The Enthusiasm Gap
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
had dinner the other night with a Democratic pollster who told me Dems are heading toward next fall's mid-term elections with a serious enthusiasm gap: The Republican base is fired up. The Dem base is packing up.
The Dem base is lethargic because congressional Democrats continue to compromise on everything the Dem base cares about. For a year now it's been nothing but compromises, watered-down ideas, weakened provisions, wider loopholes, softened regulations. Health care went from what the Dem base wanted - single payer - to a public option, to no public option, to a bunch of ideas that the President tried to explain last week, and it now hangs by a string as Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid try to round up conservative Dems and a 51-vote reconciliation package in the Senate. The jobs bill went from what the base wanted - a second stimulus - to $165 billion of extended unemployment benefits and aid to states and locales, then to $15 billion of tax breaks for businesses that make new hires. Financial regulation went from tough new capital requirements, sharp constraints on derivate trading, a consumer protection agency, and a resurrection of the Glass-Steagall Act - all popular with the Dem base - to some limits on derivatives and a consumer-protection agency inside the Treasury Department and a rearrangement of oversight boxes, and it's now looking like even less. The environment went from the base's desire for a carbon tax to a cap-and-trade carbon auction then to a cap-and-trade with all sorts of exemptions and offsets for the biggest polluters, and now Senate Dems are talking about trying to do it industry-by-industry.
These waffles and wiggle rooms have drained the Democratic base of all passion. "Why should I care?" are words I hear over and over again from stalwart Democrats who worked their hearts out in the last election.
The Republican base, meanwhile, is on a rampage. It's more and more energized by its mad-as-hell populists. Tea partiers, libertarians, Birchers, birthers, and Dick Armey astro-turfers are channeling the economic anxieties of millions of Americans against "big government."
Technically, the Dems have the majority in Congress and could still make major reforms. But conservative, "blue-dog" Dems won't go along. They say the public has grown wary of government. But they must know the public hasn't grown even more wary of big business and Wall Street, on which effective government is the only constraint.
Anyone with an ounce of sanity understands government is the only effective countervailing force against the forces that got us into this mess: Against Goldman Sachs and the rest of the big banks that plunged the economy into crisis, got our bailout money, and are now back at their old games, dispensing huge bonuses to themselves. Against WellPoint and the rest of the giant health insurers who are at this moment robbing us of the care we need by raising their rates by double digits. Against giant corporations that are showing big profits by continuing to lay off millions of Americans and cutting the wages of millions of more, by shifting jobs abroad and substituting software. Against big oil and big utilities that are raising prices and rates, and continue to ravage the atmosphere.
If there was ever a time to connect the dots and make the case for government as the singular means of protecting the public from these forces it is now. Yet the White House and the congressional Dem's ongoing refusal to blame big business and Wall Street has created the biggest irony in modern political history. A growing portion of the public, fed by the right, blames our problems on "big government."
Much of the reason for the Democrats' astonishing reluctance to place blame where it belongs rests with big business's and Wall Street's generous flows of campaign donations to Dems, coupled with their implicit promise of high-paying jobs once Democratic officials retire from government. This is the rot at the center of the system. And unless or until it's remedied, it will be difficult for the President to achieve any "change you can believe in."
To his credit, Obama himself has not scaled back his health-care ambitions all that much, and he appears, intermittently, to want to push conservative blue-dog Dems to join him on a bigger jobs bill, tougher financial reform, and a more effective approach to global warming. (His overtures to Republicans seem ever more transparently designed to give blue-dog Dems cover to vote with him.)
But our President is not comfortable wielding blame. He will not give the public the larger narrative of private-sector greed, its nefarious effect on the American public at this dangerous juncture, and the private sector's corruption of the democratic process. He has so far eschewed any major plan to get corporate and Wall Street money out of politics. He can be indignant - as when he lashed out at the "fat cats" on Wall Street - but his indignance is fleeting, and it is no match for the faux indignance of the right that blames government for all that ails us.
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Robert Reich is Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written twelve books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," and his most recent book, "Supercapitalism." His "Marketplace" commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.
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Comments
Do you really still believe that Obama's campaign promises had anything to do w/ his actual program?
I was a fervent supporter.
He lied.
t's sickening to watch the spineless Dems tremble helplessly before the outrage ginned up by the reich-wing (sorry, no offense intended). They seem incapable, as you point out about Obama, of re-framing the narrative and stuck with the one the Re THUG LIE CONS have hung around their necks.
It's all the more sickening that the problems we're dealing with were created by their "free-enterprise" model. As Paul Krugman so accurately described, they've once again spent us into bankruptcy and thus made effective government programs impossible. We have a gold-plated military on which we spend more than the rest of world combined spends on military but cant' provide health insurance - or even cover the current budget obligations. In the meantime, they have no solutions other than to let the fat cats continue to gorge at the public trough. The rich get richer, etc. etc. etc. . .
Thanks for your great service. Keep it up.
You are right on the dot, on what I and others like me feel. The question is how does it get transferred to the 58 senators that still will listen? I don't consider Joe Liberman a fellow traveler, and he should be dumped from his committee leadership to give an warning to the Blue Dogs to shape up or ready to be shipped out. If it is done in next 4 weeks and public option is passed - a legend like Medicare will be made and Democrats will win the mid term, if they show the spine.
Obama won the election by saying what the majority wanted to hear and then lost it completely by becoming bi-partisan to a fault! If I were a cartoonist, I would draw a cartoon showing the electorate operating on Obama's weak spine!
What can we do?
Annie Estlund anniefwo@gmail.com
For one thing we need more outrage from the Liberal spokespersons, such as you. The Reps. have that mastered with the likes of Limbaugh, etc. We must copy a page from their playbook or face the fact that we will lose the power we had in the upcoming elections.
Republican or not these people are scary. That is why I do care.
The “passion” of the Democratic base was headed for disappointment from the beginning. The beast was set up to starve. The government had been expanded and the debts increased to the point that loans could dry up.
President Obama cannot wave a magic wand to solve all the problems listed. He made his first error when he tried to give legislative power back to Congress. His second mistake was in waiting too long to realize Congress is notorious for not facing real issues.
So we are left here with a Government that is terribly crippled but it is better than what the “Tea Party” big tent wants for us all. I may not like what the Congress doesn't get done but I wonder about the alternatives.
"Technically, the Dems have the majority in Congress and could still make major reforms. But conservative, 'blue-dog' Dems won't go along. They say the public has grown wary of government. But they must know the public hasn't grown even more wary of big business and Wall Street, on which effective government is the only constraint.
Anyone with an ounce of sanity understands government is the only effective countervailing force against the forces that got us into this mess: Against Goldman Sachs and the rest of the big banks that plunged the economy into crisis, got our bailout money, and are now back at their old games, dispensing huge bonuses to themselves. Against WellPoint and the rest of the giant health insurers who are at this moment robbing us of the care we need by raising their rates by double digits..."
Anyone who reads this should understand that the Right is off its rocker, if they think the President is a socialist. I am not sure there is a typeo, but the Tea Party types are a little tipsy too if... "the public hasn't grown even more wary of big business and Wall Street, on which effective government is the only constraint." (cont.)
The plain understatement is that Democrats are not out to destroy America or corporations in particular, nor has the "Free Market" ever been free, but is easier to simmer than get fired up, when the heat comes from the ad hominem, ad group'em, ad label'em, add lose'em blame game enthusiasts. Not to blame the author, but change is "hard work" as pointed out in the many areas we have sacrificed our plans and as Senator Lamar Alexander said of the Republican approach, "we don't do comprehensive well."
keith campbell
Not such a good prognosis for the future. Real Revolutions are built from such things....
Let's call our champion back to the camp and then take the field one more time.
Michael Moore for President!
Come on people! Contact your local Democratic Party office & get active! Get on a committee! Agitate for progressive change; run for local office; campaign on behalf of other progressives; get out the vote. I don't believe that the status quo in Washington can ever be reformed until the Democratic Party is reformed! This matters most of all now because if the Democratic Party is not reformed we all lose.
As Robert Reich, for whom I have always had great respect, I think his pitting government against business is just flat wrong. Certainly businesses go after the cash; that's what they are supposed to do. They hire people in the process. It was the government that put FDIC and FSLIC into place. Would you maintain your careful ways if you know there is someone who is going to cover you if you fail? We did it, to a certain extent, to ourselves. I think pointing fingers is useless at this point. We need to see if we can deal with the mess that is at hand and stop blaming everyone else for the problem.
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