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Cutting Off Debate
by Geov Parrish
I was laid up in the hospital most of the past couple of weeks, meaning
I got to witness both the Alito debacle and Bush's State Of The Union
address from the linoleum-caked institutional halls of the intensive
care unit. Some pain-soaked immigrant whose liver was shot was screaming
"Mama, MAAAMMAAAA, MAAAMAAA" all through Bush, which seemed oddly
appropriate.
Here in Seattle, the local progressive blogosphere was then all
a-twitter over Democratic senator Maria Cantwell's betrayal, i.e., her
vote this month to end the anti-Alito filibuster, and whether as a
consequence progressives here should still support her re-election bid
this year. (Conclusion: Yes, because she's a Democrat, and that's what
progressives do: we get screwed by Democrats, and then we vote for them
anyway because being screwed by their opponents would be so much worse.)
Excuse me?
Who did people think they were dealing with? Cantwell is a centrist.
Always has been, always will be. For three years, her position on Iraq
has been indistinguishable from George Bush's. She's voted to confirm
John Roberts, John Negroponte, and a host of other Bush conservatives.
On most issues, she is right there with Hillary Rodham Clinton, Joe
Lieberman, and the other muddled moderates of the Democratic Leadership
Council. She. Is. Not. Liberal. She. Is. Not. Progressive. As such, she
is a great case study in the trap progressives often fall into with
Democrats that are only barely less evil than the alternative.
ETS! readers know what I think of the Democrats' utter failure to mount
any serious challenge to the Alito nomination. They gave up at about the
same instant he was nominated. But Democrats in general, and centrists
like Cantwell in particular, were never given a political reason to
betray their own instincts for accommodation and instead mount a real
fight. Principle means nothing to these people. Even being a permanent
minority party--a very real possible consequence of Alito's
confirmation--does not matter.
What matters is getting re-elected. And Cantwell never got the kind of
constituent pressure on Alito that would make her sit up and take
notice, let alone take action, let alone take courageous action. Dems
like Cantwell do not give a hoot about their political base,
because they assume that base has nowhere else to go. Even when, as with
Cantwell, they won their last election by only a thousand or so votes.
Cantwell, like every other Democratic senator, really only heard from
anti-Alito constituents in great numbers for two or three days before
the final vote. That level of frenzy should have started on Halloween,
the (appropriate) day Alito was nominated, and never let up for an hour
until Alito withdrew his nomination. Nothing of the kind happened, and
that's our failure. Not Cantwell's. Ours. But even though, as with over
a dozen other moderate Democratic senators, Cantwell has pissed on her
base, again, the progressive candidacies challenging her--Mark Wilson's
quixotic antiwar primary campaign, and Aaron Dixon's rumored Green Party
bid--are so hopelessly disadvantaged in organization, money, and support
as to be politically meaningless.
Wilson and Dixon are great guys. Lifelong activists. Our guys. It's
our fault that nobody else has heard of, or will hear of, their
candidacies. Not Cantwell's fault. Ours. If Cantwell (to her credit)
isn't worried about taking on the money of Alaskan Sen. Ted Stevens over
ANWR, she's sure not losing sleep over Wilson. (More's the pity.)
Progressives like to piss and moan a lot about being unrepresented in
the political process, and that's true. It's also true that the deck is
stacked against our participation in many different ways. But difficult
is not impossible. It's up to us to build the coalitions,
energize the constituents, and field the campaigns that will win us
respect and influence when it comes to impacting public policy. That
means more than laying out critiques and alternatives and mounting
protests and position papers and expecting the world to salute. It means
organizing, and it means listening to others and incorporating their
concerns and ideas, and it means packaging our issues and candidates
attractively and organizing more, and then organizing again, and again,
until the world is forced not to salute but to get the hell out of the
way of the fast-moving train.
That's how the big boys and girls do it. If our issues and ideas and
critiques and alternatives are so much better, and polls show widespread
support (which they often do), we have advantages that can make up for
having less money and experience. We can earn the experience. The days
of any political hack with a (D) after her or his name automatically
collecting our time, money, and votes because they haven't (at least
officially) jumped parties needs to be O-V-E-R. We can play this game, too.
It's about time we started. Or else the Maria Cantwells of the world
will keep right on letting the Samuel Alitos of the world run our lives.
She and her type will keep right on urinating on her base until she has
a good reason not to, and he and his ilk will keep right on urinating on
all of us until he is removed from power.
Find a campaign you like. Get experience. Get involved. Bring your
friends. Recruit their friends. Stop complaining, and seize power.
Don't like electoral politics? Throw sand in the gears. Create
alternative institutions. Show people a better way.
Your move.
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