David Sirota thinks that the the left doesn’t exist in this country. Depending on how you define ‘exist’ and ‘the left,’ I might agree with him. Certainly, we don’t have any viable political parties that are as far left as what you’ll see in most of Europe. The majority of the conservative parties in Europe are closer in most respects to America’s Democratic Party than its Republican Party.
But, I don’t think Sirota really knows what he’s talking about.
First, he seems to think that progressives in this country are too optimistic and trusting.
What has prevented an American Left from existing is a deeper “trust” ideology among activists. Maybe it’s because we are more optimistic, maybe because we want to see the good in everyone, or maybe it’s because we’re as innately wimpy as the Right says – but it’s clear that progressives are far more willing to “trust” celebrity politicians and others perceived to have Establishment power than pressure or even question those icons.
Yet, David Sirota and the progressive circles he runs in are about the furthest thing from optimistic and trusting. The idea that they want to see the good in everyone is belied by his own argument. For example, look at how he treats the newest senator from Massachusetts:
Two weeks ago, the Massachusetts legislature did not merely make a mockery of election law by going back and forth and then back to allowing its governor to appoint Senate replacements. Gov. Deval Patrick (D) then appointed former pharmaceutical lobbyist, insurance executive and corporate lawyer Paul Kirk to fill the seat of Ted Kennedy – right in the middle of the legislative endgame on health care. Patrick passed over the three-term former governor and one-time Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis to appoint Kirk – a person who has never held public office.
It was appalling to watch Kirk’s appointment be publicly justified by his friendship with Kennedy – as if Senate seats are something to just be passed around to buddies. But it was telling that almost voice on the Left made a peep about what this really says about American politics and the Democratic Party.
That the Kennedy family recommended Paul Kirk as the man they would like to see carry the torch for Teddy on health care reform is entirely discounted. That Kirk was the former head of the DNC is not mentioned. All that matters is that he once worked as a lobbyist for the pharmaceutical industry. Is that cause for concern? Sure. But isn’t this precisely a case of thinking the worst of someone?
Or, take this bit on Jim Messina.
As the Wall Street Journal reported this weekend, the Professional Beltway Left is now being given orders every Tuesday by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Jim Messina – the same Jim Messina who was chief of staff to Max Baucus when Baucus helped President Bush ram through almost every one of the Republican’s signature initiatives (with the exception of Social Security privatization).
Actually, the Wall Street Journal did not report that the ‘Professional Beltway Left’ is ‘taking orders’ from Messina. They reported that relations between the left and the administration are improving and that one of the reasons is that Messina meets weekly with progressive activists at a ‘common purpose’ table to hear each other out. But, apparently, the fact that Messina used to work for Baucus is all that matters.
All of this leads to this amateurish diagnosis:
As I’ve written before, a party is not a movement (and neither are cable networks, magazines or think tanks that serve only to promote a party). So when you are wondering why the Democratic Party proceeds to sell out the public option or environmental policy or anything else, you have your answer: It’s because the “American Left” has made the party, not the policy, the objective. Only when that formula and outlook is reformed will we have any prayer of turning “hope” into “change.”
If he were optimistic, he wouldn’t be predicting the imminent sell-out of the public option or environmental policy or anything else. If he had any real analytical skill, he wouldn’t be blaming the limitations on progressive progress on progressives. Who voted against Rockefeller’s public option amendment in the Finance Committee? Answer: Max Baucus, Kent Conrad, Blanche Lincoln, Bill Nelson, and Tom Carper. Are any of them progressives? Are progressives to blame for their votes? When it comes time to debate the Climate Change Bill in the Senate, who do you think is going to water it down or kill it? It will be Democrats from energy producing states like Robert Byrd, Jay Rockefeller, Mary Landrieu, Tim Johnson, etc. The obstacles to progressive change are not coming from progressives. The obstacles are built right in to the fabric of our political system.
The make-up of the Senate (two senators per state, regardless of population) is the biggest culprit. The way the Constitution sets up federal elections, basically determining that we have a permanent two-party system is another culprit. The obscene amount of money needed to run for office, and the flood of corporate money in our electoral system is yet another.
All of these factors shift our politics far to the right of what we see in other industrialized nations. But we aren’t having difficulty passing health care or energy reform because progressives are too optimistic and trusting. We aren’t facing obstacles because progressives have been working within the two-party system. We are only able to debate these changes at all because of all the progress we’ve made over the last five years by working within the system. When we look around and see that we still can’t get what we want, it’s frustrating. It’s enough to make an activist pessimistic. But it ain’t our fault for trying. Whatever the left is in this country, the only place it is being represented in Congress is in the Democratic Party. That may be unsatisfying, but consider where we were after the 2004 elections, and compare that to where we are now.
Sirota gives “the left” a bad name, with his third-grade level of analysis.
One of many things that Sirota does not comprehend is that it’s possible to push and prod the administration, without constantly sowing cynicism.
awww…now look what you’ve gone and done; you’re gonna hurt lil’ davids’ feelings.
sirota’s always seemed like the eeyore of the open left crew to me.
ims, he was going to quit blogging back in may, because he was sick and tired of the slings and arrows regularly sent his way from his compatriots on the left…but, sadly, the posts at OL and dKos have been deleted.
his outlook, analytical skills, and commentary certainly hasn’t improved.
maybe he should reconsider.
Sirota’s a tool. He’s been whining for years. Eeyore is exactly right.
Sirota is just the name Ralph Nader blogs under. So obvious.
Okay, then now that we have straightened that out, according to Ralph there is no left left in America. It is all Corporate politics. Show me another FDR out there and I will follow him to hell if need be. But, sadly, there is none.
The Founders just never accounted for the effects of corruption on democracy. They also left the First Amendment out there, never even indicating that lies if generalized enough cannot be subject to civil action. Drats. Our democracy has been bought up. Politicians can lie.
What have we come to?
Why so pessimistic?, you say. Get this, reported from Huffington:
Will Sirota ever buy anything this big? He’s poor, a Democrat with doubts. Leave him alone.
I quit participating over at OL largely because of Sirota’s preemptive attacks on Obama. He can’t seem to distinguish between criticism/pressure and undermining a president who, whatever else, is a damn site better than what we’ve had in a while.
Still, he’s right about not having a left in this country compared to almost anywhere else. And I think he’s right that we go along too easily, and excuse too easily, the willingness of the Democratic Party to slide to the right at the clink of a coin or the screech of a loony.
Excusing our failings as necessities caused by a lousy system ends up being a kind of circular argument: a real left would be working and screaming for a restart on
A real left would not accept the system as it is. We’d be, at the very least, concentrating our energies and resources on taking the money out of electoral politics. We would be agitating for a new look at “corporate personhood”. We would be working for what used to be called economic justice — a deep redistribution of wealth through the tax system and a hugely expanded social safety net. We would be campaigning to reverse everything Phil Gramm, the root of all evil, has ever done. We certainly wouldn’t be looking to the Democratic Party to take the lead on this or any other “radical” systemic change.
The Constitution has been amended on behalf of all kinds of trivial matters like prohibition. A real left would be insisting on questioning its extreme conservative bias and finding ways to ameliorate that. We’d probably be organizing for a Constitutional Convention, except we’re too spooked by the loonies to take that risk. So I think Sirota’s right to complain about the left, but wrong in his analysis. We’re not too optimistic, we’re too scared of being called “radical” or “commie” or even “socialist”. We’re too timid and beaten down by decades of intellectual genocide. I do see some hope in the kind of public pressure put on individual Dems re healthcare by outfits like DFA, MoveOn, and others. With any luck, they’ve planted a seed that will find a new way to mount an independent left movement with sharp teeth — one that uses the Democratic Party for its own ends instead of the current opposite reality.
“Sirota’s preemptive attacks on Obama. He can’t seem to distinguish between criticism/pressure and undermining a president who, whatever else, is a damn site better than what we’ve had in a while.”
Sirota is not the only progressive with this problem. There seem to be many who take lessons from David. I keep trying to tell them that pushing to the Left is different than taking on an extremely harsh tone and attacking everything that the President does or does not do with such fervor that they sound like the crazies on the right.
I think that if people bother to look at the Stimulus bill, they will find a lot of really progressive items that are still in the works.
This is a good article on administration accomplishments:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dylan-loewe/wheres-the-change-there-a_b_301653.html
And this is a compilation of accomplishments gathered from whitehouse.gov:
http://obama-truth.blogspot.com/2009/08/defending-president.html
I think that we should push the President to the left but we should also thank him for what he has accomplished in less than 9 months in office.
Has our President changed the world? I would say Yes and the best is yet to come!
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE59447120091005
I doubt if we could have elected anyone who works so hard on so many fronts at the same time. So… push to the left but also be supportive (and ignore Sirota!).
Perhaps he’s labelling progressives as too optimistic and trusting in order to differentiate himself as a hard nosed poll who can get things done? His analysis (what little I have read) always seems to be about HIM.
Never been a fan of David Sirota. He’s a horrible analyst. He toots his own horn far too often, too, and it’s kind of pathetic because, again, he’s not that talented. He constantly refers to his “syndicated” blog or magazine or w/e the hell it is in the beginning of every post. I didn’t even read his piece to know that he did it.
edit: Wow, like, this is the first time ever that it wasn’t referenced. I’m impressed, David.
He got into the game early, and his franchise relies on his being as much well-known as good.
New media and path-dependency are closely tied together. Sirota’s timing was superb. Spencer Ackerman, e.g. and otoh, came along about ten months too late to become Spencer Ackerman™
Is it possible that David Sirota is not the caricature some of you commentors make him out to be? He’s written a couple of decent books. He offers some insights into our political system from the left worth considering. He seems like a committed liberal frustrated with our inability to gain real power against the corporate elite.
I’ve never noticed his analysis to be substandard until reading this post. Maybe he has had it wrong occasionally, but does it mean he’s really all that bad?
The thing that I don’t get is this notion that somehow there once were leaders that stood up for all that’s right and good and never backed down.
Take FDR. No doubt one of the best, but FDR was the towering political figure of his day, had a totally discredited Republican party, huge majorities, and didn’t have to really worry about a well financed right wing noise machine or filibusters on everything, and yet passed a Social Security Act that until improved over the following decades was a watered down racist piece of shit.
The original Social Security act gave NOTHING to all domestic and agricultural workers, meaning African Americans, Hispanics, and immigrants got nothing. In addition it gave no benefits to the self-employed, railroad employees, clergy, federal and local workers, surviviors and their dependents, as well as giving no help to the disabled. It also had no cost of living adjustment built in. It could not have been any more watered down.
You combine that with FDR doing nothing on health care, as well as that little incident of locking up Japaneese Americans and taking their homes away from them and you see the man wasn’t perfect. Yet in spite of all that I still think, as most do, he was great.
LBJ is another one. For all the talk of how tough he was, where was his Universal Health Care? Oh, that’s right. He found the task to daunting and caved.
Instead he settled on a plan that you pay payroll taxes your whole life for, yet doesn’t kick in until you’re 65. With the average life span then being about 70, you pretty much have to wait till you’re at death’s door for the plan to kick in, so then you have to go out and purchase private insurance to tide you over until you’re 65. Yeah it’s great he covered the old and the poor (medicaid) be he tossed the whole rest of the country uneder the bus. Yet it was still great we got those two programs.
My point is progress is incremental, and Sirota seems incapable of ever seeing it. Obama, I’ve always maintained, is at least as progressive as FDR and LBJ, perhaps moreso. But Sirota seems intent on just pouting, undermining the admiistration, and blaming progressive themselves because legislation isn’t perfect.
What’s actually changed is that the Democratic Party has been become more liberal and the GOP has become much, much more conservative. A higher percentage of Republican senators voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 than Democratic senators. The idea that we’ve suddenly degenerated is a myth. For the first time ever, we have a working majority without the South.
I completely agree with your sentiment. That is something I point out all of the time.
But that fact has fallen on deaf ears.
I also find Sirota grating at times, but he has a point about progressives being too trusting.
In the sector of the nonprofit world I work in, peace activism, organizations are hurting badly. AFSC, for example, just cut 50% of its budget at its regional and national offices. Why? Like all such groups, the economy has had an impact, but at least as much of an impact has been the attitude that with Bush gone and Obama in power, we can rest easy. The fact that we’re still in two pointless wars, still practice rendition and torture, still embrace Bush-era civil liberties and state secret policies, etc. is immaterial. Obama will take care of it. We” won.
The insider baseball of what Obama, pragmatically speaking, can or can’t do at this moment, misses the point. He has those constraints in part because there’s little in the way of a progressive movement in this country pushing him or other elected officials. And there are a lot of reasons for that. In some ways Sirota is blaming the victims here — victims of money in politics, fatuous media, the disconnect between what the public wants and what we get, etc.
But some people — I’ve talked with them — can’t be bothered battling those structural impediments, because it’s just easier to trust Obama. That, I think, is what Sirota is referencing.
Now, about the fact that David seems to think anyone who doesn’t agree with him on everything is a sellout…
Actually, the Wall Street Journal did not report that the ‘Professional Beltway Left’ is ‘taking orders’ from Messina.
Wasn’t it actually Jane Hamsher that said this? Or at least referenced this? Meaning Messina, not the Murdoch toilet paper. Her whole thing on the liberal “veal pen”.