http://www.zcommunications.org/lessons-of-the-obama-debacle-by-walden-bello

<http://www.zcommunications.org/lessons-of-the-obama-debacle-by-walden-bello>Lessons
of the Obama Debacle
------------------------------
By Walden Bello <http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/waldenbello>

Source: Foreign Policy in Focus
Thursday, October 14, 2010


The problem with us progressives at this time of crisis is not that we lack
an alternative paradigm to pit against the discredited neoliberal paradigm.
No, the elements of the alternative based on the values of democracy,
justice, equality, and environmental sustainability are there and have been
there for sometime, the product of collective intellectual and activist work
over the last few decades.



The key problem is the failure of progressives to translate their vision and
values into a program that is convincing and connects with the people
trapped in the terrible existential conditions created by the global
financial crisis. This fluid process is preeminently political. It requires
translating a strategic perspective into a tactical program that takes
advantage of the opportunities, ambiguities, and contradictions of the
present moment to construct a critical mass for progressive change from
diverse class and social forces.



We must look at the political experience of the global progressive movement
in order to understand why our side has been derailed and how we can fight
back to political relevance. The experience of the Obama presidency is rich
in this regard.   In the U.S. political context, Obama is a social democrat,
and the broad left supported his candidacy. Although he was no
anti-capitalist, still we expected that he would initiate a program of
recovery and reform similar in ambition to Roosevelt’s New Deal. The
electoral base that brought him to power, which cut across class, color,
gender, and generational lines -- was full of potential. Obama’s ability to
bring this base together on a message of change achieved what was then
thought impossible—the election of an Afro-American as president of the
United States—and showed how smart political leadership can shape social and
political structures.



Two years after his spectacular electoral victory, President Obama and the
Democrats face a rout in the U.S. polls in early November. Indeed, Obama and
his party are like a rabbit on the railroad track that is hypnotized by the
light of an oncoming train. Whereas Obama seemed to do all the right things
in his quest for the presidency, he seemed to make all the wrong moves as
chief executive.



His prioritizing of health care reform, a massively complex task, has been
identified as a key blunder.  This decision certainly contributed to the
debacle. But other important factors related mainly to his handling of the
economic crisis, a primary concern of the electorate, were perhaps more
critical.



*Six Reasons behind the Debacle*



Obama’s first mistake was to take responsibility for the economic crisis.
In his quixotic quest for a bipartisan solution, he made George W. Bush’s
problem his own.  Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan never made this
mistake. They took no responsibility for the economic problems of the 1970s,
heaping the blame entirely on their liberal predecessors and eschewing any
bipartisan alliance with those they considered their ideological enemies.
Roosevelt, too, slammed – and slammed hard –his ideological foes, those he
termed “economic royalists.”



Insofar as Obama and his lieutenants identified villains, this was Wall
Street. Yet saying the financial elite brought on the crisis, while bailing
out key Wall Street financial institutions such as Citigroup and AIG on the
grounds that they were “too big to fail,” involved Obama in a terrible
contradiction. The least that he could have done was to remove the existing
boards and top managers of these organizations as a condition for government
funds. Instead, unlike the case of General Motors, the top dogs stayed on
board and continued to collect sky-high bonuses to boot.



The strong sense of disconnect between word and deed was exacerbated rather
than alleviated by the Democrats’ financial reform.   The measure did not
have the minimum conditions for a reform with real teeth:  the banning of
derivatives, a Glass-Steagall provision preventing commercial banks from
doubling as investment banks; the imposition of a financial transactions tax
or Tobin tax; and a strong lid on executive pay, bonuses, and stock options.



Third, Obama had a tremendous opportunity to educate and mobilize people
against the neoliberal or market fundamentalist approach that deregulated
the financial sector and caused the crisis. Although Obama did allude to
unregulated financial markets as the key problem during the campaign, he
refrained from demonizing neoliberalism after he took office, thus
presenting an ideological vacuum that the resurgent neoliberals did not
hesitate to fill. No doubt he failed to launch a full-scale ideological
offensive because his key lieutenants for economic policy, National Economic
Council head Larry Summers and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, had not
broken with neoliberal thinking.



Fourth, the stimulus package of $787 billion was simply too small to bring
down or hold the line on unemployment.  Here, Obama cannot say he lacked
good advice.  Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate, and a whole host of
Keynesian economists were telling him this from the very start.  For
comparison, the Chinese stimulus package of $580 billion was much bigger
relative to the size of the economy than the Obama package.  For the White
House now to say that the employment situation would now be worse had it not
been for the stimulus is, to say the least, politically naïve.  People
operate not with wishful counterfactual scenarios but with the facts on the
ground, and the facts have been rising unemployment with no relief in sight.



Politics in a time of crisis is not for the fainthearted. The middle-of-the
road approach represented by the size of the stimulus was the wrong response
to a crisis that called for a political gamble: the deployment of the
massive fiscal firepower of the government against the predictable howls of
anger from the right.



Fifth, Obama and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke deployed mainly
Keynesian technocratic tools—deficit spending and monetary easing—to deal
with the consequences of the massive failure of market fundamentalism.
During a normal downturn these countercyclical tools may suffice to reverse
the downturn. But standard Keynesianism could address such a serious
collapse only in a very limited way. Besides, people were looking not only
for relief in the short term but for a new direction that would enable them
to master their fears and insecurities and give them reason to hope.



In other words, Obama failed to locate his Keynesian technocratic
initiatives within a larger political and economic agenda that could have
fired up a fairly large section of American society.  Such a larger agenda
could have had three pillars: the democratization of economic
decision-making, from the enterprise level to the heights of
macro-policymaking; an income and asset redistribution strategy that went
beyond increasing taxes on the top two percent of the population; and the
promotion of a more cooperative rather than competitive approach to
production, distribution, and the management of resources. This agenda of
social transformation, which was not too left, could have been accommodated
within a classical social democratic framework.  People were simply looking
for an alternative to the Brave New Dog-Eat-Dog World that neo-liberalism
had bequeathed them. Instead, Obama offered a bloodless technocratic
approach to cure a political and ideological debacle.



Related to this absence of a program of transformation was the sixth reason
for the Obama debacle: his failure to mobilize the grassroots base that
brought him to power. This base was diverse in terms of class, generation,
and ethnicity. But it was united by palpable enthusiasm, which was so
evident in Washington, DC, and the rest of the country on Inauguration Day
in 2009. With his preference for a technocratic approach and a bipartisan
solution to the crisis, Obama allowed this base to wither away instead of
exploiting the explosive momentum it possessed in the aftermath of the
elections.



At the eleventh hour, Obama and the Democrats are talking about firing up
and resurrecting this base. But the dispirited and skeptical troops that
have long been disbanded and left by the wayside rightfully ask: around
what?



*The Right Makes the Right Moves*



In contrast to Obama, the right wing understood the demands and dynamics of
politics at a time of crisis, as opposed to politics in normal times. While
Obama persisted in his quest for bipartisanship, the Republicans adopted a
posture of hard-line opposition to practically all of his initiatives.



Unlike Obama and the Democrats, the right posed the conflict in stark
political and ideological terms: between left and right, between “socialism”
and “freedom,” between the oppressive state and the liberating market. The
Republican opposition used all the catchwords and mantras they could dredge
up from bourgeois U.S. ideology.



Finally, in contrast to Obama’s neglect of the Democratic base, the right
eschewed Republican interest-group politics. Fox News, Sarah Palin, and the
tea party movement stirred up the right-wing base to challenge the
Republican Party elite and drive a no-compromise, take-no-prisoners
politics. To understand what has happened to the Republican Party in the
last few weeks with the string of tea party successes in the primaries,
historian Arno Mayer’s distinction among conservatives, reactionaries, and
counterrevolutionaries is useful. In Mayer’s terms, the
counterrevolutionaries, with their populist, anti-insider, and
grassroots-driven politics are displacing the conservative elites that have
long held sway in the Republican Party.



With their anti-spending platform, the Republicans and tea partiers that
might capture the House and the Senate in November will probably bring about
a worse situation than today. As such, Obama and the Democrats might repeat
Bill Clinton’s political trajectory when he scored a victory at the polls in
1996 because the Republicans led by Newt Gingrich overreached politically
after their triumph in the midterm elections of 1994. But this is a
desperate illusion. The current counterrevolutionaries and their backers are
skilled in the politics of blame, and they will likely be successful in
painting the worsening situation as a result of Obama’s “socialist
policies,” not of drastic cuts in government spending.



*Lessons for the Left*



The problem lies not so much in our lack of a strategic alternative as in
our failure to translate our strategic vision or paradigm into a credible
and viable political program. Politics in a period of crisis is different
from politics in a period of normality, being more fluid and marked by the
volatility of class, political, and intellectual attachments. We should
remember that politics is the art of creating and sustaining a political
movement from diverse class and social forces through a flexible but
principled political program that can adapt to changing circumstances.



Finally, there is no such thing as an objectively determined situation. The
art of politics is using the contradictions, spaces, and ambiguities of the
current moment to shape structures and institutions and create a critical
mass for change. Class, economic, and political structures may condition
political outcomes; they do not determine them. Who will ultimately emerge
the victor from this period of prolonged capitalist crisis will depend on
smart and skilled political leadership.





Foreign Policy In Focus columnist Walden Bello is a member of the House of
Representatives of the Philippines and a senior analyst at the Bangkok-based
research and advocacy institute Focus on the Global South. He can be reached
at *[email protected]*
*
*

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Peace Is Doable

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