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Washington Post criticizes populist rhetoric
A shot across the bow against Barack Obama
By Jerry White
19 February 2008
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In an editorial Sunday the Washington Post, the major
daily newspaper in the US capital, criticized the leading
contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, Barack Obama,
for stirring up class warfare in his recent campaign
appearances.
The Post column begins approvingly, saying, At
his best, Sen. Barack Obama is a tribune of hope, an eloquent
politician-prophet who unabashedly calls on Americans to remember
that we rise or fall as one nation. But then, it continues,
citing a speech the Illinois senator gave to auto workers at a
General Motors factory in Janesville, Wisconsin last week, [T]here
are moments like last Wednesday, when Mr. Obama struck some unusually
sour notes in what was billed as a major economic policy address.
Yes, there were the trademark invocations of shared sacrifice
and shared prosperity. But Mr. Obamas remarks were
also tinged with an angrier, and intellectually sloppier, message.
We thought wed heard the last of class warfare and populism
when former North Carolina senator John Edwards bowed out of the
race. In his speech, Mr. Obama quoted Mr. Edwards approvingly;
he then echoed him in implying that he could pay for new domestic
programs with an immediate U.S. withdrawal from Iraq and in exaggerating
the millions of job losses attributable to trade agreements...
The Post editorial followed an article in the Wall
Street Journals weekend edition, entitled, Democrats
Attacks on Business Heat Up, which singled out the same
speech for attack. In particular, the Journal objected
to Obamas criticisms of trade deals with plenty of
protections for corporations and their profits, but none for our
environment and our workers whove seen factories shut their
doors and millions of jobs disappear.
The Journal noted that business groups are dismissive
of the Democratic attacks, quoting Randel Johnson, a vice
president of the US Chamber of Commerce. They should be
talking about ways to grow the economy such as deregulation and
lessening burdens on employers, rather than criticizing them with
simplistic politically driven rhetoric, said Johnson.
Obama, for his own political purposes, is seeking with considerable
success to tap into the widespread and deep mood of social anger
and political frustration among voters. In his Wisconsin speech
he pointed to the widening gap between the wealthy and the rest
of the American population, noting that many CEOs were making
more in a day that the average worker makes in a year and that
a typical familys annual income had dropped by $1,000 over
the last seven years.
Obamas tepid proposals for reform in no way challenge
the economic monopoly of Americas ruling elite. Far from
calling for a radical redistribution of wealth, Obama proposed
to provide families with a few hundred dollars worth of tax credits.
He calls for a $6 billion a year infrastructure programroughly
what the Pentagon spends every three daysunder conditions
in which the American Society of Civil Engineers estimates $1.6
trillion is needed to bring the nations roads, bridges and
public buildings into good condition.
To the extent, however, that he makes an appeal to social discontent,
no matter how insincerely, he raises popular expectations that
neither he nor any other bourgeois politician can meet. Within
major business and political circles there are concerns that any
appeal to class sentimentgiven the level of social tensions
in America after more than three decades in which the class struggle
has been suppressedcould be the proverbial match being thrown
into a powder keg.
Up until now Obama has been given wide latitude by the media
to pursue the Democratic nomination. The Washington Post
editorial and Wall Street Journal article are signs that
the political and media establishment may well rein him in. If
he fails to heed their advice to tone down the populist rhetoric,
the media could turn on Obama like a dime.
There are, however, significant policy and tactical differences
being fought out in the contest between Obama and Hillary Clinton.
The day after the Post editorial, New York Times
columnist Roger Cohen wrote an op-ed piece defending Obama against
criticism and arguing he would be more effective than Clinton
in refurbishing the international image of the United States and
thereby defending the geopolitical interests of corporate America.
In a column headlined A Realist Called Obama, Cohen
argues that the Bush administration has alienated US allies and
squandered opportunities to expand US influence in the Middle
East, Africa and Asia. At the same time, he says, Hillary Clinton
is too sullied by her husbands coterie of the worlds
rich and famous, with its dubious deal-making from Kazakhstan
to Colombia, to project the image of a U.S. renewal.
Therefore a realistic view of Obama, Cohen says,
would be that he is best placed to seize and shape a new
world of such possibilities. He has the youth, the global background,
the ability to move people, and the demonstrated talent for reaching
across lines of division, even those etched in black and white.
Cohen says Obama would help rebrand America. This,
he says, is crucial to advance US interests worldwide. Such rebranding,
Cohen says, was even used by the Papacy, in the late 1970s, with
the elevation of a Polish pope, John Paul II, adding, and
Poles then precipitated the fall of the Soviet empire.
Rejecting arguments about Obamas inexperience, Cohen
says his administration would have a tough foreign policy
team to confront Iran and other potential adversaries. At
the same time, Cohen reassures the foreign policy establishment,
the Illinois senator needs to recall what he once said:
No president should ever hesitate to use forceunilaterally
if necessaryto protect ourselves and our vital interests
when we are attacked or imminently threatened.
Cohen makes clear that those pushing Obamas campaign
see him as a useful tool to advance the interests of US imperialist
policy.
The Obama campaign, however, seeks to conceal the contradiction
between the interests of his supporters in the ruling elite and
the concerns and hopes and expectations he is arousing within
the electorate on the basis of vague calls for unity, renewal
and change, and his identity as the first African-American with
a serious chance to become president.
It is not possible to reconcile the domestic and international
interests of Americas financial aristocracy with the needs
of the masses of working people. The only means of ensuring a
decent future for workers and young people is to break the economic
and political stranglehold of the Wall Street banks and large
corporations.
Should he win the nomination and be elected, there is no doubt
whose hopes and expectations he will disappoint. In the face of
the mounting crisis of American and world capitalism, the Democratic
Partythe second party of American big businesswill
place the burden of the economic catastrophe squarely on the backs
of working people.
See Also:
Obama, Clinton admit primaries may not
settle nomination fight
[18 February 2008]
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