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IAN WILLIAMS
is a Columnist for MaximsNews Network.
See his Blog: DeadlinePundit. This
article was first published in The
Tribune.
REASON WE
DARE TO HOPE FOR AN OBAMA VICTORY by IAN WILLIAMS:
20/04/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 20
April 2008 -- MY FAVOURITE memory of Hillary Clinton is her address
to New York trade union activists fundraising for her Senate campaign. “I
have been associated with the same causes as you all my working life”, she
declared with her typical brass-necked chutzpah. Indeed she has. She was a
corporate lawyer working for anti-union companies.
While many of the Republican attacks against her smack of fervent misogyny,
the Clintons give plenty of more rational reasons to provoke unsupportive
reactions. Hillary has all the negative connotations of Bill’s tenure, but
lacks her husband’s charisma and political charm.
Barack Obama is not the new prophet to lead the United States out of the
wilderness of neo-liberal capitalism, but his election would augur well for
the maturity of American society. It would indicate that the scars of slavery
were fading and, along with them, the Republicans’ “Southern strategy”,
aimed at winning white voters.
Obama did not always have the lock on black American votes that he now has.
Clinton inherited her husband’s tremendous (and not objectively merited)
support among them. It was hers to lose – and she did, as she sent out coded
signals to whites, which black voters were historically well-equipped to
decode. Registrations of young black voters have soared across the US – and
it is open to question whether they would actually turn out for Clinton in a
presidential election.
On the other hand, Obama’s deft footwork has benefited him in the racial
minefield of American politics. His skin colour is belied by his mixed race
origins, so that white voters who would cavil at what they see as the
influence of “professional” blacks can and do support him. His thoughtful
speeches on this issue show that Obama knows how to walk the tightrope, while
Clinton’s cynical attempts to push him off seem to be backfiring.
One question is the Hispanic vote, which has been going solidly in favour of
Clinton. Many Hispanics are, in their own way, redneck about blacks. It
remains to be seen how the endorsement of Governor Bill Richardson –
hitherto the most prominent Hispanic Democratic candidate – will help Obama
in the primaries. In the presidential election, it is unlikely Hispanics will
switch to the Republicans whose overtly anti-immigrant and covertly racist
attitudes offer little to them.
Underlying the attenuated ideological content of the Democratic Party, both
Obama and Clinton have been raising more money from the Republicans’ natural
business base, which perhaps suspects the right-wing ideology of the
conservatives makes McCain unelectable. Obama has been even more successful in
this area than Clinton, which should serve as a reality check to leftists and
keep their expectations within modest bounds.
However, an Obama victory would be a fitting nemesis for the “new”
Democrats and the Clintons, whose dark side becomes more apparent as Hillary
sees herself baulked of what she had taken for granted.
The Clinton strategy – the model for Tony Blair’s “new” Labour –
depends on raising funds from wealthy people and staying unconstrained by
pandering to the “special interest groups” representing the poor, workers
and ethnic minorities, whose votes are taken for granted. In the primaries,
Hillary neglected “unimportant” states, just as she neglects
“unimportant” people.
Her Karl Rove-style tactics against Obama have exacerbated her
conscious
abstention from building a grassroots campaign to raise serious doubts about
her ability to win the race to the White House against McCain.
Regardless of any damage to her party, she will not bow out, hoping that its
senior officials – the so-called super delegates – will defy their
constituents’ mandates and support her at the Democratic convention.
In contrast, Obama has built up a national grassroots campaign, which is
hardly surprising. That is how he built his political base in Chicago.
Unfortunately for Clinton, many among the party leadership now see her as the
least viable option to break the Republican hold on the White House. But by
fighting to the last, she ensures the Democrats are, in the nature of the
primary system, eviscerating themselves in public while McCain concentrates on
November’s election.
What does all this mean to the rest of the world? In terms of foreign policy,
it is justified in cheering for Obama. McCain supports the war in Iraq and
hews to a vigorous unilateralism mitigated only by a rationality lacking from
the current administration. At least he recognises the need for allies and is
opposed to torture.
Clinton is basically a neo-conservative who stayed with the Democrats. She
supported the war in Iraq and now only opposes it for the inimitably
Clintonian reason that open support is an obvious vote-loser. She has the
spine her husband lacks, but shares his unscrupulousness.
Obama has been a voice of reason, consistently opposing the Iraq war, calling
for engagement with Iran and Cuba and even sailing dangerously close to the
wind on the Israel-Palestinian issue.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., Barack
Obama, Hillary
Clinton, John
McCain, Iraq War, Grassroots
Campaign, Primaries,
Presidential
Election
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