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Progressives for Obama




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March 24, 2008 -- All American progressives should unite for Barack Obama. We descend from the proud tradition of independent social movements that have made America a more just and democratic country. We believe that the movement today supporting Barack Obama continues this great tradition of grassroots participation, drawing millions of people out of apathy and into participation in the decisions that affect all our lives. We believe that Barack Obama's very biography reflects the positive potential of the globalization process that also contains such grave threats to our democracy when shaped only by the narrow interests of private corporations in an unregulated global marketplace. We should instead be globalizing the values of equality, a living wage and environmental sustainability in the new world order, not hoping our deepest concerns will be protected by trickle-down economics or charitable billionaires. By its very existence, the Obama campaign will stimulate a vision of globalization from below.

 

As progressives, we believe this sudden and unexpected new movement is just what America needs. The future has arrived. The alternative would mean a return to the dismal status quo party politics that has failed so far to deliver peace, healthcare, full employment and effective answers to crises like global warming.

 

During past progressive peaks in our political history--the late thirties, the early sixties--social movements have provided the relentless pressure and innovative ideas that allowed centrist leaders to embrace visionary solutions. We find ourselves in just such a situation today.

 

We intend to join and engage with our brothers and sisters in the vast rainbow of social movements to come together in support of Obama's unprecedented campaign and candidacy. Even though it is candidate-centered, there is no doubt that the campaign is a social movement, one greater than the candidate himself ever imagined.

 

Progressives can make a difference in close primary races like Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Oregon and Puerto Rico and in the November general election. We can contribute our dollars. We have the proven online capacity to reach millions of swing voters in the primary and general election. We can and will defend Obama against negative attacks from any quarter. We will seek Green support against the claim of some that there are no real differences between Obama and McCain. We will criticize any efforts by Democratic superdelegates to suppress the winner of the popular and delegate votes, or to legitimize the flawed elections in Michigan and Florida. We will make our agenda known at the Democratic National Convention and fight for a platform emphasizing progressive priorities as the path to victory.

 

Obama's March 18 speech on racism was as great a speech as ever given by a presidential candidate, revealing a philosophical depth, personal authenticity, and political intelligence that should convince any but the hardest of ideologues that he carries unmatched leadership potentials for overcoming the divide-and-conquer tactics that have sundered Americans since the first slaves arrived here in chains.

 

Only words? What words they were.

 

However, the fact that Barack Obama openly defines himself as a centrist invites the formation of this progressive force within his coalition. Anything less could allow his eventual drift towards the right as the general election approaches. It was the industrial strikes and radical organizers in the 1930s who pushed Roosevelt to support the New Deal. It was the civil rights and student movements that brought about voting rights legislation under Lyndon Johnson and propelled Eugene McCarthy and Bobby Kennedy's antiwar campaigns. It was the original Earth Day that led Richard Nixon to sign environmental laws. And it will be the Obama movement that will make it necessary and possible to end the war in Iraq, renew our economy with a populist emphasis, and confront the challenge of global warming.

 

We should not only keep the pressure on but also connect the issues that Barack Obama has made central to his campaign into an overarching progressive vision.

 

  The Iraq War must end as rapidly as possible, not in five years.

 

All our troops must be withdrawn. Diplomacy and trade must replace further military occupation or military escalation into Iran and Pakistan. We should not stop urging Barack Obama to avoid leaving American advisers behind in Iraq in a counterinsurgency quagmire like Afghanistan today or Central America in the 1970s and 1980s. Nor should he simply transfer American combat troops from the quagmire in Iraq to the quagmire in Afghanistan.

 

Iraq cannot be separated from our economic crisis.

 

Iraq is costing trillions of dollars that should be invested in jobs, universal healthcare, education, housing and public works here at home. Our own Gulf Coast requires the attention and funds now spent on Gulf oil.

 

Iraq cannot be separated from our energy crisis.

 

We are spending an unheard-of $100/barrel for oil. We are officially committed to wars over oil supplies far into the future. We instead need a war against global warming and for energy independence from Middle Eastern police states and multinational corporations.

 

Progressives should support Obama's sixteen-month combat troop withdrawal plan in comparison to Clinton's open-ended one, and demand that both candidates avoid a slide into four more years of low-visibility counterinsurgency.

 

The Democratic candidates should listen more to the blunt advice of the voters instead of the timid talk of their national security advisers. Two-thirds of American voters, and a much higher percentage of Democrats, oppose this war and favor withdrawal in less than two years, nearly half of them in less than one year. The same percentage believe the war has had a negative effect on life in the United States, while only 15 percent believe the war has been positive. Without this solid peace sentiment, neither Obama nor Clinton would be taking the stands they do today.

 

Further, the battered and abused people of Iraq favor an American withdrawal by a 70 percent margin.

 

The American government's arrogant defiance of these strong popular majorities in both America and Iraq should be ended this November by a powerful peace mandate.

 

The profound transition from the policies of the past will not be easy, and fortunately the Obama campaign is lifted by the fresh wind of change. We seek not only to change the faces in high places, however, but to save our country from slow death by greed, status quo politics and loss of vision. The status quo cannot stand much longer, neither that of politics-as-usual nor that of our security, energy and economic policies. We are stealing from the next generation's future, and living on borrowed time.

 

The Bush Administration has replaced the cold war with the "war on terrorism," led by the same military-industrial complex that President Eisenhower warned against. The reality and public fear of terrorism today is no less real than fear of communism and nuclear annihilation a generation ago. But we simply cannot continue multiple military interventions in many Muslim countries without increasing the vast number of violent jihadists against us, bleeding our military and our economy, becoming more dependent on Middle East oil, creating unsavory alliances with police states, shrinking our own civil liberties and putting ourselves at permanent risk of another 9/11 attack.

 

We need a brave turn towards peace and conflict resolution in the Middle East and the Muslim world. Getting out of Iraq, sponsoring a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians, ending alliances with police states in the Arab world, unilaterally initiating real energy independence and moving the world away from the global warming crises are the steps that must be taken.

 

Nor can we impose NAFTA-style trade agreements on so many nations that seek only to control their own national resources and economic destinies. We cannot globalize corporate and financial power over democratic values and institutions. Since the Clinton Administration pushed through NAFTA against the Democratic majority in Congress, one Latin American nation after another has elected progressive governments that reject US trade deals and hegemony. We are isolated in Latin America by our cold war and drug war crusades, by the $500 million counterinsurgency in Columbia, support for the 2002 coup attempt in Venezuela and the ineffectual blockade of Cuba. We need to return to the Good Neighbor policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt, policies that rejected Yankee military intervention and accepted Mexico's right to nationalize its oil in the face of industry opposition. The pursuit of NAFTA-style trade policies inflames our immigration crisis as well, by uprooting countless campesinos who inevitably seek low-wage jobs north of the border in order to survive. We need balanced and democratically approved trade agreements that focus on the needs of workers, consumers and the environment. The Banana Republic is a retail chain, not an American colony protected by the Monroe Doctrine.

 

We are pleased that Hillary Clinton has been responsive to the tide of voter opinion this year, and we applaud the possibility of at last electing an American woman President. But progressives should be disturbed by her duplicitous positions on Iraq and NAFTA. She still denies that her 2002 vote for legislation that was called the war authorization bill was a vote for war authorization. She now promises to "end the war" but will not set a timeline for combat troop withdrawal, and remains committed to leaving tens of thousands of counter-terrorism troops and trainers in Iraq amidst a sectarian conflict. While Obama needs to clarify his own position on counterinsurgency, Clinton's "end the war" rhetoric conceals an open commitment to keep American troops in Iraq until all our ill-defined enemies are defeated--a treadmill that guarantees only the spawning of more enemies. On NAFTA, she claims to have opposed the trade deal behind closed doors when she was first lady. But the public record, and documents recently disclosed in response to litigation, prove that she was a cheerleader for NAFTA against the strong opposition of rank-and-file Democrats. The Clintons ushered in the Wall Street Democrats whose deregulation ethos has widened inequality while leaving millions of Americans without their rightful protections against market shocks.

 

Clinton's most bizarre claim is that Obama is unqualified to be commander-in-chief. Clinton herself never served in the military, and has no experience in the armed services apart from the Senate armed services committee. Her husband had no military experience before becoming President. In fact, he was a draft opponent during Vietnam, a stance we respected. She was the first lady, and he the governor, of one of our smallest states. They brought no more experience, and arguably less, to the White House than Obama would in 2009.

 

We take very seriously the argument that Americans should elect a first woman President, and we abhor the surfacing of sexism in this supposedly post-feminist era. But none of us would vote for Condoleezza Rice as either the first woman or first African-American President. We regret that the choice divides so many progressive friends and allies, but believe that a Hillary Clinton presidency would be a Clinton presidency all over again, not a triumph of feminism but a restoration of the aging, power-driven Wall Street Democratic hawks at a moment when so much more fresh imagination is possible and needed. A Clinton victory could only be achieved by the dashing of hope among millions of young people on whom a better future depends. The style of the Clintons' attacks on Obama, which are likely to escalate as her chances of winning decline, already risks losing too many Democratic and independent voters in November. We believe that the Hillary Clinton of 1968 would be an Obama volunteer today, just as she once marched in the snows of New Hampshire for Eugene McCarthy against the Democratic establishment.

 

We did not foresee the exciting social movement that is the Obama campaign. Many of us supported other candidates, or waited skeptically as weeks and months passed. But the closeness of the race makes it imperative that everyone on the sidelines, everyone in doubt, everyone vascillating, everyone fearing betrayals and the blasting of hope, everyone quarreling over political correctness, must join this fight to the finish. Not since Robert Kennedy's 1968 campaign has there been a passion to imagine the world anew like the passion and unprecedented numbers of people mobilized in this campaign. For more information, go to progressivesforobama.blogspot.com

586561

And the Plan is?.....

By Davidson, Carl at Apr 08, 2008 10:45 AM

And what do you guys propose to do to keep McCain out of the White House?

I\'m well aware of the fact that no matter who wins, it will be a faction of imperialism. It\'s just that there\'s differences that make a difference among them, and I\'m not indifferent to which one predominates in the Oval Office. Neither should any of you, if you had any politics that could get up to the bar of talking to ordinary voters.

Our \'Progressives for Obama\' project is very clear that Obama\'s speaking to, and largely for, the center, not the left. That\'s why we thought our project, independent of the campaign, to build an organized progressive pole, was important, especially given the active forces we\'re relating to, and we\'ll have something worthwhile to build on after Novemeber, to keep the heat on whoever is in the White House. And to speak our minds on Obama and the campaign all along the way.

But actually, perhaps you\'d better sit this one out in the left-bloc cul-de-sac. Given the level of cynicism and disdain for the ordinary Obama activists, or even ordinary voters, you wouldn\'t be much help.

But if you change your mind, try:

http://progressivesforobama.blogspot.com

 

 

 

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583154

Re: Progressives for Obama

By Donahue, Paul at Mar 30, 2008 18:08 PM

Well, I was pleasantly suprised.  ThePittsburgh  protest had a turnout, better than I expected - upper 100\'s - maybe 1000.  Some Obama buttons, but not those many.

I was glad to see Greens were out with their Pennsylvnaia ballot petetions.  Even in our blue-dog congressional district, where the Democrat have no Republican opponents, the Democrats use every dirty trick in the book, in a state that already has profoundly undemocratic ballort acccess rules, to invalidate signatures and keep greens off the ballot.

The Democrats can go to hell.

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Person

Re: Progressives for Obama

By B, Alex at Mar 30, 2008 07:58 AM

i don\'t know anyone who states that there is no difference between obama and mccain, or that he is marginally better than clinton on foreign policy-- but that doesn\'t have to lead to the uncritical fawning over him exemplified by this article. how the hell can they criticize clinton on nafta while failing to mention the incident where obama\'s advisor stated to canadian officials that his anti-nafta rhetoric was political maneuvering? how can they characterize clinton, but not obama, as "duplicitous" on iraq? this is a man who states he is anti-war, but voted for all the funding in 2005-2006. as Paul Street pointed out below, these authors fail to recognize that the top priority should be creating a movement that builds social power independent of the ruling class and its two dominant parties.

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Person

where is the movement?

By Miriam, Kathy at Mar 30, 2008 06:42 AM

I agree with the critics of Hayden and crew here. Where is this supposed "movement" outside of a cult-worship?  Noone who invokes this "movement" has yet to give any evidence that activists are doing anything outside of getting out the vote. What qualifies this "movement\' as progressive? How are any progressive platforms listed actually put into practice in terms of activist work around the primaries??  The absence of any discussion of what the supposed movement is actually doing is telling.

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Occupy_iowa_city_rally

Ideological Death on the Election Year Killing Floor

By Street, Paul at Mar 29, 2008 11:36 AM

Well this is fairly standard. Every four years people I think are tough and vibrant progressives turn into October house flies  falling off the screen door and buzzing out to seeming ideological death on the election-year killing floor. This includes some good friends, who now respond to evidence-based comments on Barack (or Hillary, for that matter) like neocons responding to criticisms of Bush: "I can\'t listen to that.  Be quiet". 

It\'s an election year: check your brains, guts, and morality at the precinct door.

These fine folks don\'t get (or get but have strategically decided to suspend knowledge)  that surfer Obama has been appointed by the ruling class to ride and contain the wave of popular anger and euphoria over Cheney-Bush and their imminent passing. He is a perfectly qualified agent of repressive de-sublimation: a "JFK in sepia" (Michael Hureaux) to bamboozle the masses and reinvigorate and the empire at home and abroad.  

Of course it\'s about desperation and and how incredibly bad and stupid things have gotten under the incredibly bad and stupid Cheney-Bush regime.

And perhaps people can agree or remember later that the more urgent politics is the day- to-day struggle for justice and alternative power centers and a more responsive democratic culture beyond and between the big corporate crafted "quadrennial extravaganzas" (Chomsky\'s term).

I get that some of  these folks want Obama in because they feel there will be some movement carry over --- all the kids and others he (or, well, his mass-marketed, Axlerod-crafted, Wall-Street-funded  and corporate-mediated image) has mobilized  Okay. Maybe.  Or maybe Hillary would be better to have in there in that then the next president wouldn\'t come in with masses possibly paralyzed by a presidential Messiah complex and/or by guilt at opposing Him. But then Hillary is a truly dangerous War Hawk.

I guess folks just need to get Obama into the White House so he can be exposed as actually on the wrong side of all of Dr. King\'s triple evils (racism/capitalism/militarim) ...and other evils too..and then perhaps some productive frustrated expectations can lead to some good disillusionment as with the earlier JFK farce and the rise of the New Left.

The JFK/RFK-BO analogies hold up in some key ways actually but I don\'t find them especially flattering for Obama...at least not from a left perspective.  

One weird irony is that the ultimate insider  Hillary is actually (believe it or not) to Obama\'s left (not hard to be, granted, what with his incredible corporate sponsorship and taste for reaching out "across the aisle" to the extremist and arch-regressive GOP) on domestic policy and politics.  Compare them on the foreclosure crisis, on economic stimulus, on vouchers/merit pay for teachers, nuclear power...she\'s actually better.  But she\'s a bigger War Hawk.  She\'s worse on foreign policy.

How about that U.S. electoral system! As Obama says on Iraq (he\'s wrong on that) : "there are no good options."  Anyway, it\'s not about their ballot box, really. And I\'ve fallen into the seductiive American Election Trap (Charles Derber) myself on a few occasions.

 

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669058

Wow

By Hearin, Tim at Mar 29, 2008 09:43 AM

Awful. Mr. Hayden should keep his posts to \'progressive\' sites like the Huffington Post, instead of staining ZNET with this trash.

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Person

Sad sad sad

By R, Ryan at Mar 29, 2008 09:30 AM

I didn\'t expect much from this article, but it was still disapointing.

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583154

By Donahue, Paul at Mar 29, 2008 08:51 AM

This is a disapointing development!

Sorry, but I absolutely fail to see how the Obama campaign resembles in any a "exciting social movement" rather than just something resembling cult-worship.   In fact it is quite the opposite of a social movement  - it is sucking an enormous amount of energy from legitimate social movements.

Obama was in Pittsburgh, speaking to a big crowd, yesterday.  Today just a block away, we are having our "annual" antiwar rally and march.  If the Obama movement was a legitimate social movement, then we would be seeing a greatly improved turnout.  Based on reports from other cities, I am quite certain we will be seeing just the opposite.

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