[Peace-discuss] Obama's speech
C. G. Estabrook
galliher at illinois.edu
Thu Sep 10 02:50:14 CDT 2009
"The prophet of hope and change was selling them out on every front: escalating
war in Afghanistan; billions for bankers; and now on health reform he was
selling out to the insurance and pharmaceutical industries."
Nice speech – shame it was three months too late
ALEXANDER COCKBURN
SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
If President Barack Obama had delivered last night's speech to Congress three
months ago, by now he might well be signing health reform into law. Ted Kennedy
would have been alive to supply the crucial Senate vote that put the Democrats
over the top.
But three months ago Obama and his advisors were eager to avoid the debacle
suffered by Hillary Clinton's health plan which, after months of secrecy, she
presented to Congress in 1993. So the White House evolved the foolish plan of
letting the Democrats in Congress draft the necessary laws.
This summer no fewer than five committees on Capitol Hill went to work. The
contours of reform swiftly became murky, particularly since Obama offered no
leadership. Indeed it was unclear what precise plan he favoured and he made the
huge tactical mistake of discarding, right from the start, the 'single payer'
model - based on the NHS [in the UK] or Canadian health insurance system -
advocated by the left.
As Vicente Navarro, professor of public policy at Johns Hopkins University and
an advisor to Hillary Clinton back in 1993 accurately remarked earlier this
week, Obama "needs single-payer to make his own proposal 'respectable'. (Keep in
mind how Martin Luther King became the civil rights figure promoted by the
establishment because, in the background, there was a Malcolm X threatening the
establishment.)
"This was a major mistake made by Bill Clinton in 1993. The historical function
of the left in America has been to make the center 'respectable'. If there is no
left alternative, the Obama proposals will become the 'left' proposal, and this
will severely limit whatever reform he will finally be able to get."
By the time Labor Day weekend rolled around, Obama was heading into moderately
serious political trouble. The ravings of the nutball right were what caught the
headlines but what no doubt bothered Obama's political strategists was the
growing disillusion of the left wing of the Democrats with Obama. The prophet of
hope and change was selling them out on every front: escalating war in
Afghanistan; billions for bankers; and now on health reform he was selling out
to the insurance and pharmaceutical industries.
Unhappy with Bill Clinton in 1994, a lot of liberal Democrats sat out the
midterm elections and the Republicans swept into power in Congress. Rahm
Emanuel, Obama's chief of staff, was working for Clinton back then, and the
memory is no doubt vivid in his mind.
Did Obama's high-stakes speech to Congress last night turn the tide? It was well
written and elegantly delivered. Since columnists such as the liberal Maureen
Dowd of the New York Times had been dumping on Obama for being a wimp, the
speech writers gave him plenty of muscular flourishes: "Well, the time for
bickering is over. The time for games has passed. Now is the season for action."
The left was duly rewarded with a "public option", albeit offered almost
apologetically: "But an additional step we can take to keep insurance companies
honest is by making a not-for-profit public option available in the insurance
exchange. Let me be clear - it would only be an option for those who don't have
insurance. No one would be forced to choose it, and it would not impact those of
you who already have insurance. In fact, based on Congressional Budget Office
estimates, we believe that less than five per cent of Americans would sign up."
Obama solemnly pledged that "like any private insurance company, the public
insurance option would have to be self-sufficient and rely on the premiums it
collects". It would also, he said, keep pressure on private insurers to keep
their policies affordable and treat their customers better, "the same way public
colleges and universities provide additional choice and competition to students
without in any way inhibiting a vibrant system of private colleges and
universities".
This last was a strong point, that would have resonated with many in his
national audience, and Obama swept into his peroration, reading a letter from
Ted Kennedy that had some in his audience in tears and reminding them that big
government does have its virtues, because without it, "markets can crash,
monopolies can stifle competition, and the vulnerable can be exploited".
Alas, 'math' trumps rhetoric. The numbers are against the president. Obama may
have regained some political stature, but he doesn't have the votes in the
Senate to survive a filibuster and he and his staff have not generated the
requisite political ruthlessness to whip the Congressional Democrats into line.
Despite the flexing of rhetorical muscles, he's still a nice-guy president who
still prates on about bipartisanship, even as the Republicans last night sat on
their hands and one of their number, Joe Wilson of South Carolina shouted out
"You lie", when Obama said correctly that his plan wouldn't offer services to
illegal immigrants (which it most certainly should).
Publicly berating the president as a liar is not done in the US Congress, and
Wilson swiftly apologised. But it was an emblem of something that most
definitely did surface this summer: white race hatred for Obama. Wilson's
uncouth outburst was a nasty reminder of how unrestrained this is swiftly becoming.
http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/53338,news,alexander-cockburn-helathcare-nice-
speech-by-barack-obama-shame-it-was-three-months-too-late
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