Obama’s 100 days
29 April 2009

Since President Franklin Roosevelt’s fabled “Hundred Days,” a new US
administration’s 100th day has served as an occasion for media
comparisons to Roosevelt—usually at the expense of history and truth.
This year, such comparisons abound, in part because Barack Obama’s
first months have been dominated by a global economic crisis of a
scale not seen since the Great Depression, and in part because Obama’s
liberal supporters have sought to credit Obama with launching a modern
version of Roosevelt’s reformist New Deal.

But Obama’s first 100 days have made clear the right-wing character of
his administration and the class interests it serves.

As the World Socialist Web Site noted upon Obama’s inauguration, “the
mounting contradictions of American capitalism abroad and the
sharpening social divisions at home” would sooner rather than later
disabuse millions of their illusions in Obama. (See: “On the eve of
Obama’s inauguration”).

If the polls are to believed, there are still many workers and youth
who, while opposing the policies coming from Washington, maintain the
hope that Obama will bring about the “change” he promised in his
campaign. Yet there is a growing sense that, whatever the shifts in
style—which, as it turns out, have been less dramatic than anticipated—
the substance remains largely the same.

In foreign policy, Obama has continued the militarist and aggressive
thrust of the Bush administration’s policies.

The war in Iraq continues, with troop levels virtually unchanged. Now,
as the security situation deteriorates, top US generals openly state
that Obama’s plan for a limited withdrawal is unviable. At the same
time, Obama has not only expanded the war in Afghanistan, but, in
violation of international law, extended it to neighboring Pakistan.
His budget proposal includes the largest appropriation for military
spending in history.

Obama has done nothing to curtail the anti-democratic policies,
programs and institutions built up during the Bush years in the name
of the “war on terror.”

His administration has intervened in court cases to lock away as state
secrets information about the massive government spying operation
directed against the population—the better to continue and expand it,
and block the efforts of victims of US crimes such as “extraordinary
rendition” to hold accountable those who participated in such actions.

In the name of “moving on,” Obama has sought to block any
investigation, much less criminal prosecution, of those in the Bush
administration and the spy agencies and military who ordered and
carried out torture against detainees.

And while Obama has pledged to eventually close the prison camp at
Guantánamo Bay, it remains open, and its inmates face the prospect of
being shipped to other US military prisons, such as those in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Meanwhile, the Obama administration has intervened in
court cases to deny habeas corpus rights to prisoners at US camps in
Afghanistan and uphold the president’s “right” to declare individuals
enemy combatants and imprison them indefinitely, without recourse to
judicial appeal.

The Obama administration’s class orientation has been established by
its response to the economic crisis.

Over the past year, the majority of the population has witnessed a
rapid erosion of its social position, the result of mounting layoffs,
wage cuts and precipitous declines in home values and retirement
savings. The epidemic of home foreclosures continues unabated. Hunger
and homelessness are rampant. After decades of spending cuts,
government programs have proven to be more sieve than safety net.

Obama’s response to this calamity has been to appropriate hundreds of
billions of dollars in public funds and hand them over to the finance
industry. The central focus of his actions and pronouncements has been
to reassure Wall Street of his determination to protect its wealth and
power.

The message has been received. The run-up in share values on the major
American exchanges that began in early March reflects, more than
anything else, the confidence of rich investors that in Obama they
have a president who will do their bidding.

Even prior to assuming office, Obama accepted the framework of the
Bush administration’s approach to the crisis. In October, as the
Democratic nominee for the presidency, Obama lobbied vigorously for
passage of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). As president-
elect, he urged Congress to appropriate the second $350 billion
installment of TARP. As president, he chose for his treasury secretary
Timothy Geithner. As president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, Geithner had established the closest ties to the Wall Street
elite. When the financial crisis hit, he served as the point man for
the Bush administration’s bailout program. His appointment by Obama
was the surest signal to the bankers that they had a friend in the
White House.

Last month, Geithner announced the details of the Public-Private
Investment Program, the next phase of the government bailout, by which
the government will subsidize and virtually guarantee handsome profits
to hedge funds and private investment firms that purchase toxic assets
from the banks at inflated prices.

It is estimated that between cash infusions, loans and guarantees on
debt, the federal bailout of Wall Street now exceeds $10 trillion.
This dwarfs Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package, which will do next
to nothing to relieve the suffering of millions.

The transfer of taxpayer funds to the banks has failed to free up
credit and “kick-start” lending, as promised. Instead, the banks have
hoarded their government cash, while doling out a large share of it to
the very executives whose reckless and fraudulent policies
precipitated the economic crash.

In the wake of public anger over revelations that the bailed out
insurance giant, American International Group (AIG), was paying tens
of millions of dollars in bonuses to the top traders and executives at
its financial products division, Obama, after declaring his “outrage,”
came out against congressional legislation that would have imposed a
surtax on some bonuses awarded by firms receiving TARP funds.

Yet Obama has had no compunction in demanding that the contracts of
auto workers be ripped up and massive job cuts and reductions in wages
and benefits be imposed. Obama’s intervention in the auto industry
demonstrates his ferocious prosecution of class warfare in the
interests of the financial oligarchy.

After only 100 days of the new administration, workers and youth are
coming face to face with the fact that Obama represents no change from
the anti-working class, anti-democratic and militaristic polices of
his predecessor. His presidency has already established the
impossibility of effecting real change in government policy by means
of elections within the framework of the existing two-party system, or
through appeals to the Democratic Party.

The defense of the interests of working people is the task of the
working class itself. It must mobilize its strength in social and
political struggle independently of the two parties of the ruling
elite, fight to break the stranglehold of the financial aristocracy on
society, and advance its own socialist alternative to the bankrupt
capitalist system.

Tom Eley

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