When he had a chance to act, to speak out--when he was in Clinton's
Cabinet--he was strangely silent.  Seemed that the party line was just fine
with him.

If values based governing is wanted, it is unclear what values the Dems
currently espouse, except for a burning desire to hold power once again.  

arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: Selma Singer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2003 9:38 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Futurework] Fw: The death of opposition in America


A major hero of mine. His little book  *I'll Be Short* pulls everything
together sooooo clearly.

Selma


----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2003 9:25 PM
Subject: The death of opposition in America


America's defeated Democrats need to deepen the analysis of their election
post-mortem. American democracy is in danger if they fail to remake the
culture of politics

http://www.observer.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4567230,00.html

The death of opposition in America

Robert Reich
Sunday December 15, 2002
The Observer, London

The recent US mid-term elections saw the rarity of a presidential
incumbent's party gaining seats in both houses of Congress. President Bush
has gained control of the Senate and the House of Representatives and now
appears even less constrained in both domestic and international policy.

The awful performance by the Democrats has led, as expected, to the kind
of post-election hand-wringing that occurred in 1980, 1988 and 1994. Each
occasion prompted the same tired question: Should Democrats move rightward
to the Republican-Lite centre, or move back to the Golden days of FDR? We
stand braced for endless conferences about "The Future of The Democratic
Party", after which everyone continues whatever they were doing before.

Yet, if political opposition in the US is not to atrophy, then real change
is needed within the Democratic Party and American democratic culture more
generally. This change is important not just for the people of America,
but also, given US economic and military might, for the remainder of the
world.

One problem is the lack of a national Democratic Party. The existence of
this is often incorrectly presupposed, for while people may call
themselves Democrats, there is no real national Democratic Party as there
is a national Republican Party. The Republicans have a network of
conservative think-tanks, which produce ideas that are marketed and sold
by a boatload of money and spokespeople. They recruit and train
prospective candidates who have the discipline to stick to a Party line.

Contrast this with the Democrats' mixed message leading up to the recent
elections, where they were unclear on whether to support Bush on Iraq;
they fulminated over social security privatisation and health care policy.
Although they managed to agree that last year's giant 1.3 trillion Bush
tax cut was wrong, they failed to offer a coherent, alternative
suggestion. If the emerging presidential candidates do not produce clear
policies they can kiss goodbye to victory in 2004.

But agreement on blandness will not suffice. Only opposition grounded in
conviction will create a real national movement that embraces all who have
been marginalised by big corporations and government, people who have
grown cynical about American society and its politics. It is worth
remembering that the party of non-voters is larger than either Republican
or Democrat. Many of those who vote have no strong party loyalty, but vote
for the person they despise the least after watching three months of
attack ads on television.

The big differences in American politics today are between inspirational
leaders with courage and those without such qualities. Among the former
are the late Senator Paul Wellstone of Minnesota and Senator John McCain
of Arizona - politicians with deeply held and passionate views. They have
a fair degree of contempt for powerful Americans who do not give a damn
about their country or its citizens. On the other side is a large group of
hard-boiled poll-watchers who spend most of their time raising money. It
takes no conviction or courage to move to the Centre. If you want to be a
true leader, you define the Centre. You don't rely on pollsters to tell
you where it is, because you can't lead people to where they already are.

The Democrats also need to be careful about their increasing reliance on
the elderly. It is true that over the next two decades the baby boomers
will be retiring as the largest, noisiest, and most demanding political
constituency in American history, as tens of millions of their bodies
corrode simultaneously. Worse is that most boomers have not saved a dime
for retirement. All the equity is in their homes and prices will take a
dive when they go to sell.

Yet, who will represent and inspire the young, enabling them to feel the
joy of politics? Idealism isn't dead, it's just waiting to be ignited
(among young people, minorities and the poor) or reignited (among the
jaded middle-aged). Millions of Progressives, Greens, Democrats or
Independents are yearning to get involved and change the way politics is
practised. These groups want government to work better and for more
people. They yearn for political leaders who are authentic, who aren't
afraid to take on sacred cows and tell it like it is, who have new common
sense ideas. They are deeply worried about where Bush is taking the
country. They are a powder keg waiting to explode.

These issues are bigger and more important than the future of the
Democratic Party. It is really about the future of democracy. American
democracy is in terrible trouble right now. Power is in the hands of a
tiny group of people. Large corporate entities are more politically potent
than at any time in living memory.

I hope the opposition has learned from the mid-term elections. To me, the
clearest lesson is that Republicans, unlike the Democrats in opposition,
know exactly what and who they stand for. When you know what you believe
and for whom you exist, you've got a better chance of winning. I believe
that another era of progressivism is on its way and if the Democrats see
it and feel it then they will be the Party of the future. If not, well,
more the shame for democracy, America and the world.

· Robert Reich is former Labor Secretary to President Clinton. This
article is draws from a speech given last week to the Institute for Public
Policy Research.

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