podesta-emails
[big campaign] New Huff Post from Creamer -- Standing Up for Government
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Time for Progressive to Stand Up Proudly for Government
From the beginning of the “Reagan Revolution” in 1980 until the election
of Barack Obama, Progressives were in a defensive crouch. The ideas and
values of the right wing were predominant. During the Clinton years, at
least there were two ideological teams on the field, but even then
Progressives fought on the defense – especially when it came to the role of
government. Remember it was Bill Clinton who felt compelled to open a State of the
Union with the words: “The era of Big Government is over.”
Today’s health care debate epitomizes the sharp difference between the
progressive understanding of the role of government, and the right wing views
underlying of the failed policies that culminated in the Bush years
This year Progressives, lead by President Obama, have stopped apologizing
for our view the proper role of government, and begun to assert that Reagan
was fundamentally wrong when he said government was the problem. Instead,
as Congressman Barney Frank says, government is the name we give to the
things we choose to do together.
The right wing argues that government can never do things as well as the “
private sector.”
Government is not always the solution, any more than it is always the
problem. But in many cases, Progressives know that it is more efficient, more
effective and more consistent with the values of a democratic society for
all of us to do something together – through our government.
Progressive leaders need to finish getting out of that defensive crouch,
stand up straight, and assert our view of government forcefully and without
apology.
After all, we have the high political ground. For example, today’s
Washington Post-ABC poll shows continued strong public support for a public health
insurance option (57% support, 40% oppose). The public option has
consistently shown to be the most popular element of health reform.
The same poll shows that 55% of voters feel that the health care plan
would create either the right amount (34%) or not enough (21%) “government
involvement in the nation’s health-care system”. The charge that health care
reform will result in a “government take-over” of health care has failed to
resonate.
In fact one of the major concerns voters raise about health care reform is
the fear – especially among seniors – that it would weaken the very
popular government-run Medicare system. It’s actually pretty remarkable that one
of the most potent criticisms Republicans have raised about health care
reform is this completely incorrect charge that it would weaken the
government run Medicare program that the Right opposed as socialized medicine for
years.
Progressives know that Government action is necessary to assure the public
health, provide public education, and maintain the public infrastructure
for our common life – from streets, parks, and airports, to mass
transportation. Government is the expression of our common life – our life as a
community; and in democratic societies, it is much more accountable to average
citizens than any other major decision-making structure, including large
corporations.
Most Americans agree with us that government – not the “private sector,”
is best equipped to provide public security, fire protection, public
education, highways, public transportation and a common defense against enemies.
Most also agree that we are much better off providing everyone with Social
Security and health insurance for retirement through Medicare. And most
agree that government has the obligation to make sure that all Americans
have health insurance.
After 9/11, when it was obvious that America needed to massively
strengthen its airport security, there was uniform agreement that security screeners
should become officers of the government rather than the private security
contractors who had done the screening before the 9/11 attacks. The choice
seemed obvious. Where you want serious attention to security and public
accountability everyone agreed that the screening personnel should be
officers of our government.
In fact, the demonization of government -- and the Right’s success over
the last three decades at diverting resources from the public sector into the
hands of Wall Street and multi-national corporations -- have lead directly
to our most intractable problems. It has shortchanged our investment in
the education of our next generation, created a health care system that
costs twice as much per person as any other on earth but leaves us 37th in
health care outcomes. It has starved our investment in infrastructure and
energy efficiency.
The anti-government forces prevented serious regulation of Wall Street
that lead directly to the frenzy of reckless risk-taking that precipitated the
current economic collapse, and cost millions their jobs.
By starving the public sector they contributed directly to the
concentration of income in the top 1 percent of the population, and outsized growth of
Wall Street and the rest of the financial sector.
Right wing activist Grover Norquist, the leader of the Republican efforts
to slash taxes for the wealthy, expressed their view in its purest form
when he said he believes that government needs to be “shrunk to the size that
it can be drowned in the bathtub.” In his view, government is the enemy of
moral purpose, which resides solely in the ability of individuals to pursue
their own individual self-interest. In a utopian right wing world, there
are very few things that we should choose to do together.
From the progressive point of view, government is critically necessary
because it uses the common wealth for the common good – to make individual
freedom possible – and to allow each individual to realize his or her own
individual goals and aspirations. In the progressive view, as George Lakoff
says, “the common wealth builds the infrastructure for freedom.”
The progressive view of the role of government is not a radical new
departure. It dominated American domestic politics from 1932 until the mid 1970’
s. That dominant view translated directly into policies that created a
huge leap in economic growth. Real income grew among every sector of the
American population and the level of income inequality shrank precipitously.
The right wing counter-revolution against government never spread to most
other developed countries in the world. The progressive view of the role of
government is widely shared throughout Europe and Asia not just by the
center-left – but by many who would describe themselves as center-right.
Today the right wing view that “government is the problem” is shared by a
shrinking minority of the American population, and it is embodied in the
ideology of a rapidly declining Republican Party that is out of touch with
the needs and beliefs of ordinary Americans – not to speak of the views of
people in the rest of the world. Only 20% of Americans now self identify as
Republicans according to today’s Washington Post-ABC Poll – the lowest in a
quarter century.
But the most important thing for us to remember is that the
anti-government ideology is not simply a set of ideas that emerged whole cloth from
scholars at the CATO Institute or the mind of Rush Limbaugh. It is not simply an
alternative view of what’s good for the “public interest.” It is the
creation of those who use it to justify their own private gain.
It is used to justify the empirically unsupportable notion that private
insurance companies are better at providing health insurance than publicly
organized insurance programs like Medicare, or the public health insurance
programs that provide better health care outcomes in other industrial
countries at much lower prices. Would anyone seriously argue that we should
leave fire protection to the private sector We all agree that it is both more
efficient and more humane to make fire protection the responsibility of
government. The same goes for health insurance – a fact that has been
recognized throughout the rest of the world.
Of course, health insurance companies don’t embrace anti-government
rhetoric because of some deep-seated ideological commitment. They do it so they
can continue to make huge profits and pay multi-million dollar executive
salaries.
Wall Street bankers don’t battle “governmental intrusion” for ideological
reasons, they do it so they can continue to be free to make billions in
bonuses – even if they periodically bring the economy down in the process.
The Republicans don’t promote huge tax cuts for the rich out of a
high-minded belief that the private sector is more effective at investing hundreds
of millions of dollars than the government. They do it because their
wealthy backers want the money.
Opposition to policies that would create millions of new clean energy jobs
does not flow from the oil companies’ principled opposition against an “
intruding government.” They want to be free to make as much money as they
can, no matter what the consequences for our children or our planet.
The movement for more “outsourcing” of governmental functions from public
employees to private companies like Haliburton and Blackwater has nothing
to do with genuine concern for “effective” government. It has everything
to do with siphoning off taxpayer dollars into the hands of big
corporations.
The anti-government forces have always wanted to prevent us from doing
things together through a democratically accountable government, so they can do
things privately to enhance their own wealth and power – often at the
expense of everyone else.
This year Progressives – led by the President – have the opportunity to
reassert the importance of the public sector by winning health insurance
reform, financial regulatory reform, and a new energy policy. Together, let’s
get it done.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and
author of the book: “Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win,” available
on _amazon.com_
(http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Your-Mother-Straight-Progressives/dp/0979585295/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1206567141&sr=8-1) .
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