For the DVD, go to the URL, just below; but if you don't, imagine
passionate, overwhelming bursts of cheering,   
after almost each point by Elizabeth Warren and Tammy Baldwin.  -Ed
 
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/11/7/election_2012_ben_jealous_laura_flande
rs
 
Election 2012: Ben Jealous, Laura Flanders on Obama’s 2nd Term & the Future
of Progressive Politics

AMY GOODMAN: Tuesday night, President Obama won a second term in office. We
continue our coverage of the presidential election by hosting a roundtable
discussion. We’re joined in our studio by two guests: Ben Jealous, president
and CEO of the NAACP, and Laura Flanders, host of GritTV and author of many
books, including Bushwomen: How They Won the White House for Their Man.

We welcome you both back to Democracy Now! You were both with us last night
in a marathon election special. Ben Jealous, your response to President
Obama winning re-election as the 44th president of the United States?

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: You know, this is, I think, a great day for our democracy.
We saw the vote attacked with more ferocity this year than we have seen in a
very long time. More states passed more laws, pushing more voters out of the
ballot box in the past year than we’ve seen in a year in the past century.
And so, people really triumphed, because they took their vote seriously. And
they took it seriously when it counted, months ago, when we had to push
governors to veto these bills, when we had to push DOJ to actually go in and
invalidate laws, when we had to file lawsuits and get the job done. But then
they stayed engaged, and they turned out their communities. We overcame all
sorts of myths, people saying that the black vote, for instance, would lack
enthusiasm or it really didn’t matter. Well, it mattered in Virginia. It
mattered in Florida. It mattered in Ohio. It mattered in Pennsylvania.
Folk—and it mattered across this country. People did great work. You know,
we saw brown voters come out like never before, and we saw movements really
win incredible victories. I mean, the fact that, you know, all this
happened, and he’s pro-marriage-equality, and then we defend marriage
equality in four out of four states last night, is huge.

AMY GOODMAN: Laura Flanders?

LAURA FLANDERS: Well, you know, it turns out that women’s bodies can
magically shut down under attack: they can shut down radical, misogynistic
attacks. And that’s what we saw last night. And the Senate is going to be
returning; the 113th Congress will convene with binders full of women—19
women in the Senate, the largest number ever, with four new women senators
returning or going to the Senate, including, of course, Tammy Baldwin in
Wisconsin defeating four-term Governor Tommy Thompson; Elizabeth Warren
defeating Scott Brown, at one point the flag carrier, the spear carrier for
the tea party—became a one-termer.

This was an extraordinary, I will say, up-from-the-bottom set of victories,
longshot challenges. Four years ago, we were talking about a longshot
candidate for presidency. This year, we were talking about longshot movement
victories, like the sort that Ben is talking about, movement victories
fighting back an unprecedented assault on voting rights, movement victories
fighting back an extraordinary tsunami of money, and people voting against
the odds on a wing and a prayer, a prayer that this vote would make a
difference. We saw them go out into the wet, cold, rainy night in New York
City and around this region, Sandy—Hurricane Sandy survivors leaving their
cold, dark homes and going out into the cold, dark streets to cast a ballot.

What happens now is that we hold those hopes and dreams precious, and force
our politicians to live up to the extraordinary courage and organizing
bravery and smarts that people showed last night.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to play a comment made by Bill O’Reilly being
interviewed on Fox News last night.

BRET BAIER: So what’s your sense of the evening? I mean, you look at these
exit polls. You look at the, you know—

BILL O’REILLY: My sense of the evening is if Mitt Romney loses in Ohio, the
president is re-elected.

MEGYN KELLY: How do you think we got to that point? I mean, President
Obama’s approval rating was so low. And obviously this is hypothetical: we
don’t know who’s—who’s even winning right now, never mind who won. But how
do you think it got this tight?

BILL O’REILLY: Because it’s a changing country. The demographics are
changing. It’s not a traditional America anymore. And there are 50 percent
of the voting public who want stuff. They want things. And who is going to
give them things? President Obama. He knows it, and he ran on it—and whereby
20 years ago President Obama would have been roundly defeated by an
establishment candidate like Mitt Romney. The white establishment is now the
minority. And the voters, many of them, feel that this economic system is
stacked against them, and they want stuff. You’re going to see a tremendous
Hispanic vote for President Obama, overwhelming black vote for President
Obama. And women will probably break President Obama’s way. People feel that
they are entitled to things. And which candidate between the two is going to
give them things?

AMY GOODMAN: That was Bill O’Reilly. Ben Jealous, president and CEO of the
NAACP?

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Yeah, when you look at those comments, I mean, they’re
tinged with everything that is sad about the history of our country:  his
disdain for women, the way he just kind of rolls into women at the end —
right? — as part of this group that just wants stuff; his disdain for people
of all colors except for his own; his equating traditional with oppression.
I mean, that’s really what he’s talking about is a system based on gender
oppression and based on race oppression, based on  the oppression of people
of different sexual orientations than his own. And, Bill O’Reilly has
moments—I’ve witnessed a couple—when he’s lucid, and he actually can
recognize what this country really is. I think last night, unfortunately, he
saw that his kind of group’s, his dwindling group’s equation for success now
won’t guarantee that. And he’s going to have to change his game, and
hopefully he’ll change his tune.

AMY GOODMAN: Laura Flanders?

LAURA FLANDERS: The demographic shifts he’s talking about are very real. In
1992, a Republican candidate winning six out of 10 white votes could have
carried the presidency. It didn’t happen last night, though Romney got that
same proportion of white voters. You cannot, in this country, in 2012, win a
presidency with white male voters as your home demographic. You can’t do it.

It’s not about stuff; it’s about standing. The history of America has been
about those who have been marginalized fighting for standing in this country
as equal persons, equal persons under the law, equal persons under a code of
morality that embraces us all, and equal persons in a society that is a
society of caring and mutual aid and assistance. This is one of the
fundamental fights of this election, was about who has standing in this
country.

And what we saw was the crazy, upside-down, magical thinking, that the GOP
persuaded even many in our media to go along with, that white men would be
enough to win the presidency, that unemployed people would blame Barack
Obama, that women would embrace a return to second-class citizenship. None
of it was true.

Look at the states that won for Mitt Romney—the Great Plains states, the
Mountain states. What do they have in common? They have in common relatively
low unemployment rates vis-à-vis the states won by Barack Obama. Those who
are hurting in this country overwhelmingly, according to exit polls, blamed
the record of George Bush. They did not go for this baloney about it being a
function of the bailout. And we saw illusion after illusion that Americans
don’t vote their self-interest fall, as people actually did vote their
self-interest. They voted for a society that is not dog-eat-dog, that
actually does believe in some social safety net, and that believes—

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: In itself.

LAURA FLANDERS: —in the dream that DREAMers put forward, which is that when
you organize, when you push, when you create a viable political
constituency, you can be heard in this country.

AMY GOODMAN: An intreMedia-Latino Decisions poll released on Tuesday, as an
alternative to the exit polls, found that President Obama had won 75 percent
of Latino voters nationwide, while exit polls found him with around 70
percent of Latino support. Exit polls placed Romney at winning 29 percent of
the Latino vote, which is lower than Republican candidates received in 2008,
2004 and 2000. I mean, Mitt Romney coining the term "self-deporting" —

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: "Self-deportation," yeah.

AMY GOODMAN: —I think that was problematic for him.

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Well, he just self-deported himself from politics, right?
I mean, that’s just just what happened. And I would like to say, Bill
O’Reilly is right: we do want stuff. It’s the stuff of freedom. It’s the
stuff of equality. It’s the stuff of inclusion. It’s the stuff of our very
pledge: "one nation, under God, indivisible, with..." You know, we want all
that stuff. And we deserve that stuff, because that’s what this country is
supposed to be about.

AMY GOODMAN: Yet Sheriff Arpaio was re-elected in Arizona.

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Sheriff Arpaio will be in his own jail, you know, within
four years.

LAURA FLANDERS: I mean, let’s be clear, the history of America is a history
of having to fight really, really hard for standing and the rights promised
under the—under the promise of the Constitution and the Declaration of
Independence, fights that have been waged by movements, from the labor
movement, the women’s movement, the civil rights movement.

I mean, one of the things we saw yesterday that I’d love you to talk about
more, Ben, that you talked about last night, was about the extraordinary
organizing that the NAACP was part of, with LGBT groups, with unions, with
women’s organizations, with Latino and immigrant rights groups, who fought
against these tremendous odds, but it’s not just magic that this happened.
This was strong organizing, with legal challenges, with people refusing to
give up the ghost, with organizations like Color of Change targeting the
corporate sponsors of conservative groups like ALEC. I mean, people used
every tool at their disposal. And again, it comes down to electoral strategy
paying off by movements to support a Democratic majority. We now need that
Democratic majority to take the leadership from those movement groups and
set some priorities that will change economic—

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: "Take" as in accept, not "take" as in steal.

LAURA FLANDERS: Yes, exactly.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to go to one of the most closely watched races in this
country. That’s Democrat Elizabeth Warren defeating incumbent Republican
Senator Scott Brown in Massachusetts’ Senate race. Warren is a Harvard law
professor who’s promised to fight for a struggling middle class. She helped
create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. This is part of her victory
speech last night.

SENATOR-ELECT ELIZABETH WARREN: For every family that has been chipped at,
squeezed and hammered, we’re going to fight for a level playing field, and
we’re going to put people back to work. You bet. That’s what we’re going to
do, yes. Yes. To all the small-business owners who are tired of a system
rigged against them, we’re going to hold the big guys accountable. Yeah. To
all the seniors who deserve to retire with the security they earned, we’re
going to make sure your Medicare and Social Security benefits are protected
and that millionaires and billionaires pay their fair share. That’s right.
And to all the young people, all the young people who did everything right
and are drowning in debt, we’re going to invest in you. We are. To all of
the servicemembers and your families, who have fought so hard for us, we’re
going to fight for you. You bet we will. That’s right. That’s right. That’s
right.

WARREN SUPPORTER: We love you!

SENATOR-ELECT ELIZABETH WARREN: I love you. And to all the women across
Massachusetts—to all the women across Massachusetts who are working your
tails off, you better believe we’re going to fight for equal pay for equal
work.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren in Massachusetts. And
then there’s the Tammy-Tommy race, that closely watched Senate race in
Wisconsin, Democratic Congressmember Tammy Baldwin making history on two
different counts Tuesday night when she beat former Wisconsin Governor Tommy
Thompson: Tammy Baldwin becomes the first Wisconsin woman elected to the
U.S. Senate and the country’s first openly gay senator.

SENATOR-ELECT TAMMY BALDWIN: I am well aware that I will have the honor to
be Wisconsin’s first woman U.S. senator. And I—and I am well aware that I
will be the first openly gay member.

BALDWIN SUPPORTERS: Tammy! Tammy! Tammy! Tammy! Tammy! Tammy! Tammy! Tammy!
Tammy! Tammy! Tammy! Tammy!

SENATOR-ELECT TAMMY BALDWIN: But—but I didn’t run—but I didn’t run to make
history. I ran to make a difference, —a difference in the lives of families
struggling to find work and pay the bills, a difference in the lives of
students worried about debt and seniors worried about their retirement
security, a difference in the lives of veterans who fought for us and need
someone fighting for them and their families, a difference in the lives of
entrepreneurs trying to build a business and working people trying to build
some economic security. But in choosing me to tackle those challenges, the
people of Wisconsin have made history.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Tammy Baldwin, the new senator-elect from Wisconsin,
taking the seat of Herb Kohl, who was retiring. Nineteen women senators now,
one of them a Republican woman senator from Nebraska, who defeated Bob
Kerrey. She is Deb—Deb—

LAURA FLANDERS: Fischer.

AMY GOODMAN: Deb Fischer from Nebraska. On the issue of Elizabeth Warren,
she now becomes a senator in the Senate that refused to confirm her as head
of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau—

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: —because of their involvement with the banks, across the board.
What does this mean for her to become a senator now? And where does she go
with the banks?

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Well, you know, look, she will really, quite frankly,
extend the tradition of Barney Frank, extend the tradition of Ted Kennedy,
as these great fighters from Massachusetts who are willing to go out and
take risks to hold our financial industry accountable. You know, right now,
if I was running a payday lending corporation, I’d be very worried. This is
somebody who wants to come in and kill payday lending. And we should,
because it is usury. You know, and she is someone who you will see really
become  a driving force in her party and come as close to filling the void
left by Ted Kennedy—no one can really do that, but come as close as any one
person can, because she comes in with an entire movement behind her, and
people of all races in this country who look up to her, and women who really
want to see her do well, but also a country that’s yearning for somebody to
take on the banks who’s not afraid.

AMY GOODMAN: And the racism leveled against her.

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Yeah, which—which was insane and perverse and weird,
right? 

AMY GOODMAN: Scott Brown saying that she had said she was Native American,
and she said, "Well, my mother told me that I was." And he would not let go
of this.

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: That’s exactly right, as people doing the whole tomahawk
thing, you know, and following her—

AMY GOODMAN: His staffers.

BENJAMIN JEALOUS: Yes, you know, and it’s just so disrespectful. And it
inflames racial hatred. It’s one of the oldest in our country. And it’s
desperate. And you saw it with Bill O’Reilly earlier.  I was sitting there,
you know, looking at Tammy Baldwin, looking at Liz Warren, thinking about
Sojourner Truth saying, "Ain’t I a woman?" Well, it’s like, "Ain’t I white?"
I mean, really, can’t we have a more expansive vision of white and actually
allow Bill O’Reilly, people who are white who are willing to link up with
people of all races in this country on equal and respectable terms, include
them and not say to someone that they’re non-traditional whites?

LAURA FLANDERS: Two things on Elizabeth Warren. The irony, of course, is
that she came to prominence fighting big money and big power of big banks,
and is now going to come to the Senate as the Senate candidate who raised
more money than any other in American history. So let’s hope that she
doesn’t feel beholden to her big donors. I don’t think—I hope she won’t.

On the question of Tammy Baldwin and the politics that we’re talking about,
we’ve often heard in American political punditry that one must, you know,
suppress identity politics organizing in favor of, you know, good-class,
mainstream politics. If we hadn’t built movements to defend against bigotry
against women, against people of color, against LGBT people, if we didn’t
have powerful identity politics movements in this country, we would have
seen Tammy Baldwin have no chance of defeating Tommy Thompson. The fact that
she won shows that these two issues—these movements have always got to walk
in—work in lockstep. And that’s what happened in Wisconsin. And it’s a huge
lesson I hope we’ll learn.

 
 
  _____  

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