Monday, November 3, 2014

Arun Gupta — How the Democrats Became the Party of Neoliberalism

There is a standard critique of the U.S. political system that seemingly explains why right-wing ideas drive the national agenda even when Democrats control the White House: the Democratic Party does not stand for anything and the Republicans are the party of ideologues.… 
But it’s time to rethink this notion that Democrats lack principles. They have a clear agenda and are actually more ideological than Republicans. Democrats like Obama are willing to lose power to carry out the neoliberal agenda.…
Counterpunch
How the Democrats Became the Party of Neoliberalism
Arun Gupta

Also
Over the weekend, the New York Times took note of Rhode Island’s surprisingly competitive gubernatorial race, in which Democratic nominee Gina Raimondo, the state treasurer, barely leads Republican candidate Allan Fung, the mayor of Cranston, in the polls. Raimondo finds herself in a close contest in large part, the Times observes, because of the unpopularity of her radical restructuring of the state’s pension system as treasurer. While the right-wing Wall Street Journal editorial page and Raimondo’s financial industrybackers applauded her pension “reforms,” she earned the enmity of public employees when she slashed their guaranteed retirement income and redirected pension investments toward the hedge fund industry, never bothering to consult with public employee unions in the process. Raimondo’s vulnerability heading into tomorrow’s election underscores the political pitfalls for Democrats of pursuing policies that please plutocrats and other Very Serious People at the expense of the common good. 
First, however, it’s important to note that “reforms” like Raimondo’s aren’t simply wrongheaded from a political perspective. The center-right economic agenda is also terrible policy. In Rhode Island, the hedge funds who benefited from Raimondo’s pension overhaul haven’t delivered better returns for the state pension fund, and undermining workers’ retirement security poses substantial economic risks. Other pet causes of the center-right — like savage cuts in the social insurance programs Medicare and Social Security — are similarly counterproductive, damaging seniors’ purchasing power and restricting their financial flexibility. That’s before you even get into the morality of asking low- and middle-income Americans to bear the brunt of the elite’s austerity mania.…
What’s happening in Rhode Island is hardly unique. Republicans elsewhere are hammering Democratic incumbents over their support for changes to Social Security and Medicare. Democrats on the receiving end of such attacks include North Carolina Sen. Kay Hagan, Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor, California Rep. Scott Peters, Georgia Rep. John Barrow, and Arizona Rep. Ron Barber. In Barber’s district, the Arizona GOP distributed a flier last week that asked, “What makes Ron Barber so scary?” The answer? “His vote for the terrifying Paul Ryan budget.” The flier described the plan Barber voted for — which was actually a compromise proposal offered by Ryan and Democratic Sen. Patty Murray, not Ryan’s original, more conservative budget proposal — as a “bone-chilling” proposal to “cut vital assistance programs.” 
The Republicans running against Democrats like Raimondo and Barber won’t be champions of economic populism, and in some cases would likely pursue even more draconian cuts. But their attacks serve as a useful reminder that laudatory editorials from the Wall Street Journal don’t win elections.
Salon
Wall Street Democrats’ wake-up call: Why center-right policies make for horrible politics
Luke Brinker

2 comments:

Matt Franko said...

"Democrats like Obama are willing to lose power"

You cant lose something you never claimed to have in the first place....

" to do a 'power' drain you first have to have done a 'power' add...."

Ryan Harris said...

The Democrats showed their true colors when they rescued GM. They showed no concern for making a level playing field for union workers across all states so that individual companies are not at a disadvantage for being union shops. They made no attempt to integrate government and union policies. They made no attempt to reform unreasonable union work rules while strengthening basic worker protections. What they did do, was ensure the union pension funds were topped up and had plenty of cash to stash in Wall Street.

Then they slashed wages, rolled back unions employment and then forced "professional management" to offshore most part suppliers to China to produce their auto-parts. Wolf in sheeps clothing.

Meanwhile, the evil republicans in Texas are busy convincing all types of industry to move to the state, not just "good middle class jobs" but jobs for people that didn't go to school, weren't born in the US, maybe don't even speak the language. You know, "Labor," the people that Dems protect and stand arm-in-arm with! When was the last time you saw a Democrat work to attract a blue collar industry? If it isn't white collar, it doesn't belong. You must go back to university for a degree. There are a diversity of people that deserve government policy support in utilizing their skills.

Not that Repubs aren't irritating too, they are, but they do practical things that matter to ordinary people where Dems have 14 high minded excuses why they must screw over the little guy to help him.