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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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28 April 2009 By Dave Lindorff For almost a
generation, the Democrats in Congress have been able
to pretend to be the party of ordinary working people,
the party of progressives, and the inheritor of the
mantel of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal, all the
while doing little of substance and catering primarily
to the interests of Wall Street and the nation’s
corporate interests.
The Democrats managed this sleight of hand for so
long by claiming that while they had the best of
intentions, really. Their inability to pass
legislation, even when they were in the majority in
both houses of Congress, was, they claimed, simply
caused by the threat of bills being filibustered to
death by a Republican minority.
That excuse has continued to be paraded out to this
day, with the party currently having 58 seats in the
Senate.
But the excuse is vanishing. It appears likely that
Al Franken has won his tight race defeating former
Sen. Norm Coleman in Minnesota, with the contest all
over but the shouting. (A 3-judge state panel already
found Franken to be ahead by 312 votes, with no
outstanding issues in the count, and public opinion in
the state widely favors Coleman finally conceding.)
And now comes the changeling Arlen Specter, the
onetime Democratic district attorney of Philadelphia,
who switched to a Republican to run, first for mayor
of Philadelphia (unsuccessfully), and then for the US
Senate, a post he's held now for 29 years. But facing
likely defeat from the right in a Republican primary
for his party’s nomination by a conservative
challenger who almost knocked him off last time
around, Specter has finally faced reality: In a state
that has been moving steadily into the Democratic
column for years, his future is with the Democrats.
With Specter switching his party affiliation to
Democrat, the Democrats will finally have a
filibuster-proof 60-seat majority in the Senate, and
an already solid majority in the House.
There will, at that point, be no more excuse for
Democrats to duck progressive, liberal, pro-worker,
pro-ordinary person issues, using their old-standby
excuse of needing to compromise and win over
Republican votes. There won’t even be any need to
cater to party turncoat Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-CT) to
get things done. For that matter, there won't be any
justification for President Obama to seek
"bi-partisanship" for his programs, by watering them
down until they are meaningless.
So the way I see it, it’s time for progressives,
for the union movement, for the peace movement, for
the environmentalist movement, the single-payer health
care reform movement, indeed for all progressive
elements in the US, to pour on the pressure to get
Congress and President Obama to pass real, progressive
legislation in this Congress.
To put it simply: We don’t need no effin
“bipartisanship” anymore. The Republicans can just be
steamrollered--and should be, since that's exactly why
there are so many Democrats in Congress today and why
we have a Democratic president. The public has been
voting for progressive change.
Now granted, not all Democrats in Congress are
progressive, but getting Democrats on board for issues
like overriding a filibuster attempt is different from
getting Democrats to vote for a particular bill. The
party leaders have plenty of leverage in the form of
control over the moving forward of members’ bills, of
committee assignments, office assignments, etc., to
get members of the caucus to line up on procedural
votes like terminating a filibuster, if they want to
use them.
And of course, that’s where the pressure comes in.
No longer can Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV)
or House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) claim that they
are hamstrung by the need to win over Republican
members to their side. If they don’t use their caucus
power to control their own members, they will stand
exposed as fake liberals, and fake advocates of
ordinary Americans. They will stand exposed as agents
of the corporatocracy.
Maybe that’s what they want, but I don’t think the
party will survive that kind of exposure.
So let’s get moving. We can start with renewed
pressure for single-payer healthcare reform, passage
of the Employee Free Choice Act and a real end to the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. These are litmus test
issues for progressives and will let us know if the
Democrats are going to keep being the other corporate
party, or are going to be a real liberal alternative.
The Employee Free Choice Act will be an interesting
one to watch in Specter’s case. Specter, who has long
enjoyed union backing in Pennsylvania, a few weeks ago
said that after earlier backing the measure he was now
not going to support it. But that was when he was
facing a bitter Republican primary. Now he has to earn
his spurs as a prodigal Democrat, returned to the
fold. Unions in Pennsylvania are going to put heavy
pressure on him to back the measure if he wants to
avoid a primary now in the Democratic Party for
nomination as its candidate for Senate next year.
Specter must not be given a free pass to
re-election as a Democrat. |