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[big campaign] New Huff Post from Creamer- Vote Transforms Political Landscape
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House Health Care Vote Transforms the Political Landscape
We wake up this morning surrounded by a new political world.
The House vote approving health care reform was without doubt the most
significant congressional vote in the last four decades. That’s because it
completely transformed the American political landscape. It certainly changed
America’s health care system. But it altered the balance of political
power in America as well.
* Fundamental Reform. The House vote, together with the work the Senate
will finish this week, will provide health insurance to 32 million Americans,
rein in the power of the private insurance industry and end the terror
that if you lose your job and get a serious illness you will no longer be able
to get insurance. It will ultimately help stop tens of thousands of
preventable deaths each year that are caused by the condition known as “no
insurance.”
* It brought us into the company of every other industrial nation by
establishing that from this day forward in America – health care is no longer a
privilege or a commodity but a right.
* In the two-century-long battle between progressive and conservative
values in our country, last night’s victory was momentous. Progressive values
now define the fundamental frame of reference for a massive new sector of
our economy: health care. After President Bush’s victory in 2004, the
forces advocating conservative, social Darwinist values tried to take back the
territory they had lost in the 1930’s by attempting to privatize Social
Security. Progressives defeated their efforts – and began to push them back.
Barack Obama’s victory in 2008 was like the Normandy invasion – the
beginning of a forceful progressive counter-offensive. Today we have secured a
whole new massive chunk of real estate.
I do not mean “government control” – far from it. I mean that the terms
defining the distribution of health care in America will no longer be
exclusively based on the interests of huge private insurance companies. Instead
they will be defined by the fundamental understanding that health care is a
human right.
As the late Senator Kennedy wrote to President Obama before he died, what
was at stake in the health care battle was not “the details of policy, but
the character of our country.”
The exact structures of the health care reform bill may be modified – and
I hope expanded -- to include a robust public option. But the progressive
value premise has been established and I do not believe it can be rolled
back.
Before the Republicans execute their plan to run this fall on a “repeal
the bill” platform, they should take a look at the fate of Alf Landon and the
Republicans who, in 1936, ran on the platform of repealing Social Security.
They lost big. In fact by the time the Republicans finally retook the
White House (16 years later) with Dwight Eisenhower no Republican candidate
uttered a word about “repealing” a program that had long sense become
massively popular.
* This victory has validated President Obama’s commitment to making
serious change. He came into office promising real, transformative change and he
has delivered it. He proved that he – and America – can make big change –
address truly fundamental issues.
Many pundits had argued that he bit off more than he could chew. They had
said that he should be satisfied with “small change” – shouldn’t tackle
so many things at once – shouldn’t challenge the interests of so many
powerful sectors of the American economy. Suddenly his Administration, and the
forces that surround it, look a lot smarter than it did two days ago, when
the dominant media chatter was about who was to blame for allowing the
Obama Presidency to be stuck in the mud. Obama accomplished something that had
eluded Presidents for a century – not bad.
* With this victory the entire narrative of the Obama presidency has
changed. Health care reform has repeatedly been declared moribund – completely
dead after the Scott Brown election in Massachusetts. Obama has brought
health care back – like a phoenix -- from the dead. He did it through
absolute persistence and clear, unflappable leadership – the same kind of
leadership he and his organization exhibited when they were repeatedly counted out
during the Presidential race.
He also demonstrated nerves of steel. He bet the political ranch on health
care reform and won.
* Last night’s vote demonstrated to the American voters that government
can work. It has been a central Republican goal for years to show that
government doesn’t work. Of course the incompetence of the Bush Administration
helped validate their premise. But since the election of a Democrat to the
White House they have had one key goal: gridlock. The lock has been
broken.
* Our victory demonstrated that a special interest as wealthy as the
private insurance industry can in fact be defeated. The insurance companies
and Chamber of Commerce have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to stop
health care reform cold. They lied, they distorted the facts, they
threatened. They have failed. That will embolden Democrats – and average Americans
– to challenge the power of Wall Street and the Oil Companies, to
challenge the power of every other special interest that seeks to promote their
private interest at the expense of the public interest.
* The House vote shows that hope can defeat fear. The entire campaign of
the health insurance industry and the Right has been built on a foundation
of fear – from death panels, to “government takeover,” to “socialized
medicine,” to bogus “cuts” in Medicare. Hope won. That has enormous
implications for issues like immigration reform.
* The health care victory was a tribute to political courage – the courage
of Barack Obama who bet his Presidency on the outcome – and the courage of
many House Democrats who took, what they feared would be an unpopular
vote.
In fact, I would argue, that by Election Day, there will be very few
districts where a vote for health care reform is unpopular. But I would also
argue, that this fall we will see clear evidence that courage itself is very
popular.
Willingness to stand up for what you believe – and unwillingness to be
swayed by political winds – is good politics. People love candidates who are
not what they conceive as “typical politicians” that always have their
fingers in the air or decide what they believe based on the latest poll.
The fact that many Members stood up tall – took on the insurance industry –
and refused to be intimidated – is itself a great political narrative for
Democratic candidates this fall.
And I predict that we will also learn the opposite is also true. The
Democrats who decided to oppose health care reform because of political
pressure – particularly those that voted yes the first time health care reform was
considered by the House – will be in deep political trouble.
The flip-floppers will find that they will gain nothing with the hard core
opponents of reform, their base will be demobilized, and the flip-flop
charge itself will move independent voters to oppose them. Very dumb.
* Last night’s victory shows that great organizing works. Credit goes to
the millions of members of Organize for America (OFA), MoveOn.org, the
major health care reform coalition, Health Care for America Now (HCAN), U.S.
Action, the Center for Community Change, the American Federation of State
County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), The Service Employees International
Union (SEIU), the AFL-CIO, the National Education Association, the Center
for Community Change, Americans United for Change, The Communications Workers
of America (CWA), AARP, the Alliance of Retired Americans, the NAACP, the
National Council of La Raza, the National Women’s Law Center, Planned
Parenthood, the Center for American Progress, Progress Now, Families USA – and
scores of other grassroots organizations.
These are real organizations – not the creations of “astro-turf” lobby
firms like Dick Armey’s “Freedom Works.”
Credit especially goes to organized labor – the bedrock of the progressive
forces in America – without which victory was not even remotely possible –
as well as progressive funders like Atlantic Philanthropies.
The campaign conducted by the pro-reform forces included everything from
phone calls, to grassroots action, to earned media, to lobby visits to
Congress, to TV commercials. In many respects it was a model – to be built and
improved upon in the future. Though we were outgunned financially by the
infinitely deep pockets of insurance industry, we won.
And ultimately victory also depended entirely on a tough, eloquent
President to provide the leadership necessary to win.
The end game was particularly masterful. One commentator noted that the
President had the Republicans for lunch when he spoke at their own retreat –
and he had a seven hour banquet at the “bi-partisan” summit. He used the
power of the Presidency to enormous effect to place the Republicans on the
defense.
The rallies, the self confidence, and the sense of inevitability that he
and Speaker Pelosi brought to the last several weeks – coupled with brilliant
one-on-one work with Members of Congress and co-ordination with
Administration allies sealed the deal.
* Perhaps the biggest political winner of last night’s victory was House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. She showed once again that she is the best political
organizer in America. She aggregated the self-interests of hundreds of
individual members. She navigated the dangerous shoals of dozens of
contentious, divisive issues. She hammered together the votes to win largely out of
her own force of will. For her, failure was not an option.
Her organizing skill was complemented by the enormous but understated
talents of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid who convinced his caucus that a
reconciliation bill to incorporate the negotiated agreement with the House
was the only way to get health care moved. Reid delivered what the House
needed – the agreement of 51 Senators to pass the reconciliation bill. Reid
will finish his part of the drama this week and – as a by-product --
massively improve his own prospects for re-election this fall.
* Finally, this victory will invigorate the base of the Democratic Party
and greatly improve the chances of victory for all Democrats this fall. Let’
s remember that Democrats lost control of the House in 1994 because
Democrats didn’t come out and vote after the failure of health care reform
earlier that year. Last night’s victory will have precisely the opposite effect.
Not only that, but voters like to support winners. Last night the
Democrats in Congress, President Obama and the progressive forces in America won
big. The Progressive band wagon has been freed from the mud and is moving
once again. It will attract more and more followers as we get closer to the
Election Day.
There was another big loser last night -- the “chattering class” of
pundits. Turned out that health care, the Obama Presidency, and the progressive
movement weren’t so dead after all.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and
author of the recent 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=1213241439&sr=8-1)
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