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Obamas Texas speech: Populist appeals with reassurances
to big business
By Jerry White
21 February 2008
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On Tuesday night after his primary election victory in Wisconsin,
Barack Obama, the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential
nomination, delivered a speech to a crowd of 20,000 supporters
at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas.
In his remarks, which lasted 50 minutes, the Illinois senator
appealed to two disparate and, in fact, conflicting constituencies.
First, he sought to tap into and channel the mood of social discontent
and frustration among voters opposed to the growth of social inequality,
war and the irresponsiveness of the two big business parties.
At the same time, he gave several signals to corporate America
that he was committed to defending its interests in the US and
throughout the globe.
In an appeal aimed particularly at young people, Obama presented
his campaign as a part of popular social movement, imbued with
the same hope for change as earlier movements that
fought for independence from Britain, against slavery and for
trade union and civil rights.
If we win this election in November, he said, then
we are going to need your help and your time, your energy, your
enthusiasm, your mobilization, your organization, and your voices
to help us change America over the next four years.
The country, he added, needs leaders who can inspire
the American people to rally behind a common purpose and a higher
purpose. His travels throughout the country had convinced
him that change in America does not happen from the top
down. It happens from the bottom up.
In his remarks, Obama deliberately sought to obscure the question
of class and the fact that a genuine struggle for significant
social change would require challenging Americas corporate
and financial elite.
Although he made several references to the deteriorating conditions
of working peopledeclining wages, rising medical, education
and other living expenses, the shifting of jobs to low-wage countriesthis
was not presented as the product of capitalism, a social and economic
system that benefits the wealthy at the expense of the working
class. Instead, he claimed, these conditions were the result of
lobbyists in Washington who used their money and influence
to crush good ideas and politicians who spend too
much time trying to score political points instead of trying
to bridge their differences so we can get something done.
If all Americans recognized their patriotic and civic duty,
Obama suggested, they could join together to make a better country.
The purpose of his campaign, he explained, was to move beyond
the divisions that have become so commonplace in our politics
and bridge the gap not only between racial, ethnic
and generational divisions, but between the rich and poor.
In this way we can join together and challenge the special
interests in Washington, he declared.
How the monopolization over political life by such special
interests as the banks, insurance companies and other giant
corporations can be broken through unifying working people and
the richrather than waging a struggle to wrench economic
and political power out of their handsObama did not say.
Nationalism
In his Houston speech Obama adopted the protectionist and nationalist
rhetoric of sections of the trade union bureaucracy, blaming the
loss of jobs on unpatriotic companies and trade agreements that
supposedly give unfair advantage to China and other countries.
Were here, he said, because there are
workers in Youngstown, Ohio whove watched job after job
after job disappear because of bad trade deals like NAFTA, whove
worked in factories for 20 years, and then one day they come in
and literally see the equipment unbolted from the floor and sent
to China.
Because he is seeking the support of Mexican immigrant voters
in Texas, Obama aimed his fire at China, rather than the USs
NAFTA trading partner Mexico. Nevertheless, on Wednesday he won
the endorsement of the Teamsters union, which has been conducting
a viciously racist campaign to block Mexican truck drivers from
entering the US.
Addressing himself to widespread anger over the growing chasm
between the rich and the rest of the population, Obama said, If
you are ready for change, then we can start restoring some balance
to our economy.... When weve got CEOs making more in 10
minutes than ordinary workers are making in a year and its
the CEOs who are getting a tax break and workers are left with
nothing, then something is wrong, and something has to change.
It would be understandable if politically inexperienced workers
and young people thought such rhetoric meant Obama was an advocate
of a serious redistribution of wealth and the expansion of government
programs to address the social crisis. He quickly made sure that
his backers in the corporate and political establishment knew
he had no such intentions. I believe in the free market,
he insisted. We dont believe in government doing what
we can do for ourselves.
Obama, like his rival for the Democratic nomination Hillary
Clinton, calls for a partial rolling back of Bushs tax cuts
and setting the tax rate where it was during the administration
of Democrat Bill Clinton. Obama told Investors Business
Daily last year that he opposes confiscatory taxes that
get in the way of economic growth. Obama offered a series
of tax rebates targeted to low-income workers, families and senior
citizens, which would, at most, provide an extra few thousand
dollars a year to those living below or at the poverty level.
Ever since former President Bill Clinton announced the end
of the era of big government the Democrats have preferred
to offer tax rebates, not government programs, in order to deflect
any accusations that they are tax and spend liberals.
Every reform proposed is therefore predicated on offering subsidies
to big business, including the insurance companies in the health
care plans offered by both Obama and Clinton.
In the face of the home mortgage crisiswhich could threaten
up to 2 million people with foreclosure in the coming year and
halfObama offered nothing in his speech but assurances that
he would pass laws against predatory lending.
Referring to the decades-long decline in the national infrastructure,
Obama said, If youre ready for change, we can start
reinvesting in America, in the cities. We are spending $9 billion
a month in Iraq. We can invest that money in rebuilding roads
and bridges and hospitals right here in Houston, building schools,
laying broadband lines, putting people back to work, employing
young men and young women in our inner cities, in our rural communities.
That is possible if youre ready for change.
In fact, Obama is only proposing to spend $6 billion a year
on infrastructure repairless than the monthly cost of the
war in Iraqand an infinitesimal drop in the bucket compared
to the $1.6 trillion the American Society of Engineers says is
required to bring the nations infrastructure up to good
condition.
Addressing himself to skyrocketing tuition costs for college
students, Obama said, Were going to provide a $4,000
tuition credit [to] every student, every year, but, students,
youre going to have to give back something in return. Youre
going to have to participate in community service. Youre
going to have to work in a homeless shelter, or a veterans home,
or an underserved school, or join the Peace Corps.
An Obama administration not only intends to use hard-pressed
young people as involuntary free labor. These plans for mandatory
national service would not be restricted to civilian occupations.
The proposals of leading Democrats, including Obama, for national
service are bound up with attempts to alleviate strains on the
military through an influx of new soldiers.
The Iraq war and national security
Obama sought to appeal to the antiwar sentiment of his audience,
saying, I will bring this war to an end in 2009. It is time
to bring our troops home.
In fact, Obama has pledged no such thing. He had refused to
state whether troops would be home by the end of his first term
in 2013, and has been an advocate of strategic redeployment
of US troops in Iraq or elsewhere in the Middle East where they
could quickly be sent back in if US interests were threatened.
Lest he be seen as an opponent of American militarism, Obama
stressed, As your commander-in-chief, my job will be to
keep you safe. And I will not hesitate to strike against any who
would do us harm. I will do whatever is required.
Throwing a bouquet to the military, he added, Part of
keeping you safe is maintaining the finest military in the world,
and that means providing our troops with the proper equipment
and the proper training and the proper rotations. Far from
calling for a substantial reduction in the Pentagons multibillion-dollar
annual budgetwhich chews up half of the US governments
spending on discretionary programsObama advocates an expansion
of the number of soldiers and Marines.
He then got to his criticism of the launching of the war in
Iraq. Part of keeping you safe, Obama said, is
also deploying our military wisely. And the war in Iraq was unwise.
It distracted us from the fight that needed to be fought in Afghanistan
against Al Qaeda. Theyre the ones who killed 3,000 Americans.
It fanned the flames of anti-American sentiment. It has cost us
dearly in blood and in treasure.
Obama does not question the legitimacy of the Bush administrations
war on terror, which has been used as the cover for
military expansion into the oil-rich territories of Central Asia
and the Middle East. Nor does he oppose the use of military force
to defend US geopolitical interests against its international
rivals. His main aim is to put a new face on US foreign policy
by combining military aggressiononce again clothed in humanitarian
and internationally sanctioned garbwith diplomacy
and economic penetration.
He continued, Yes, we will hunt down terrorists; yes,
we will lock down loose nuclear weapons that could do us harm.
But we are also going to lead on climate change. Were also
going to lead on helping poor countries deal with the devastation
of HIV-AIDS. Were also going to lead in bringing an end
to the genocide in Darfur, he concluded, referring to the
distressed region of Sudan, one area where Obamas foreign
policy advisors plan to challenge China for supremacy in Africa.
Obama has received the backing of leading sections of the corporate
and political establishment because he is seen as a useful tool
to establish a more popular base of support for the geopolitical
interests of the American ruling class. At the same time, his
talk of unity, renewal and his status as the first African American
with a serious chance to win the US presidency has attracted the
support of workers and young people in the first stages of their
political awakening and shift to the left.
It is impossible to combine the popular demands for an end
to war and militarism with the defense of US imperialist interests.
Nor is it possible to put an end to social inequality while defending
the free market and capitalism. In the end, as the
economic crisis in the US and internationally deepens, it will
be the expectations of ordinary people that will be dashed, not
those sections of big business that are backing Obama.
See Also:
Obama defeats Clinton by wide margin
in Wisconsin primary
[20 February 2008]
Washington Post criticizes populist
rhetoric
A shot across the bow against Barack Obama
[19 February 2008]
Obama, Clinton admit primaries may not
settle nomination fight
[18 February 2008]
The circularity of hope:
The Nation endorses Barack Obama
[15 February 2008]
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