvious and the unmentionable.
Ron P.aul is the only candidate who has has the guts, historical knowledge and economic insight to have taken on the private Federal Reserve and the banksters virtually on his own for over 20+ years.
Whatever you think of him, he is the only candidate that will respect and obey the Constitution in either party.
I'll vote for Paul in my primary if you'll vote for Obama over Romney (like there's a real difference, sadly) in the main event. If hell freezes over, and Paul wins, I'll even vote for him over Obama.
If it is Obama vs Romney then lets hope that a third party might be an option.
It's really past voting for the lesser of two evils.
Obviously, he failed, for 20+ years.
How has he failed?
The rest of the bought and sold politicians have failed YOU (and the rest of America).
You know I understand the criticisms leveled against P.aul - he would likely be the first to say he is an imperfect messenger. But no matter his personal faults or the faults in his platform, something that I respect is his quiet determination.
I get the feeling he would like to be behind the scenes and not be in the public eye. But he does what he does for his community, for his family and because he believes he can help others. I don't feel this way about Obama or most of the other candidates or politicians in general.
He just squawks a lot. 20+ years, not much to show. Just another career politician. In the end, just another neoliberal, and that's what got us here.
It's nice, he treats his family and community well. He should run for governor of Texas and give us a test run of his policies.
The presidential "race" is a con job. More and more people are finally getting it, but not enough to make a real difference.
Will the real David Graeber please stand up? Please stand up, please stand up...
Actually that's very well written. My sentiments exactly but, you know, you don't want the whole world to know this, because, like, we enjoy watching the game. It's no fun when you know who the winners are.
I suspect the U.S. President is gradually becoming a figurehead.
The "permanent government" is the military and the other National Security bureaucracy.
Obama didn't even bother firing most of Bush's appointees in the DOJ and he hardly even vetoes anything coming from Congress.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_presidential_vetoes
It's not a presidential race yet.
Just a bunch of republican clowns.
Did you expect more?
"looselyhuman" writes : "President Obama will be supported by progressives..."
W H A T ????????
No, actually, that was Robert Reich.
I probably won't even vote. If I did, it would be to try to prevent Romney from winning, and that's about it. I see little difference overall, just a slightly lesser evil.
Sorry about that, "looselyhuman". I stand corrected.
But I cannot for the life of me imagine a true "progressive" supporting Obama. I think OWS should request that the completely useless and meaningless 2012 elections be REPLACED by a NATION-WIDE REFERENDUM to overhaul the present, corrupt-to-the-core political system. THAT imo would be useful and meaningful.
So have you been pointing everyone to the 99% Declaration? There will of course be no replacement of 2012 but their will be a shadow growing along side... https://sites.google.com/site/the99percentdeclaration/
What is your personal view of the OWS stance of not supporting candidates?
I would probably care more if there was a not-a-neoliberal in the race. :)
Thanks for the vote of confidence.
Well, no, yes, but I meant all the candidates will be neoliberals. You do have my confidence.
Yeah, I understood. But I was thinking in terms of backing someone outside the current field. Alan Grayson maybe. I know it would be a long shot and might just serve as a spoiler like Nader, but I hate to think Obama is as good as it gets.
Running as an independent, or primarying O? The former would be a spoiler, the latter wouldn't, and could be a good wakeup call for the establishment. Somebody would need serious brass ones to take him on though. Or a serious statement of support from progressives that constitutes a mandate...
Yes, I think the best we could hope for is the wake up call aspect. They would never let him into the primary.
yeah, nice writing here. kinda refreshing..
Fine rundown of the current sitation. Tactically, I think patience is a good approach right now. Sometimes things just happen, and we must be there waiting rather than becoming shrill and divisive out of frustration ( a tendency I have to curb in myself). Yey we must have no doubt that we will win. The survival of our children is at stake. In order to do so we must realize the power of Satyagraha, and carry it to new heights of courage and self-sacrifice.