Obama deserves rebuke from Massachusetts

Alexander Cockburn: Armed with a nation’s fervent hopes, Obama has done the opposite of what he promised

Column LAST UPDATED AT 08:24 ON Fri 22 Jan 2010

Republican Scott Brown takes over a Senate seat held by the Kennedy family for over half a century and the dark cloud already hovering over Obama's White House thickens. By any measure the energetic Brown's emphatic defeat of Martha Coakley, believed only a month ago to be a sure thing as Ted Kennedy's replacement, is a disaster for the Democratic Party and for President Obama.

Coakley, a former prosecutor and attorney general of Massachusetts, ran a dumb, complacent campaign, allowing Brown to charge that she seemed to believe she had an inherent right to the seat. Coakley ladled out platitudes; Brown, pelting about in a manly GMC truck, made the Democrats' health reform bill his prime issue, which was scarcely rocket science, since people of moderate income accurately believe that "reform" is going to cost them money, with zero improvement in overall service.

A year after his inauguration Obama has disappointed so many constituencies that a rebuke by the voters was inevitable. Yesterday it came in the state often categorised as the most liberal in the union. This is entirely untrue. Massachusetts is a disgusting sinkhole of racism and vulgar prejudice, as five minutes in any taxi in the state, listening to Talk Radio or reading the local newspaper, will attest.

Brown's achievement is not novel. His type of Republican has been elected governor in Massachusetts three or four times in the last 18 years by the real "majority party" - which is the "unenrolled" independents of whom there are up to one-and-a-half times the number of Democrats among registered voters, who in turn tower over the local Republicans.

Steve Early,  a labor organiser in the state, wrote to me today that Brown "is in the mould of two recent Republican governors of Massachusetts, William Weld and Paul Celluci, the latter two actually being backed by some labor unions such as the Teamsters.

"These were genial, likeable, clean-cut jocks, presenting themselves to independent voters as a much-needed public rebuke to an increasingly corrupt, arrogant or personally screwed up Beacon Hill clique of Democrats [see recent spate of House and Senate member/leader indictments, jailings, and/or resignations pending trial]. A lot of folks, at the moment, are again just plain pissed about the self-serving political class of Democratic Donkeys who run our ‘one-party state', including the now unpopular Obama precursor, Deval Patrick."
 
Because the Democratic majority in the US senate is now reduced to 59, the common prediction is that the Democrats' health reform bill is doomed, since it takes 60 votes to override a filibuster, which the Republicans would mount to kill the bill.

More likely is that the insurance companies - who dictated the basic terms of the Obama "reform" and stand to gain millions of new customers forced by law to take out health insurance - will be loath to throw away months of successful lobbying and will dictate some new "compromise" which will allow both Republicans and Democrats to claim victory. Obama will  delightedly sign any insurance bill landing on his desk bearing the necessary label, "reform".
 
Certainly Coakley's resounding defeat is grim news for Democratic politicians limbering up for the midterm elections this coming autumn. The parallel is with the midterms of 1994, when voters, furious at the bumbling failures of Clinton's first two years, handed both the Senate and the House to Republicans for the first time in decades.  

Obama has caused fury and disillusion across the spectrum. The nutball right bizarrely portrays him as a mutant offspring of the Prophet Mohammed and Karl Marx, demonstrating that cretinism flows more strongly than ever in Uncle Sam's bloodstream.

The Republican small business crowd tremble at the huge deficits. The independents see no trace of the invigorating change pledged by Obama. Working people in the labor unions who supplied the foot-soldiers for Obama's campaign see no improvement in their economic condition. Everyone knows that Obama is the champion of bankers, not bankrupts.

The liberals morosely list 12 months of disasters, from a wider war in Afghanistan to major betrayals of pledges to restore constitutional restraints after eight years of abuse by Bush and Cheney.
 
Obama richly deserves the rebuke from Massachusetts. Armed with a nation's fervent hopes a year ago, he spurned the unrivalled opportunity offered by economic crisis to do what he pledged: usher in substantive change. He's done exactly the opposite. Wall Street has been given the green light to continue with business as usual. The stimulus package was far too weak. The opportunity for financial reform has passed. Trillions will be wasted in Afghanistan.
 
A final note on Coakley. She rose to political prominence by peculiarly vicious grandstanding as a prosecutor, winning a conviction of the 19-year-old English childminder Louise Woodward for shaking a baby to death. An outraged judge later freed Woodward, reducing her sentence to less than a year of time served. Then Coakley went after headlines in child abuse cases.

Innocent people are still rotting in prison as a consequence of Coakley's misuse of her office. For this alone, regardless of the setback the Democrats richly deserve, I rejoice in her humiliation. · 

Comments

I'm also a Brit who has lived in Massachusetts for 40 of my 50 years in the US. There is a need to change the way that insurance companies can exclude responsible people with family or childhood histories of illnesses that are expensive to treat. In other respects the system works well for the vast majority of people. Scott Brown as a State Senator provided excellent constituent service for his district regardless of politics, is highly respected by his colleagues and had many lifelong friends and classmates making personal calls to voters. At the same time even Democrats disliked Martha Coakley's grandstanding at the expense of Louise Woodward and other victims of her previously successful attempt to win votes by persecuting innocent people.

LET'S BASH OBAMA - NOBAMA, KEEP THE CHANGE - and what does the headline 'Obama deserves rebuke from Massachusetts' mean, if anything? A thrashing at the hands of the electorate in the safest of safe seats is NOT a rebuke? What is it? A tickle in the ribs?

Can we actually pull over to the side of the road for a minute and get off the Obama-bashing bus, please.

It's ridiculous to see how so many failings are being attributed to just one man. You need only look down Pennsylvania Ave. towards the Congress and the Senate houses to see that's where the major failings are. Too many self-serving lobbyists make their demands to the politicians with bags of money or promises of a career outside politics long after the congress men and women have "served" their country.

Obama has done his best with what he was left with. I'm glad he's got three more years to try and make change/reform/a difference. And I live in the UK.

This video explains the problems: http://bit.ly/7mtKlx '8 minutes on Obama's first year'

I'm also a Brit - living in the US - I am also gobsmacked by the realisation that the little guy here has no clue what he is supporting - if you have health insurance here and you have not been really sick you have no idea what it is like to deal with cancer or any other 'big' illness - people lose their homes even when they HAVE health insurance - it is a ridiculous state of affairs
that only a public system can fix -
why do they not understand that the big corporations are NOT on their side - I am heartbroken that Obama has not stood up and fought for what he seemed to be promising - we have all been
disappointed - I was waiting for a decent health service as the big missing link here in the US - such a big beautiful country - but sorely lacking in some modern ideas, due to blinders on a lot of people's eyes !!
I can see I shall have to get really politically active in the next round !

As cockburn puts it so well, cretinism still runs through Uncle Sam's vein. I agree with Peter Smmons, those of us who come from countries where health care for all is seen as a basic necessity are hard put to understand middle America's abhorrence of it. This is a society that will eventually self destruct. Perhaps sooner than we think.

On her Facebook page, under the caption "Mr. Brown Goes to Washington", Gov. Sarah Palin offers interesting reflections & pertinent political commentary on Scott Brown's victory in Massachusetts.

@Peter Simmons. They don't want them to die out. Let them perish around retirement age, beyond which they're no further use and a burden on the State. You must have read somewhere that the last two years of life are the ones that run up more medical bills than all the preceding ones. This single fact alone dictates affluent Americans' opposition to health care. Who needs old folks with no savings? Or if they have a few savings left, let them fork out to rich doctors and hospital shareholders until the savings are exhausted and they die anyway.

I wonder how many poor will die for lack of health care if the health reform bill is doomed. I find it bizarre, as a Brit, that so many affluent Americans can be so openly opposed to a health service for all, or are they hoping the poor [on which their wealth is based] will die out? Of course, everything was sweetness and light when the godfearin' chimp was on power. The US should have stayed two countries, the democrat intelligent north and the retard fascistic south.

The 'nutball right'? It seems the nutballs were right. The Obama socialist-communist tendencies, so obvious to anyone with two independent brain cells and functional dendrites, so leaked by his aides who explained that the president regards the constitution as 'just a piece of paper', the nutballs were wary on the basis that vacuities about 'hope' and 'change' meant whatever he wanted it to mean when he won - and that was unreasonable? Or are they just right?

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