Mr. Obama Goes to Washington

by DAVID SIROTA

posted on thenation.com on 8 June

[from the June 26, 2006 issue]

It's not every day that God calls your cell phone. But that's exactly what 
happened to me on an overcast afternoon last November. "Is this David?" asked 
the deep, vaguely familiar voice on the other end. When I told him it was, he 
said, "This is Barack Obama." Thinking it was a good friend playing a joke, I 
said I didn't believe him. But no, the voice insisted with a laugh, it was 
Illinois Senator Barack Obama, otherwise known in cult-of-personality political 
circles as a deity, a rising Democratic star or, as George W. Bush recently 
called him, "the pope."

Obama was calling because he was bothered that I had written a few blog posts 
questioning positions he'd taken that appeared to belie his progressive image, 
most prominently his vote for a corporate-written "reform" of class-action 
lawsuits, his refusal to frontally challenge the Iraq War after running as an 
antiwar candidate and his vote to confirm Condoleezza Rice as Secretary of 
State. One by one, Obama methodically answered each criticism. And when the 
call ended with his telling me he was committed to working with progressives, I 
was perplexed. Obama certainly talks a great game--but then, so have many false 
prophets over the years. I requested a formal interview, and to my surprise, 
Obama readily agreed. By the end of a day in Washington with him, I had the 
answers to two key questions: What can progressives expect from Barack Obama, 
and what does he really aspire to be?

I first met the Illinois senator in his Capitol Hill office, where he 
introduced me to his staff, all of whom seemed totally at ease with him. Unlike 
in many Congressional offices, there was no overuse of the words "senator" or 
"yes, sir." In separate conversations I had with many staffers, he was referred 
to as just "Barack." I was given a packet documenting Obama's accomplishments 
since his 2004 election, and it was hard not to be simultaneously impressed and 
underwhelmed. Given that he's one of the most junior members of the Senate, his 
successful efforts to secure additional funding for veterans' medical care and 
energy development in Illinois are no small feats. But considering that he's 
one of the most famous politicians in America, the accomplishments are fairly 
mundane.

"That's the constraints of being in the minority," Obama said, when asked why 
he hadn't used his media megaphone to push for more systemic changes. Then he 
adopted a signature Obama move: downplaying expectations. "What has probably 
been strategic was in the first year, my thinking was not to do a lot of 
message bills, in part because I've got a lot of colleagues here who do message 
bills," he said. "A lot of what I think is interpreted as caution is just a 
function of my institutional role as a freshman in the minority party and the 
limits that places on me in terms of being able to move legislation out of 
committee."

In a speech later that day, this theme came out again as he told the audience, 
"Remember, I've got a lot of clout--I went from 99th to 98th in seniority this 
year." His sarcastic point has some merit--but only some. After all, 
legislation is just one measure of success. Another is how big an impact a 
politician has on the public debate. Most members of Congress have to scratch 
and claw to get attention even on pressing issues. Obama, by contrast, can put 
whatever's on his mind on the front page of major newspapers. Does he want a 
public image as a low-key legislative technocrat with a nice packet of 
accomplishments? Or does he want to be someone who uses the Senate platform to 
move the national political debate?

Obama carefully answered the question about how he wants to define himself: 
"The amount of publicity I have received...means that I've got to be more 
sensitive in some ways to not step on my colleagues." For those who see him as 
a bold challenger of the system, this may be disappointing. After all, it oozes 
deference to the Senate clubbiness that has killed many a populist cause. And 
Obama has defended that club from outside pressure not only in his rhetoric but 
in his actions. For instance, last year he posted a long article on the blog 
Daily Kos criticizing attacks against lawmakers who voted for right-wing 
Supreme Court nominee John Roberts--even though Obama himself voted against 
Roberts. And in January Obama publicly criticized a fledgling effort to 
filibuster nominee Samuel Alito. Obama actually voted for the filibuster, but 
his statements helped take the steam out of that effort.

True, Obama did show a rare flash of defiance when he unsuccessfully pushed 
legislation this year to create an Office of Public Integrity, which would have 
enforced anti-corruption laws. But that kind of power-challenging move, which 
was met with strong resistance from both parties, was an exception. At the same 
time that he was ruffling feathers with that bill, he was one of the many 
Democratic senators who fled from Russell Feingold's motion to censure Bush 
over the White House's refusal to seek court orders for domestic wiretapping. 
Though polls showed that roughly half of Americans supported censure, it was 
shunned by the Senate club as too confrontational, and Obama seemed to agree.

That's the key word in trying to figure out Obama: He seems like everything to 
everybody, which is not necessarily his fault. Much of the media coverage of 
Obama has been personality focused, as the story of the son of a Kenyan and a 
Kansan, the third African-American senator since Reconstruction. Because the 
media have not looked as closely at his political positions, Obama has taken on 
the quality of a blank screen on which people can project whatever they like. 
But he hasn't discouraged this. A masterful politician, Obama has a Bill 
Clinton-esque talent for maximizing that screen and appearing comfortable in 
almost any setting. And, like Clinton, Obama has an impressive control of the 
issues and a mesmerizing ability to connect with people.

Many progressives wonder whether Obama will show that an outsider can force 
real change in government, or that the Senate club has become so insulated that 
Mr. Smith can no longer go to Washington. But that question brings another one: 
whether Obama wants to challenge the club in the first place. "There's no doubt 
that I will be staking out more public positions on more issues as time goes 
on," Obama said cryptically. Does that mean he is going to be more 
confrontational? "The question is not whether you end up being 
confrontational," he said in a tone that made clear he had been pondering that 
idea long before I brought it up. "The question is, Do you let confrontations 
arise as a consequence of your putting forward a positive vision of what needs 
to happen and letting the confrontation organically emerge, or do you go out of 
your way for it?"

By almost all measures, Obama has been a solid liberal, both in his early 
career as a community organizer and then as a local politician. In the Illinois 
State Senate he supported increased funding for healthcare and education and 
wrote bills to publicly finance judicial campaigns and create a state 
earned-income tax credit. His charisma, intellect and ability to build 
bipartisan coalitions were evident early in his career, fueling progressives' 
high hopes for him. In the US Senate, for the most part he has stuck with his 
party on key votes when so-called moderates didn't. For example, Obama voted 
against the corporate-written Central American Free Trade Agreement. And he was 
particularly outspoken after Hurricane Katrina, leading the charge among 
lawmakers demanding answers about the government's failure to protect New 
Orleans.

But while Obama has a solid liberal record, many believe there is a difference 
between a liberal and a true progressive. For example, his signature 
legislation today is his "healthcare for hybrids" proposal, which would give 
away hundreds of millions to auto companies to relieve them of some of the 
costs of paying for retirees' healthcare. In exchange, the companies would 
produce more fuel-efficient vehicles. The goals are unassailable, but the 
policy reflects the liberal carrot of appeasing a powerful industry rather than 
the progressive stick of forcing that industry to shape up by simply mandating 
higher fuel-efficiency standards.

The occasions when Obama has broken with his party indicate similar 
inclinations. Just one month into his term, the former civil rights lawyer 
defied the Democrats and voted for the class-action "reform" bill. Opposed by 
most major civil rights and consumer watchdog groups, this Big Business-backed 
legislation was sold to the public as a way to stop "frivolous" lawsuits. But 
everyone in Washington knew the bill's real objective was to protect corporate 
abusers. A few weeks later, though he voted against the 
credit-card-industry-written bankruptcy bill, Obama also voted against an 
amendment that would have capped credit-card interest rates at a whopping 30 
percent (he defends his vote by claiming the amendment was poorly written).

Then there is the Iraq War. Obama says that during his 2004 election campaign 
he "loudly and vigorously" opposed the war. As The New Yorker noted, "many had 
been drawn initially by Obama's early opposition to the invasion." But "when 
his speech at the antiwar rally in 2002 was quietly removed from his campaign 
Web site," the magazine reported, "activists found that to be an ominous 
sign"--one that foreshadowed Obama's first months in the Senate. Indeed, 
through much of 2005, Obama said little about Iraq, displaying a noticeable 
deference to Washington's bipartisan foreign policy elite, which had pushed the 
war. One of Obama's first votes as a senator was to confirm Condoleezza Rice as 
Secretary of State despite her integral role in pushing the now-debunked 
propaganda about Iraq's WMD.

In November Obama's reticence on the war ended. Five days after hawkish 
Democratic Representative Jack Murtha famously called for a withdrawal, Obama 
gave a speech calling for a drawdown of troops in 2006. "Those of us in 
Washington have fallen behind the debate that is taking place across America on 
Iraq," he said. But then he retreated. On Meet the Press in January Obama 
regurgitated catchphrases often employed by neoconservatives to caricature 
those demanding a timetable for withdrawal. "It would not be responsible for us 
to unilaterally and precipitously draw troops down," he said. Then, as polls 
showed support for the war further eroding, Obama tacked again, giving a speech 
in May attacking the war and mocking the "idea that somehow if you say the 
words 'plan for victory' and 'stay the course' over and over and over and over 
again...that somehow people are not going to notice the 2,400 flag-draped 
coffins that have arrived at the Dover Air Force Base."

Another area of retreat and equivocation for Obama is his role in party 
politics. He had previously said he didn't "want to be the kingmaker," because 
"it's never been sort of a role that I've aspired to in politics." Yet Obama 
forcefully intervened in a suburban Chicago Congressional primary on behalf of 
Iraq veteran Tammy Duckworth, the candidate handpicked by Democratic power 
brokers, against grassroots contender Christine Cegelis, who in 2004 garnered 
an astonishing 44 percent against GOP incumbent Henry Hyde and who almost beat 
Duckworth. Wasn't this the very kingmaking role he'd said he didn't want to be 
a part of? Obama said only, "There are going to be strategic questions about 
who do I think is best equipped to win the general elections." One senior 
Congressional aide said, "Obama showed himself to be the pure political hack he 
is. Here you have a guy whose own success was predicated on winning primaries 
against party-backed candidates now using his enormous politica
 l capital to go to bat for the same party machines he says he doesn't want to 
be a tool of."

Although Obama said such high-profile primary endorsements were rare, a similar 
controversy arose a few weeks later. Just as Ned Lamont's antiwar primary 
campaign against prowar Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman was gaining momentum, 
Obama traveled to the state to endorse Lieberman. Like the Duckworth 
endorsement, Obama's move was timed to derail an insurgent, grassroots 
candidate. To progressives this may seem surprising, given Obama's progressive 
image. But remember, according to the New York Times it is Lieberman--one of 
the most conservative, prowar Democrats in Washington--who is "Obama's mentor 
in the Senate as part of a program in which freshman senators are paired with 
incumbents."

At the end of a long day, we sat down in Obama's Capitol Hill office. It was 
time to talk specifics, so I asked him to explain his "healthcare for hybrids" 
auto-industry proposal. Why not simply push to strengthen fuel-efficiency 
mandates?

"There is a difference between an opinion writer or thinker and a legislator," 
he said, making sure to note that he is also a co-sponsor of bills that would 
mandate better fuel efficiency. "I a lot of times don't get an opportunity to 
frame legislation in ways that I would exactly prefer. I have to take into 
account what is possible within the constraints of the institution." 
Fuel-efficiency standards, he said, provided a good example of what he was 
talking about. Michigan Democrats "Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow are as 
progressive a set of senators as you can hope to find," he continued. "But if 
you have a conversation with them about standards, they are adamantly opposed. 
That's something that I've got to take into account if I'm going to be able to 
actually get something accomplished."

This theme had been reiterated all day: Obama is all about the art of the 
possible within the system. "This is a classic conflict within the left: Are 
you a revolutionary or are you a reformist?" Obama said. "I am less concerned 
with the labels that are placed on me in terms of what kind of leader I am, and 
I am more interested in results.... I think within the institutional structures 
we have, we can significantly improve the life chances of ordinary Americans." 
I asked him to give me some specific examples of what he meant. Is a proposal 
to convert America's healthcare system to one in which the government is the 
single payer for all services revolutionary or reformist? "Anything that Canada 
does can't be entirely revolutionary--it's Canada," Obama joked. "When I drive 
through Toronto, it doesn't look like a bunch of Maoists." Even so, Obama said 
that although he "would not shy away from a debate about single-payer," right 
now he is "not convinced that it is the best way to
  achieve universal healthcare."

Obama has a remarkable ability to convince you that his positions are motivated 
purely by principles, not tactical considerations. This skill is so subtle and 
impressive, it resembles Luke Skywalker's mastery of the Force. It's a powerful 
tool for a Democratic Party that often emanates calculation rather than 
conviction. "I don't think in ideological terms. I never have," Obama said, 
continuing on the healthcare theme. "Everybody who supports single-payer 
healthcare says, 'Look at all this money we would be saving from insurance and 
paperwork.' That represents 1 million, 2 million, 3 million jobs of people who 
are working at Blue Cross Blue Shield or Kaiser or other places. What are we 
doing with them? Where are we employing them?"

Shifting back to how he sees himself in the Senate, Obama seemed to amend his 
previous statement about what kind of leadership progressives can expect from 
him. "I am agnostic in terms of the models that solve these problems," he said. 
"If the only way to solve a problem is structural, institutional change, then I 
will be for structural, institutional change. If I think we can achieve those 
same goals within the existing institutions, then I am going to try to do that, 
because I think it's going to be easier to do and less disruptive and less 
costly and less painful.... I think everybody in this country should have basic 
healthcare. And what I'm trying to figure out is how to get from here to 
there." He went on to tell me about his support for other structural changes 
such as public financing of elections, forcing broadcasters to offer free 
airtime for candidates, adding strong labor protections to trade pacts and 
major efforts to create a more just tax system.

Obama is telling the truth--he's not opposed to structural changes at all. 
However, he appears to be interested in fighting only for those changes that 
fit within the existing boundaries of what's considered mainstream in 
Washington, instead of using his platform to redefine those boundaries. This 
posture comes even as polls consistently show that Washington's definition of 
mainstream is divorced from the rest of the country's (for example, 
politicians' refusal to debate the war even as polls show that Americans want 
the troops home).

Obama's deference to these boundaries was hammered home to me when our 
discussion touched on the late Senator Paul Wellstone. Obama said the 
progressive champion was "magnificent." He also gently but dismissively labeled 
Wellstone as merely a "gadfly," in a tone laced with contempt for the senator 
who, for instance, almost single-handedly prevented passage of the bankruptcy 
bill for years over the objections of both parties. This clarified Obama's 
support for the Hamilton Project, an organization formed by Citigroup chair 
Robert Rubin and other Wall Street Democrats to fight back against growing 
populist outrage within the party. And I understood why Beltway publications 
and think tanks have heaped praise on Obama and want him to run for President. 
It's because he has shown a rare ability to mix charisma and deference to the 
establishment.

Barack Obama makes a convincing case that he is not overly motivated by 
political machinations. Many have accused him of Hillary Clinton-style 
positioning for a potential presidential run. But that kind of calculation does 
not appear to be in play, at least not right now--and Obama chafes when anyone 
implies the opposite. "You should always assume that when I cast a vote or make 
a statement it is because it is what I believe in," he said. "The thing that 
bothers me is the assumption that if I make a judgment that's different from 
yours, then it must mean I am less progressive or my goals are different, 
meaning I must be not really committed to helping people but rather I am trying 
to triangulate or drift toward the DLC [Democratic Leadership Council]."

Still, there's no question that his passions are confined by intense caution. 
Joan Claybrook, president of the consumer watchdog group Public Citizen, tells 
the story of how, after Obama voted for the class-action bill, he attended a 
meeting of public-interest groups. "We were worried about what his vote 
indicated about him for the future," she said. "And he told us, 'Sometimes you 
have to trim your sails.' And I asked myself, Trim your sails for what? You 
just got elected by a wide margin--what are you trimming your sails for?"

Obama will often be a reliable liberal vote, and he can give one hell of a 
speech. But we should believe him when he downplays our expectations. He says 
he's "a work in progress," but he's in an institution that tends to stifle 
greatness. As comic Jon Stewart said, "Everybody thought Barack Obama was going 
to [inspire people] when he came to Washington, but, you know, the Senate seems 
like the place where smart people go to die." 
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