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dcsmart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 12:55 PM
Original message
Obama names third Republican to cabinet
We always hear criticism from the right, i think it is equally informative to hear criticism from the left. I do not completely agree with this article, i campaigned for Obama and he is my president, but we need to hear voices from all sides.

(p.s. most republicans stink) sorry, not objective, but oh well. the cause of the working class (that means 95% of us) and their well-being is my only concern and polices that support and increase their standard of living are the correct polices.



A further bow to the right
By Barry Grey
4 February 2009

Barack Obama deepened his extraordinary efforts at bipartisan collaboration with the Republican Party on Tuesday with the announcement of New Hampshire Republican Senator Judd Gregg as his pick for commerce secretary.


Judd’s confirmation by the Senate, which is virtually assured, will bring to three the number of Republicans in Obama’s cabinet, including the unprecedented retention of Bush’s defense secretary, Robert Gates. The other Republican cabinet member is former congressman Ray LaHood, picked to head the Department of Transportation.


Besides naming Republicans to cabinet posts, Obama has elevated three recently retired four-star military officers to top government positions, an unparalleled representation of the military brass in a Democratic administration. He has appointed Gen. James Jones, retired Marine commandant, as his national security adviser; Gen. Eric Shinseki, retired Army chief of staff, as secretary for veterans affairs; and retired Admiral Dennis Blair as director of national intelligence.


The extent of Obama’s bowing before the Republican right is highlighted by his agreement, as demanded by Gregg, to have New Hampshire’s Democratic governor appoint a Republican to assume the vacated Senate seat. By so doing, Obama—with the support of the Democratic leadership in Congress—is foregoing the chance to obtain the 60 Democratic seats in the Senate required to defeat Republican efforts to block legislation by means of filibusters. The Democrats already control 58 seats and Democrat Al Franken is expected to survive legal challenges to his election victory in Minnesota, bringing the Democratic majority to 59.


As the New York Times reported Tuesday: “Even when the possibility of putting a Democrat in Mr. Gregg’s Senate seat dimmed, Mr. Obama pressed ahead, telling his advisers that it was more important to build a bipartisan cabinet than increase his Senate majority.”


In fact, Obama and the Democratic congressional leadership are more than happy to replace Gregg with another Republican. In the run-up to the November election, there were numerous press reports citing Democratic fears that a 60-seat majority in the upper chamber would unduly arouse popular expectations—i.e., that it would remove a convenient excuse for continuing in all essentials the reactionary foreign and domestic policies of the Bush administration.


At his press conference to announce Gregg’s nomination, Obama made a point of stressing the right-wing credentials of his choice to head the Commerce Department. He said Gregg is “famous or infamous, depending on your perspective, on Capitol Hill for his strict fiscal discipline.” Obama indicated that Gregg’s reputation was well suited to his own plans to slash social programs and impose austerity measures on the American people, saying that Gregg “shares my deep-seated commitment to guaranteeing that our children inherit a future they can afford.”


Notwithstanding his fiscal conservative credentials, when it comes to protecting the interests of Wall Street, Gregg is an enthusiastic supporter of massive government bailouts. As the ranking Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, he helped draw up the Wall Street rescue plan last year and was one of a handful of Republicans who voted last month to release the second half of the $700 billion package.


In announcing the selection of Gregg, Obama added to his incessant appeals for bipartisan collaboration, saying it was necessary to “put aside stale ideology and petty partisanship and embrace what works.”


This kowtowing before the Republican right goes hand in hand with an extraordinary and unseemly deference to the military. Reporting on Obama’s first meeting with the joint chiefs of staff, held last Thursday, the New York Times noted that the military chiefs “left ‘comforted’ about Obama’s willingness to work with them.”


The article continued: “Pentagon officials say they are relieved that Obama is proceeding slowly on two campaign promises: to pull all combat troops out of Iraq within 16 months and to allow gay men and women to serve openly in the military.”


The Times noted the pains Obama has taken to pass muster with the brass, including carefully practicing his first public salute, executed on inauguration day, laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns and visiting wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in the run-up to the inauguration, and speaking by video feed to US troops in Afghanistan at the Commander-in-Chief Ball on the evening of the inauguration.


None of this prevented Gen. Raymond Odierno, the US commander in Iraq, from holding a press conference last week in which he dismissed Obama’s campaign pledge to withdraw one brigade a month and all US combat troops within 16 months—leaving behind tens of thousands of “non-combat” forces—and announced that the speed and level of troop withdrawals would be determined by the military according to its assessment of the security situation on the ground in Iraq.


What accounts for Obama’s extraordinary deference to the Republican right and the military?


Ever since his election, and even more so since his inauguration, Obama’s efforts have focused on assuaging the most right-wing sections of the ruling elite and the military and assuring them that they have nothing to fear from his administration. Despite his decisive election victory and his high opinion poll numbers—attributable to popular hatred for the Republicans, opposition to war and Bush’s right-wing social policies, and a general swing to the left among broad layers of the population—Obama has acted as one who believes his administration cannot survive without substantial Republican support and solid backing from the financial elite and the military brass.


The new Democratic president has managed to refurbish the image of the Republican Party following its electoral rout in November, presenting it as a powerful and legitimate force, not the despised bastion of political reaction that was repudiated by the American electorate. Indeed, Obama has given the Republicans virtual veto power over his administration’s policies.


One reason is that Obama knows that no matter how discredited and unpopular among the broad masses of the people, the Republican Party represents powerful sections of the ruling elite, including the bulk of the military officer corps.


Nevertheless, the contrast between the behavior of the Democrats and Republicans is striking. In power, the Republicans function ruthlessly as the ruling party. Out of power, they function no less ruthlessly as the opposition.


With the Democrats, it is the exact opposite. When they do not manage to throw an election and instead find themselves in power, they temporize and conciliate, cowering before the Republicans and at every point looking anxiously over their shoulders lest they offend the military brass. Out of power, they serve as little more than a rubber stamp for the Republicans.


This has been the pattern at least since the Clinton administration, when the Democrats collapsed in the face of the Kenneth Starr witch hunt of Clinton and followed that up with an abject acceptance of Bush’s theft of the 2000 election. That, in turn, set the stage for Democratic collaboration in all of the crimes carried out in the name of the “war on terror,” which the Democrats embraced and continue to promote.


It is worth noting that Gregg, who will now sit in the same cabinet as Hillary Clinton, voted in the 1999 Senate impeachment trial of her husband to convict and remove him from office.


The different behavior of the two parties, both of which are instruments of the same corporate ruling elite, is bound up with their somewhat different functions in defending American capitalism. The Republicans openly and directly champion the interests of the most reactionary sections of the corporate establishment. The Democrats, by virtue of their specific historical and political role as a lightning rod for popular discontent, tasked with preempting any independent political movement of the working class, are obliged to posture as a party of the “common man” and the “middle class.” The need to maintain this fiction while upholding the interests of the ruling class imparts to their actions their distinctively half-hearted and two-faced character.


As the Democratic Party has abandoned any program of social reform and lurched to the right, in parallel with the decline in the global economic position of American capitalism, the disparity between its populist pretence and its policy and practice has grown increasingly naked. Moreover, its leading personnel have participated in the self-enrichment of the top layers of American society over the past three decades, and their political outlook has accordingly shifted further to the right.


In social and class terms, the Democratic Party and the Obama administration do not represent the millions of working people who voted them into office, but rather sections of the financial elite and the most privileged upper-middle-class layers. Whatever their differences with Bush and the Republicans, these layers want no part of wealth redistribution from the top to the bottom, and they fear an upsurge from below far more than the predations of the Republican right.


Obama himself—the product of the Chicago Democratic Party machine, promoted by multi-millionaire sponsors and the recipient of nearly a billion dollars in campaign cash, the bulk of it from corporate interests—embodies these privileged and politically reactionary social layers.
Text


SOURCE SITE
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/feb2009/obam-f04.shtml


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ErinBerin84 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 12:57 PM
Response to Original message
1. I'm not that pleased with it.
Edited on Wed Feb-04-09 12:58 PM by ErinBerin84
But Gates is only staying on for a year, right? Obama did say he'd have more than one...hopefully Gates will be replaced by a Dem leaving just two.
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TwilightGardener Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:02 PM
Response to Original message
2. Funny, of the FEW Republicans I like and trust (Powell, Chafee, Hagel, Leach, etc.) who
also were kind or helpful to Obama during the campaign, NONE seem to have been offered anything in Obama's administration. I wonder if that's because they are no longer "in power", or are tainted because they aren't liked anymore by the GOP, and thus aren't useful to him now? I do find it odd--someone here once said that Obama rewards his enemies more than his friends, and I guess that's true in some ways (except for Daschle and Kaine).
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dflprincess Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:18 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. Powell is tainted by the lies he willfully told the U.N. (eom)
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TwilightGardener Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:19 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Yeah, but everyone fucks up. His fuck-up was big, but he redeemed himself
somewhat by supporting Obama at risk of condemnation from his own party.
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WinkyDink Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:27 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Too bad for the dead and maimed.
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TwilightGardener Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:30 PM
Response to Reply #8
12. I'm not opposed to Powell having to wear a permanent hairshirt of sorts--but I don't
think he's the worst person in the world, either. I applaud people who do the right thing, even when it comes on the heels of having done the wrong thing.
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dflprincess Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:28 PM
Response to Reply #6
10. When your lies have resulted in deaths of thousands of people
it's going to take a lot more than supporting the same candidate I'm voting for to redeem yourself.
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Bleacher Creature Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:03 PM
Response to Original message
3. Not thrilled with it either, but he said that he would do this.
Clinton appointed a token Republican to his cabinet (Cohen) and Bush did the same (Mineta). Obama made clear during the campaign that his vision of bipartisanship would be mean that he wouldn't just appoint a single, token, GOPer. I don;t love the idea, but it's not a surprise.

That said, I agree that I'll feel better as soon as Gates is gone and replaced by a Dem.
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TwilightGardener Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:06 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. I'm not sure Gates will be replaced by a Dem--I think he'll be replaced
with Raytheon Lobbyist Man, the undersecretary--is he a Democrat?
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Kalyke Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:22 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. Should be Wes Clark - he'll be eligible in 2010.
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TwilightGardener Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:27 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. My gut tells me that Clark is not on Obama's radar at all--never was, never will be.
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Kalyke Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:42 PM
Response to Reply #9
13. What a shame. Clark's brains make Obama's look small - and
that's not a put-down of Obama - just a compliment of Clark. He did consult him during the campaign, though.



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WinkyDink Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 01:29 PM
Response to Original message
11. I guess I'm just an Old School Democrat, because no Republican would please me.
I'd have to ask them: "Explain why you are not a Democrat. Which Democratic principle do you object to?"
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Hippo_Tron Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 02:38 PM
Response to Original message
14. Explain to me why I should be concerned about who runs the Department of Commerce
And don't give me the "He's going to rig the census in favor of the Republicans" nonsense.
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PurityOfEssence Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-04-09 02:50 PM
Response to Original message
15. Hey, he's got more in his cabinet than he can get to vote for him
by a factor of INFINITY!

These guys play for keeps. Coexistence is not part of the conservative way. Liberals accept that people are different and that people should interact with and accomodate others. Conservatives KNOW that they're correct; others are not only wrong, they shouldn't even exist.

Why does he keep reaching across the aisle? BECAUSE THEY DON'T REACH BACK.

At some point, the noble concept of inclusiveness becomes candy-assed fear of going it alone. If the olive branch keeps getting offered and rejected, he needs to swat 'em with it and do what he wants. After awhile, it all smacks of uber-cautious deniability: wanting Republicans to sign on, too, so if it fails, they'll have some responsibility.

Great strengths are great weaknesses. Obama has a skill of charting a middle course and keeping many doors open, but now is the time for decisiveness. He's showing some of that, and perhaps he'll finally get sick of the obstructionist assholes and press on with his own theories, but it's not familiar territory for him.

I certainly don't envy him for the snake pit he's in, and I wish him luck and some resoluteness.
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