I don't agree with everything in Moberg's analysis, but it's thoughtful and
pretty comprehensive.  I do agree with a lot, particularly the possibilities
opened by an Obama presidency and the need to organize for that - and
even more-so for the alternative.  Here's a solid compendium of issues
and concerns for your own evaluation.
ed

http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3859/moving_obama_left/

Moving Obama Left

By David Moberg
In These Times: August 25, 2008

After Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) secured his party's nomination in June, his
tightly knit campaign message began to fray at the edges. Critics from
across the political spectrum charge that Obama has shifted to the center or
right on a host of issues, and that the flip-flopping was - take your pick -
good, bad, inevitable or duplicitous.

Progressives, whose hopes for Obama grew from his early opposition to the
war in Iraq, and the youthful movement his candidacy inspired, wondered how
much they could trust him on Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, civil
liberties, gun control, the death penalty, trade, government funding of
faith-based groups and other issues.

Disappointed as some progressives may be, Obama has not made a dramatic
shift to the center: He's always been more centrist, cautious and
compromising than many of his supporters - and critics - have wanted to
admit.

"I don't think he's changed positions," says Robert Borosage, co-director of
the progressive advocacy group, Campaign for America's Future. "He's always
been a cautious liberal."

The Wall Street Journal took the supposed changes as Obama's admission that
the conservative positions on most issues were correct, and concluded that
Obama, as much as Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), would represent a third term
for Bush.

Right-wing anti-Obama groups warned their followers that a devious Obama was
trying to woo evangelicals from the conservative fold. McCain's backers used
the controversies to tarnish Obama's character and disillusion his
supporters.

Meanwhile, centrists rejoice that the middle - wherever that shifting spot
may be - is always best. And a few on the left find evidence, once again,
that no Democrat can be trusted.

Even if Obama is more consistent than critics allege, questions still haunt
progressives. Does an Obama presidency promise dramatic and progressive
change, as his rhetoric sometimes suggests? Or will Obama simply shift from
Bush's neoconservatism back to the confused - if slightly less
conservative - perspective of the Democratic Party establishment?

And what president would Obama most resemble? A Lincolnesque figure who
would bring national unity (without a civil war), as Obama often implies?

A Clinton, who campaigned to "put people first" - as he had put it - but
failed to take bold steps and ended up triangulating political differences?

A Kennedy, who inspired millions but got dragged down by conventional
assumptions about American power in the world, as evidenced by the Vietnam
War and Bay of Pigs?

Or, as many on the left fantasize, an FDR running a conservative campaign
but responding to the times with dramatic reforms?

On the record

The character of an Obama presidency will depend not just on Obama but also
on worsening world conditions that demand a new direction - economic
collapse and financial instability, environmental and energy crises, failure
of a military approach to terrorism, worsening inequality and insecurity for
most Americans.

It also will depend on opportunities, such as the size of a Democratic
congressional majority, and pressures, including demands from popular
movements at home for an end to the war, single-payer national health
insurance and worker rights, as well as high expectations from nations and
leaders around the world.

What Obama says as a candidate does affect his chances of winning. It can
also skew the direction of his potential presidency and demonstrate his
will - and ability - to be a forceful leader.

In most of the controversies, Obama has maintained previous positions that
often departed from progressive orthodoxy.

On other points, however, he has shifted in disappointing ways.

Obama broke his promise to vote against and filibuster the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) re-authorization. The measure included
immunity from prosecution for the telecommunications companies that aided
the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping of citizens.

"There is no reason why telephone companies should be given blanket immunity
to cover violations of the rights of the American people," Obama had said in
February. "We must reaffirm that no one in this country is above the law."

But in June, Obama told reporters that the FISA compromise was an
improvement since it would put an "inspector general in place to investigate
what happened previously." He continued: "Given . all the information I
received . the underlying program itself actually is important and useful to
American security as long as it has these constraints on them."

Though Obama didn't change his views on the merits of the legislation, his
vote for the bill - which passed easily, thanks to many Democrats'
defections - angered civil libertarians and the left blogosphere.

Obama's vote also defied majority public opinion: nearly two-thirds of
respondents to a January 2008 poll for the American Civil Liberties Union
said that the government should be required to get an individual warrant
before listening to conversations between American citizens and people
outside the country. Obama's decision did little to inoculate him from
McCain attacks and undermined his image as a different, more principled
political leader.

Obama also angered many liberals by siding with the conservative bloc of the
Supreme Court against the Washington, D.C., handgun ban that interpreted the
Second Amendment as protecting an individual right to own guns.

Obama has publicly supported the individual right to possess firearms at
least since his 2004 U.S. senate race. A campaign spokesperson said in April
that a staffer in Obama's 1996 Illinois senate campaign incorrectly
indicated he supported a ban on handguns.

Obama - who is a longstanding supporter of government's right to regulate
guns - has said he believed that the District of Columbia gun ban was
constitutional, according to a November 2007 Chicago Tribune report, and
thus shifted on that point in his support for the court decision.

Obama also sided with the conservative bloc's view that the death penalty is
constitutional in child rape cases.

As a state senator, Obama reformed procedures to Illinois' flawed
application of the death penalty, but he did not oppose the death penalty in
all cases.

In his autobiography The Audacity of Hope, he wrote, "I believe there are
some crimes - mass murder, the rape and murder of a child - so heinous, so
beyond the pale [that the death penalty is warranted]." But the crucial
issue before the Supreme Court was whether the rape alone - not murder - of
a child permitted capital punishment. So Obama, reversing his previous
position, took sides with right-wing Justice Antonin Scalia when he could
have deferred to the court majority.

Shifts, but not flip-flops

Critics have misrepresented or overstated most of Obama's other supposed
rightward shifts. Progressives might not like his decisions, but they are
hardly "flip-flops," as critics from both sides have alleged.

For example, Obama's decision not to rely on public financing for the
general election reflects both his own fundraising success and the massive
funding edge the Republican National Committee has over the Democratic
National Committee.

But John K. Wilson, author of Barack Obama: This Improbable Quest, argues
that Obama had only pledged to "aggressively pursue . a fundraising truce,"
not to adopt public financing under any conditions.

In November 2007, Obama wrote, "My plan requires both major party candidates
to agree on a fundraising truce, return excess money from donors, and stay
within the public financing system for the general election. . If I am the
Democratic nominee, I will aggressively pursue an agreement with the
Republican nominee to preserve a publicly financed general election." Obama
could have been more aggressive in pursuing an agreement, but he wasn't
backing out of a firm pledge to take public funding.

It's no big surprise that on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Obama has
muted his earlier expressions of sympathy for the Palestinian people and
echoed full-throated support for Israeli positions. In a speech to the
American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, he called for recognition of an
"undivided" Jerusalem as the Israeli capital. He explained afterward that,
rather than prejudging a thorny "final status" issue in the Middle East
conflict, he was arguing that the city should not be physically divided by
barbed wire.

Obama's embrace of Bush's program for funding faith-based initiatives, which
angered many secular progressives, was not a flip-flop. He has said openly
that religious institutions should play a greater role in public life.

In the Audacity of Hope, Obama distances himself from secular liberalism,
writing that, "I think we make a mistake when we fail to acknowledge the
power of faith in the lives of the American people, and so avoid joining a
serious debate about how to reconcile faith with our modern, pluralistic
democracy."

He advocated regulation that would require non-discrimination in hiring and
the use of public funds only for secular ends.

"To truly be successful, this initiative must utilize the unique resources
and identity of the faith community, while at the same time recognizing the
indispensable role that government and public policy must play in tackling
the root causes of poverty," writes Jim Wallis of the liberal evangelical
group Sojourners. "Obama's proposals also contain necessary protections for
religious liberty, pluralism and constitutional safeguards."

Mainstream reproductive choice groups such as NARAL and Planned Parenthood
support Obama and have usually given him 100 percent approval on his voting
record (even though he voted "present" on some legislation in the Illinois
senate, as part of legislative strategy by defenders of abortion rights).

In April, however, Obama, departing from the position of most pro-choice
organizations, said that states could properly restrict late-term abortions
if they make an exception for cases that threaten the health of the mother.

In a recent interview with Relevant, a religious magazine, Obama said
"mental distress" should not be counted as a health exception. NARAL
responded to this new statement - not necessarily a shift, since his earlier
votes were against late-term abortion bans with no exceptions - by
emphasizing that Obama's position was still consistent with the landmark
Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade.

Obama "is right on the health exception, and he is right on reproductive
choice, and he is going to be there for us 100 percent," NARAL President
Nancy Keenan told National Public Radio.

During the primaries, Obama said he would re-negotiate the North American
Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA. Then in June, Fortune magazine headlined
this story: "Obama: NAFTA not so bad after all."

This was no flip: Obama had never proposed to cancel NAFTA, simply re-open
NAFTA and use U.S. leverage to strengthen labor and environmental
protections, which he says he still wants to include in all trade deals.
Obama has consistently expressed his support for expanded trade while
recognizing the costs that globalization imposes on many people.

Progressives want Obama to expand his critique of current global economic
policy, but despite those reservations, AFL-CIO public policy director and
long-time progressive trade policy analyst Thea Lee says, "I think [Obama]
has a better position on trade than any Democratic presidential nominee in
my memory."

Obama stirred controversy when he said he might "refine" his plans for Iraq
as conditions change. He quickly restated his plan to start withdrawing
troops as soon as he takes office and to remove all combat forces within 16
months - a strategy given new credibility by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki's call for foreign troops to withdraw by 2010. Throughout the
campaign, Obama has said, he would be "as careful getting out as we were
careless going in."

"I don't think his position on Iraq has changed," says Tom Swan, manager of
Iraq Campaign 2008, a coalition committed to pushing withdrawal from Iraq
during the presidential election. "It's not as fast a withdrawal as many of
us want, but it's clearly different than staying for 100 years."

There are two bigger worries for progressives: First, how big a residual
force would Obama retain and what would they do? Second, will his shift of
troops to Afghanistan presage a counterproductive war in that country -
making it Obama's Iraq?

The issue is not whether Obama has flipped, but whether he will shape a new
foreign policy that acknowledges limits to militarism, unilateralism and the
exercise of global power. To his credit, Obama has emphasized aggressive
diplomacy over war, particularly in dealing with Iran, and despite his plan
to expand military action in Afghanistan, he also proposes increasing
economic development aid to win its people away from supporting the Taliban.

No Wellstone

Domestically, Obama's sermons to black audiences about family responsibility
are politically valuable for winning white votes. Despite legitimate
criticism that blacks alone seem to be singled out for failing families or
watching too much television, many African Americans also embrace Obama's
message. It was consistent with Obama's politics (he often talks about how
government can't solve all problems) and did not preclude increased social
responsibility toward the needy.

And his appointments of many mainstream Democratic economic and foreign
policy advisers may raise anxieties, but they're not surprising for a
candidate who has talked about transcending ideological divisions. Overall,
Obama is no crusader like the late Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-Minn.), but a
"pragmatic progressive," says Wilson.

"He's made some small shifts but no fundamental change," says Wilson. "Some
on the left simply overestimated where he stood and thought he was some
leftist. He hasn't changed fundamental values, but he's always been willing
to compromise."

Throughout the primaries, Obama walked a political tightrope, inspiring hope
for dramatic change and, for other supporters, a new post-partisan politics.
If he appears not to be principled in his pursuit of fundamental change, he
risks losing the energy that could carry him to victory.

Strategists from the Democratic left argue that Obama needs a bold
progressive plan, especially on pocketbook economic issues and the war, not
only to solve the nation's problems but also, simply, to win.

"The enthusiasm he garnered from younger people was based on their
perception of him related to what they wanted to see, not what was there,"
says Bill Fletcher, executive editor of BlackCommentator.com, and a leader
of Progressives for Obama. "Their perceptions of him were rooted in
rebellion against the Bush and Clinton years, and their hopes for a
different kind of politics. If Obama presents himself as a kinder, gentler
DLC'er [the corporate-oriented Democratic Leadership Conference], it's not
going to inspire."

'The movement, not the person'
Antiwar and healthcare proponents are organizing independent efforts to make
their issues central to the presidential race this fall, and to keep
pressure on Obama.

Iraq Campaign 2008, for example, is mobilizing a broad coalition to knock on
"a million doors for peace" on Sept. 20, talking about the war in Iraq and
its costs to Americans. On healthcare, progressives are divided between
growing ranks of single-payer, Medicare-for-all advocates and a new,
institutionally weightier coalition of more than 100 labor unions and other
advocacy groups - Health Care for America Now. The coalition, which includes
organizations such as AFSCME (public employees) SEIU, the AFL-CIO, Campaign
for America's Future, and ACORN - promote a strategy closer to Obama's
proposal that would include employer-provided or individually purchased
corporate insurance and the option of a public plan

While some on the left may still opt for the Green Party's Cynthia McKinney
or independent Ralph Nader, most typically say they support Obama because of
the need to defeat McCain. Members of the 125 chapters of Progressive
Democrats for America (PDA) overwhelmingly preferred Rep. Dennis Kucinich
(D-Ohio) or John Edwards. Now, says PDA Executive Director Tim Carpenter,
their goals in the campaign are to support "more the Barack Obama movement,
not Barack Obama, the person" and "to make him a better candidate."

Democracy for America did not endorse a candidate in the primaries. Now the
725,000-member group - which grew out of the 2004 Howard Dean campaign - is
working to support Obama and to push issues, such as withdrawal from Iraq
and universal health insurance.

"This battle is about a culture of activism versus a culture of incumbency,"
says DFA chair Jim Dean, Howard Dean's brother. Whatever disagreements DFA
may have with Obama, "I'd rather have the discussion with Obama than with
John McCain."

Obama's campaign will set its own course. The dominant culture could push
him to become more conservative, not only during the campaign, but even more
so if he wins. Yet by organizing popular movements, progressives can promote
issues in the election, encourage Obama not to drift to the right, and build
the expectations and organizations that put demands on an Obama presidency.

"It's going to be a bumpy ride," says Carl Davidson, an organizer with
Progressives for Obama. "People will get bent out of shape. This is
politics. You've got to keep a laser focus - stop McCain, stop the war, keep
your eyes on the prize."

And the prize is the possibility - not the certainty - of what an Obama
presidency can deliver.

David Moberg, a senior editor of In These Times, has been on the staff of
the magazine since it began publishing. Before joining In These Times, he
completed his work for a Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Chicago
and worked for Newsweek. Recently he has received fellowships from the John
D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Nation Institute for
research on the new global economy.



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