Obama’s Oddly Conservative Codas

By Matthew Rothschild. February 25, 2009

I watched Obama’s speech, and I was impressed with his performance and his command, and with some—but only some—of what he had to say.

I liked his call to bold action, but his defense of government intervention in the economy was neither as fulsome nor as persuasive as the one offered at his first press conference.

In his speech, he gave a quick tour of previous positive public interventions, and concluded, “Government didn’t supplant private enterprise; it catalyzed private enterprise.”

Well, that’s not exactly true. During World War II, it basically ran the economy. And, anyway, should government’s only role be to catalyze capitalism?

Plus, did Obama really have to say that he didn’t believe in bigger government?

He’s in the midst of a tough ideological battle with the Republicans, and he just surrendered an enormous amount of territory.

Likewise, he didn’t need to propose, in his recovery plan, and then stress, in his speech, that 90 percent of the jobs he creates will be “in the private sector.” Those will be largely nonunion jobs, and less secure ones, at that.

Nor did he have to reiterate his pledge to cut the deficit in half by the end of his first term. That’s precisely the wrong thing to do in the Great Recession. He will either accomplish this goal and kill off the recovery, or fail to meet the goal he foolishly set for himself.

And while he had the cutting knife in his hand, he menaced Social Security with it.

He sang some populist notes, like talking tough with bankers, though he didn’t propose the obvious solution, nationalization. How could he, with his paeans to the private sector?

He also put as much blame on the American people for overspending and overbuying, as he did on the banks for swindling them and then gambling on their securitized mortgages.

He played to the stands when he repeated his lecture to parents to turn off the TV and read to their children. In a line that Ronald Reagan could have uttered, he said, “There is no program or policy that can substitute for a mother or father” who is involved with their kids.

Though his agenda was liberal and ambitious in some places, his coda was too often oddly conservative.

Comments

Just to reformulate slightly my point above about the New Deal and World War II. Let me quote from an article by Brian Wadell, who, after referring to the stalemate that was killing off New Deal programs in the late 1930s, then says that "wartime mobilization resolved the New Deal political stalemate in large part by granting various segments of the corporate community the opportunity to influence the shape of U.S. national state." (Journal of Policy History 11.3 (1999) 223-256.

Wadell does not argue this from a conservative, but from a radical socialist perspective (definitely not mine, but that doesn't matter). Yet here we have the Progressive favorably juxtaposing World War II corporatist state mobilization to Obama's form of it and merely saying Obama needs to do more. I've said before on this site that Obama's agenda is corporatist statism, not the soft-focus ideological obfuscation known as social democracy or socialism.

Submitted by JonBurack on Sun, 03/01/2009 - 10:06pm.

CURRENT ISSUE: FEBRUARY 2012

February 2012

Progressive Matt

The Koch Brothers Conspire to Buy the White House