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Archive for the ‘elections’ Category

Tea Party Takeover of GOP: It’s Worse Than You Think

September 5th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, rightwing

GOP Politician Confirms

What Was Long Suspected:

Republicans Intentionally

Feed the Racism, Anger, and

Paranoia of the Far Right

By David Corn
Mother Jones Online, August 4, 2010,
via Progressive America Rising
It was the middle of a tough primary contest, and Rep. Bob Inglis (R-S.C.) had convened a small meeting with donors who had contributed thousands of dollars to his previous campaigns. But this year, as Inglis faced a challenge from tea party-backed Republican candidates claiming Inglis wasn't sufficiently conservative, these donors hadn't ponied up. Inglis' task: Get them back on the team. "They were upset with me," Inglis recalls. "They are all Glenn Beck watchers." About 90 minutes into the meeting, as he remembers it, "They say, 'Bob, what don't you get? Barack Obama is a socialist, communist Marxist who wants to destroy the American economy so he can take over as dictator. Health care is part of that. And he wants to open up the Mexican border and turn [the US] into a Muslim nation.'" Inglis didn't know how to respond.
As he tells this story, the veteran lawmaker is sitting in his congressional office, which he will have to vacate in a few months. On June 22, he was defeated in the primary runoff by Spartanburg County 7th Circuit Solicitor Trey Gowdy, who had assailed Inglis for supposedly straying from his conservative roots, pointing to his vote for the bank bailout and against George W. Bush's surge in Iraq. Inglis, who served six years in Congress during the 1990s as a conservative firebrand before being reelected to the House in 2004, had also ticked off right-wingers in the state's 4th Congressional District by urging tea-party activists to "turn Glenn Beck off" and by calling on Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) to apologize for shouting "You lie!" at Obama during the president's State of the Union address. For this, Inglis, who boasts (literally) a 93 percent lifetime rating from the American Conservative Union, received the wrath of the tea party, losing to Gowdy 71 to 29 percent. In the weeks since, Inglis has criticized Republican House leaders for acquiescing to a poisonous, tea party-driven "demagoguery" that he believes will undermine the GOP's long-term credibility. And he's freely recounting his frustrating interactions with tea party types, while noting that Republican leaders are pushing rhetoric tainted with racism, that conservative activists are dabbling in anti-Semitic conspiracy theory nonsense, and that Sarah Palin celebrates ignorance. (more...)

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Critical Problem for 2010: When Younger Voters Get Angry, They Stay Home

August 22nd, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, youth and students

Young 'Millennial' Voters,

Hot Issues and Progressive Politics

by DemFromCT

DailyKOS

Young Americans are the linchpin of a new progressive era in American politics. So why aren't Democrats paying more attention to them?

That was the lead to an essay by E.J. Dionne in February as part of a series of articles he wrote outlining a huge problem. The younger voters (millennials, aka Gen Y, Gen Next, echo boomers, etc) are more liberal, less white and more accepting than their elders, but there's a catch, as EJ outlines:

Pew poll on millennials

 

(more...)

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Proto-Fascist Update: Right Wing Using Anti-Islam Bigotry to Divide and Conquer

August 21st, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, racism, rightwing

 

Fallout of Hate Is Spreading

Across America from 9/11 Site

By Joshua Holland
Progressive America Rising via AlterNet August 21, 2010,

Scientists building the first atomic bomb at Los Alamos referred to the coordinates where a test device was detonated as “point zero.” When the horror of nuclear warfare was unleashed on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the term “Ground Zero” entered our lexicon. The expression has come to mean the epicenter of a catastrophic event, be it a nuclear detonation, a disease epidemic or an earthquake. It is the point from which damage spreads, whether it’s radioactive fallout or a deadly contagion.

That the site of the World Trade Center has come to be known as Ground Zero illustrates how the American public has come to fetishize the attacks of 9/11. It’s not an apt analog for the physical destruction that resulted from the attacks on the World Trade Center. But it is an appropriate metaphor for the virulent and socially acceptable bigotry against Muslim Americans that has radiated out from Ground Zero and spread across the United States.

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‘Cheap Labor Conservatives’ – A Proper Label for Blue Dogs, the GOP and the Tea Party

August 17th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Unemployment, elections, rightwing

Defeat the Right Wing in Three Minutes With

Truth in Labeling and the 'Cheap Labor' Frame

By Conceptual Guerilla

Have you got three minutes. Because that's all you need to learn how to defeat the Republican Right. Just read through this handy guide and you'll have everything you need to successfully debunk right-wing propaganda.

It's really that simple. First, you have to beat their ideology, which really isn't that difficult. At bottom, conservatives believe in a social hierarchy of "haves" and "have nots" that I call "corporate feudalism". They have taken this corrosive social vision and dressed it up with a "respectable" sounding ideology. That ideology is pure hogwash, and you can prove it.

But you have to do more than defeat the ideology. You have to defeat the "drum beat". You have to defeat the "propaganda machine", that brainwashes people with their slogans and catch-phrases. You've heard those slogans."Less government", "personal responsibility" and lots of flag waving. They are "shorthand" for an entire worldview, and the right has been pounding their slogans out into the public domain for getting on forty years.

So you need a really good slogan – a "counter-slogan" really, to "deprogram" the brainwashed. You need a "magic bullet" that quickly and efficiently destroys the effectiveness of their "drum beat". You need your own "drum beat" that sums up the right's position. Only your "drum beat" exposes the ugly reality of right-wing philosophy – the reality their slogans are meant to hide. Our slogan contains the governing concept that explains the entire right-wing agenda. That's why it works. You can see it in every policy, and virtually all of Republican rhetoric. And it's so easy to remember, and captures the essence of the Republican Right so well, we can pin it on them like a "scarlet letter".

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Keeping Smoke In Your Eyes: Right Wing Using Islam To Win in 2010

August 16th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, rightwing

 

Shameless Schemers Like Sarah Palin,

the Tea Partiers and Right-Wing Christians

Start a New Religious War Against Muslims

By David Rosen
Progressive America Rising via CounterPunch
Aug 15, 2010 - The building of a Muslim community center in an abandoned building two blocks from the site of New York’s former World Trade Center has become the latest controversy in America’s long fought religious wars. The construction of the center, often referred to as a mosque, has become the latest rallying issue for the Christian right, Tea Party proponents and Republican operatives in their war to impose moralistic and corporatist values on America.

It is too early to know how the Muslim center issue will be resolved, but it is clear that the rantings of Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich, Abe Foxman (of the Anti-Defamation League) and others have played an important role pushing a local issue into the center-stage of national politics. Since the horrendous attacks of 9/11, Muslims in general and American Muslims in particular have been the targets of an undeclared religious war promoted by Christian fundamentalists and self-serving Republicans. For some among these religious zealots, Islam is a threat to their belief that the U.S. is a white Protestant nation. Over the last four centuries, Quakers, Mormons, Catholics, Jews and many others have been targets of religious persecution, often the victims of imprisonments, hangings, lynchings and other acts of violence.

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Jobs for All Dept: Dump the GOP’s Neoliberal Kool-Aid Down the Drain

August 6th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Jobs, elections, rightwing, trade unions

First Punish The Unemployed,

Then Declare War On The Employed

By Jason Linkins

Huffington Post

August 6, 2010 - Over the past few months, Congressional Republicans and skittish Democrats who've lingered too long at the Deficit Panic Kool-Aid Stand have made life extraordinarily difficult for the most vulnerable members of society -- the nation's unemployed.

Rather than extend unemployment benefits so that the millions of Americans who are out there busting their humps to find the needle-in-a-haystack that is a job of any kind, they've demanded that those benefits be offset, essentially punishing the unemployed for the deficits they giddily ran up for years.

It's been pretty embarrassing to watch, frankly. But at least no one's out there running on an actual platform of kicking those who have managed to secure employment out of work, right?

(more...)

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Note to Obama: It’s Helps to Be Antiwar and pro-Green

July 19th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, youth and students

Millennials, Issues and Politics

Why Dems Are Losing the Youth Votes

by DemFromCT

 

Pew poll on millennials

Young Americans are the linchpin of a new progressive era in American politics. So why aren't Democrats paying more attention to them?

That was the lead to an essay by E.J. Dionne in February, part of a series of articles he wrote outlining a huge problem. The younger voters (millennials, aka Gen Y, Gen Next, echo boomers, etc) are more liberal, less white and more accepting than their elders, but there's a catch, as EJ outlines:

For Democrats looking ahead to this fall's election, the Pew study has some disturbing news.

It's true that Millennials are the most Democratic age group in the electorate -- they voted for Barack Obama by 2 to 1. Their turnout rate relative to older voters was higher in 2008 than in any election since 1972, the first presidential contest in which 18-year-olds could vote.

But Pew notes that since 2008, the Millennials' "enthusiasms" have "cooled" -- "for Obama and his message of change, for the Democratic Party and, quite possibly, for politics itself."

look at the R2K polling found here: the 18-29 vote (graphics below the fold) consistently supports Obama and Congressional Democrats more than any other age demographic.

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The Time of Day: Getting the Big Picture of What Progressives Need To Do

May 25th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, pushing obama

 

trenton

The Time of Day

 

By Jack Kurzweil

When asked what time it was, Yogi Berra responded, “You mean, right now?”

For those who are involved in politics, the question is “What’s the political time of day, like right now?”  What’s happening in this country on the large scale?  What’s the Obama Administration trying to do?  What are its internal limitations and its external constraints?  And what should progressives be trying to accomplish?

When, during the election campaign, Obama said that he admired Reagan for having captured the mood of the country and shifting the governance of the country according to that mood, I don’t believe that he was conveying his approval of the character of the changes.  Rather, I think that he was admiring the process of transformation because he envisions his administration initiating a process of change of direction of the nation as well.

Reagan’s “revolution” was to distance government on all levels from responsibility for infrastructure, corporate regulation, and social safety net while strengthening the military  industrial complex, setting the stage for globalization, breaking the unions, and initiating the most extraordinary transfer of wealth to the ruling classes that this nation had not seen since the 1880’s.  The slogan, then as now, was free markets and limited government.  And that slogan has taken hold; it now represents a deeply held feeling in this country, even among those for whom the absence of government has been crippling.

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The Democrats: Will the Center Hold, or Not?

April 24th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, pushing obama

UNITED BY CHANGE, DIVIDED BY REFORM

The growing rift between Obama and his base

is a political time bomb he must face.

 

Jeffrey Feldman

Frameshop Editor-in-Chief

One year after Candidate Obama inspired the world to vote for symbolic "change," the Democratic Party is now deeply divided by two divergent, and seemingly irreconcilable, approaches to reform.  If President Obama fails to grasp soon why his idea of reform has alienated key parts of his base--and if he fails to do something to bridge the divide--the result may be much worse than acrimony from the chattering liberal classes.  He could have a full on mutiny on his hands by 2010.   

One way to describe this divide is to say that President Obama has advanced "conservative reform"--repair and improve, but maintain what we have--whereas the base of the Democratic Party wants, and has aggressively demanded, "progressive reform"--out with the old, in with the new.

It is impossible to exaggerate how much friction these contrasting approaches to reform have created in just one year.

Consider, for example, the banking crisis. Having inherited the TARP program from the previous administration, President Obama continued to advance a policy of using government funds to mend the broken financial institutions and then create new regulations to steady the markets: improve, but maintain.  The base of his party, by contrast, called for a complete overhaul of the financial industry, and a new set of legal measures that would neuter investment banks, reign in corporate power, and limit windfall profits: out with the old, in with the new.

The automotive industry bailout was the second big example of this divide. When the large American auto manufactures faced ruin, President Obama called for a sophisticated government bailout.  His idea was to use to government resources to prop up the auto industry and shepherd them through bankruptcy.  The Cash for Clunkers program then jump started the restructured manufacturers:  repair, but maintain. The base of his party, by contrast, largely called for government to allow the Detroit-centered industry to die a natural death, pushing instead for a massive investment in the fledgling, West Coast green automotive industry: out with the old, in with the new.

The health care reform debate has also spotlighted this divide.  Obama has pushed for a reformed and regulated private health insurance industry: repair, but maintain.  The base of his  party, by contrast, has called for the end of a health care system based on private health insurance, pushing instead for a non-profit, single payer system: out with the old, in with the new.  

Next up on the environment--although this fight is now being obscured by the health care argument--Obama will call for investment in new energy sources, but will also push for repairing and maintaining the oil and coal industries. The base of his party, by contrast, will call for an end to the oil and coal industries, and a total switch over to a new energy economy.

And so on, and so forth.

With each of these fights, a larger and larger portion of the issues patchwork Democratic Party base is drawn into a increasingly bitter narrative of disappointment over Obama's approach to reform. 

By 2010, just about every Democratic Party member with a stake in some issue will be saying the same thing about Obama: his policies are not a clear enough departure from the past; this is not real reform.

The collective malaise will only be compounded if Democratic losses in the midterm election are significant.

What should Obama do?  Here are five suggestions:

First, Obama needs to recognize that he gained support during his Presidential campaign because he personally symbolized a departure from the past.  His identity, his speaking style, his ability to draw young and old into politics--all of this symbolized progressive change for people.

Second, Obama needs to understand that he has not led the country in any discussion whatsoever about why a conservative approach to reform is better than a progressive approach to reform.  He may have had these discussions behind the scenes, but he has not had them on the full stage of the public debate.

Third, Obama needs to find some way over the next three to six months to deliver some kind of reform that looks and feels to his base like a clean departure from the past. 

Fourth, Obama needs to spend less energy and political capital dealing with the base of the Republican Party, and more energy and political capital reaching out and working with the base of the Democratic Party.

Fifth, Obama needs to play a more central role leading the push for reform.  The base that elected him does not know what to do when his initiatives are pushed by uncharismatic leaders in the House and Senate.  The President needs to be the voice and the face of reform, not just the beer table host. 

In other words, Obama needs to realize that he is the focus, and as such, he foments or alleviates the base's concerns over reform.  From what I can tell, the crush of crises put on his desk has led Obama to forget this crucial point

After listening to him talk on the campaign trail, expectations were very high for a President who pushed progressive reform.  The base will work with him at a more conservative level, but not until he stands up and explains why this is important.

The clock is ticking.



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Snarky Quips Don’t Help Dept: Get Serious about 2010 and the TeaBaggers

February 17th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in elections, racism, rightwing

What Not to Do

About the Tea Parties

& And Some Hints

About What to Do

 

by Leonard Zeskind

Huffington Post

The Tea Party convention has come and gone, and we need to look past the speculative bubble surrounding Sarah Palin's possible presidential ambitions and examine the Nashville gathering more closely. A fact-based analytical look at this developing phenomenon is much needed. There is no call to get snarky about the foibles of these Tea Party-types, however much the blogosphere lends itself to the small pleasures of poking fun at others. Neither will pulling down some off-the-shelf theory devoid of hard data give us the handles necessary to tackle this terribly new situation in real time.

During the past year the Tea Parties have managed to capture the angst and the sense of political and social dispossession felt by a definite strata of middle and working class white people. In the process, they have demolished whatever remained of the notion that the conservative, far right wing movement was dead. Street protests in April and July laid the basis for something akin to a civic uprising during the town hall meetings last August. While the Massachusetts election of Senator Scott Brown is now credited with derailing health care reform by virtue of his possible vote to sustain a filibuster, it was in fact the town hall events that first threw Democratic health care plans off the track.

Tea Partiers have already started to run campaigns for political offices small and large in the 2010 Republican primaries. There will certainly be some Democrats who wish them well, using a partisan-based logic that leads to disaster. If you hope that a more radical Republican Party will make it easier to elect moderate and liberal Democrats, you ignore the simple fact that when Republicans have been pulled further to the right, Democrats have usually followed. Worse is never better, it is always worse.

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