Departments
After the election disaster: Back to basics
by Norman Solomon
November 5, 2010
Now what?
We need to build a grassroots progressive movement -- wide, deep and strong enough to fight the right and challenge the corporate center of the Democratic Party.
The stakes are too high and crises too extreme to accept “moderate” accommodation to unending war, regressive taxation, massive unemployment, routine foreclosures and environmental destruction.
A common formula to avoid is what Martin Luther King Jr. called “the paralysis of analysis.” Profuse theory + scant practice = immobilization.
It’s not enough to denounce what’s wrong or to share visionary blueprints. Day in and out, we’ve got to organize for effective and drastic social change, in all walks of life and with a vast array of activism.
Yes, electioneering is just one kind of vital political activity. But government power is extremely important. By now, we should have learned too much to succumb to the despairing claim that elections aren’t worth the bother.
Such a claim is false. As bad as the election results are, they would have been much worse across the country if progressives hadn’t worked hard against the right-wing juggernaut.
For instance, consider the many hundreds of on-the-ground volunteers who rejected the paralysis of analysis by walking precincts and making phone calls to help re-elect progressive Congressman Raul Grijalva. He won a tight race in Arizona’s southwestern district and will return to Congress next year -- much to the disappointment of the corporate flacks and xenophobes who tried to defeat him because of his strong stance against the state’s new racial-profiling immigration law.
The mass-media echo chamber now insists that Republicans have triumphed because President Obama was guilty of overreach. But since its first days, the administration has undermined itself -- and the country -- with tragic under-reach.
It’s all about priorities. The Obama presidency has given low priority to reducing unemployment, stopping home foreclosures or following through with lofty pledges to make sure that Main Street recovers along with Wall Street.
Far from constraining the power of the Republican Party, the administration’s approach has fundamentally empowered it. The ostensibly shrewd political strategists in the White House have provided explosive fuel for right-wing “populism” while doing their best to tamp down progressive populism. Tweaks aside, the Obama presidency has aligned itself with the status quo -- a formula for further social disintegration and political catastrophe.
The election of 2010 is now grim history. It’s time for progressives to go back to the grassroots and organize with renewed, deepened commitment to changing the direction of this country. If we believe that state power is crucial -- and if we believe in government of, by and for the people -- it’s not too soon to begin planning and working for change that can make progressive victories possible in future elections.
__________________________________________________
Norman Solomon is co-chair of the Healthcare Not Warfare campaign, launched by Progressive Democrats of America. His books include War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.
|
 |
Recent Election Issues Articles
Seeking Republican patriots: how reining in anonymous attack ads can help save our democracy December 2, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
All bled out: Post-election analysis, 2010 November 6, 2010 David S. Lewis
The party of organized money November 5, 2010 Robert C. Koehler
After the election disaster: Back to basics November 5, 2010 Norman Solomon
Ohio Chamber lies & hides election buys November 2, 2010 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
How & why we have filed racketeering charges against Karl Rove's election operations October 29, 2010 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Learning from the Tea Party October 28, 2010 Ted Glick
Visualize Karl Rove's election theft subpoena October 26, 2010 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Top "tossup" House race for progressives: Raul Grijalva October 25, 2010 Norman Solomon
Election guide for election haters October 24, 2010 David Swanson
Felon's fingers in US vote-by-mail system October 14, 2010 Blackboxvoting
Progressive canaries in a political mine October 14, 2010 Norman Solomon
On voting for bad Democrats: the Perriello predicament September 26, 2010 David Swanson
SHELBY: MATERIAL MISREPRESENTATIONS AND FLAT-OUT WHOPPERS September 23, 2010 Bev Harris/Black Box Voting
Tennessee County election audit finds more than 3,000 phantom votes September 22, 2010 Bev Harris, Black Box Voting
Elections are a waste of time -- If... September 19, 2010 Norman Solomon
The election needs you, broken heart and all September 10, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
Why the Arkansas primary challenge was worth it June 11, 2010 Paul Rogat Loeb
Franklin County Primary May 4, 2010 Pete Johnson
U.S. has agreed to store enough nuclear reactor waste to fill two Yucca Mountains March 25, 2010 Ailis Aaron Wolf, IEER
Will Diebold steal Ted Kennedy's seat – and the Senate? January 18, 2010 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Read Election Issues Articles by Year: 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 |