Progressives and Obama: The Clash of Narratives
by Norman Solomon
By now, across the progressive spectrum, some familiar storylines tell us the meaning of the Obama campaign. In a groove, each narrative digs its truths. But whether those particular truths are the most important at this historical moment is another story.
We can set aside the plotline that touts Obama as a visionary pragmatist who has earned the complete trust of progressives. The belief has diminished in recent months — in the wake of numerous Obama pronouncements on foreign policy, his FISA vote to damage the Fourth Amendment and the like — but such belief was never really grounded in his record as a politician or his policy positions.
A more substantial narrative concedes that Obama has "compromised" on numerous fronts but assumes he has done so in order to get elected president, after which time his real self will emerge. This kind of dubious projection is as old as the political hills, and inevitably becomes a kind of murky exercise in armchair psychology. All in all, projection is not useful for assessing where political leaders are and where they’re headed.
In contrast, quite a few on the left — some from the outset of
his presidential race, others beginning more recently — express
appreciable disdain for the Obama campaign. The critiques of Obama’s
positions on issues are often on the mark. Overall, the fact that Obama
brings civility and intelligence to public discourse that would be a
welcome change in the White House does not alter the corporate centrist
core of his espoused policies.
No matter how much we might like to think that people’s reasoning
and logic are the essence of political judgments, actual experience
tells us different: The political stances of many people, including on
the left, are contoured around their own internal emotional terrain.
And there may not be a lot of sorting through contradictions or
analysis of the current historical circumstances.
Yet we’re in
great need of willingness to acknowledge contradictory truths, to sort
through them as a means of finding the best progressive strategies for
the here and now. While some attacks on Obama from the left are
overheated, overly ideological and mechanistic, there’s scant basis for
denying the reality that his campaign and his positions are way too
cozy with corporate power. Meanwhile, his embrace of escalating the war
in Afghanistan reflects acceptance rather than rejection of what Martin
Luther King Jr. called "the madness of militarism."
To some, who
evidently see voting as an act of moral witness rather than pragmatic
choice (even in a general election), forces such as corporate power or
militarism are binary — like a toggle switch — either totally on or
totally off. This outlook says: either we reject entirely or we’re
complicit.
Such analysis tends to see Obama as just a little bit
slower on the march to the same disasters that John McCain would lead
us to. That analysis takes a long view — but fails to see the profound
importance of the crossroads right in front of us, where either Obama
or McCain will be propelled into the White House.
Any
progressive who watched the "faith" forum that Obama and McCain
participated in on Aug. 16 would have good reasons to be negative when
assessing some of Obama’s answers. But McCain’s responses were vastly
more jingoistic, militaristic, fanatical and pro-corporate, while also
making clear his enthusiasm for the worst of the current Supreme Court
justices.
In an odd and ironic way, progressives who are
unequivocal Obama boosters and unequivocal Obama bashers embrace
similar concepts of limited alternatives in electoral work. They seem
to rule out candidly critical support of a candidate — viewing such an
option as either a betrayal of the candidate or a betrayal of
principles.
But supporting one candidate — clearly preferable to
the Republican — should not require a lack of candor about the
preferred candidate’s defects. And progressive interests are not
advanced by claiming, against the evidence, that it doesn’t really
matter which candidate wins.
We suffer from way too much
political argumentation that seems to be on automatic pilot, either
puffing up Obama as a paragon of progressive virtues or denying the
real differences between him and McCain. The pretending that follows
from faith or dogma is no way to mobilize a progressive movement.
Norman
Solomon is an elected Obama delegate to the Democratic National
Convention. His book "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death" has been adapted into a documentary film of the
same name. He is a national co-chair of the Healthcare NOT Warfare
campaign.
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