Huffington Post: Obama holds the center

by smkovalinsky | October 22, 2009 at 05:29 am
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Huffington Post's Lincoln Mitchell makes some good points about the reality of the political center,  and Obama's power therein. 


Despite loud braying from the extremist right on matters of internment camps and Socialist takeovers,  the impact it has had on real politics is minimal to none,  Lincoln says.  

While there is the danger of infiltration by extremist thinking,  the reality shows that more often than not,  such ideology shoots its self and its party members in the foot.  

If historical trends continue unabated,  such governing from the center,  as Obama had proven to use as his modus operendum  for better or worse,  and to the dismay of many on the left,  will stand him in good stead until such time as trends turn sharply in a different direction,  allowing him some room to veer.

Most of historical events of import were carried by substratum events,  and not the will of any partisan group.  Mitchell seems to grasp this well,  while acknowledging the claims of those on the extreme right to be post-seasonal rather than blatantly wrong.  



"The noise in recent months made by Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly, Glen Beck, the birthers and others on the far right as well as the bizarre accusations and claims that they make has obscured the more interesting story of the failure of any of these people or movements to get any traction outside of the right wing base. While this right wing base, may have grown in recent years, and has certainly become louder during that period, it has made no real inroads into mainstream political life. Claims that President Obama is a socialist, or not an American, that his administration is seeking to set up reeducation camps or shut down unfriendly media outlets draw a lot of attention on Fox News and the right wing blogosphere, but these assertions are in no way part of the political dialog or debate that matters in Washington. The political center in the US has again proven itself to be surprisingly strong and resilient."

Even when these right wing fringe tactics have seeped into the political mainstream, they have not been successful and have stopped quickly. For example, during the health care debate, opponents of health care reform have sought to introduce the rumor and fear mongering of the far right as well as their bullying tactics into the debate by accusing the administration of wanting to set up death panels, shouting down Democratic members of congress at town hall meetings and, predictably, calling Obama a socialist. None of this should have been surprising, but the speed with which these tactics were abandoned, presumably because they accomplished nothing and tarred all opponents of health care with the same radical and nutty brush, was noteworthy.

While progressives can take some comfort in the failure of the right wing fringe to develop a broader appeal, the strength of the center has not been an entirely positive development for progressives. Some of the disappointment many progressives feel in the Obama presidency is because the Obama administration, in spite of its roots in progressive politics, has largely governed from the center. .

Obama's transition from the candidate of the progressive wing of the Democratic Party to being broadly appealing to the American center began during the campaign. Correspondingly, the general election campaign of 2008 may have been the beginning of the resurgence of the American center. The two national elections preceding 2008 had been extremely close and extremely divisive. These elections contributed to an eight year period of intense partisan fighting and an evenly and intensely divided electorate. In 2008 this changed. During this time, partisan rhetoric on the extreme left, while not as nasty, outrageous or dangerous as what the right wing has said during the last year or so, was strong and viciously critical of the president Bush, his policies and those around him.

The 2008 election was different because the middle had quietly reasserted itself back into politics. The winner of that election was the candidate not who appealed most to his party's base, but who could speak most effectively to the ideological center. Republican candidate John McCain, did not see this coming so his effort to run a Bush era divisive and ideological campaign was almost completely unsuccessful, leaving him with very little support outside of his party's base. Obama, of course, sought to, and succeeded in, positioning himself as a centrist. The failure of McCain's divisive message to resonate beyond the base should have alerted Republican leaders to the resurgence of the center, but they seemed to have missed this clue.

The inability of the right wing to make their message appeal to the ideological center and the unwillingness of Republican strategists to seek to appeal to a broader swath of the electorate combine to ensure that Obama will remain relatively popular and, if these trends continue, win reelection in 2012. To make his presidency truly successful, however, Obama has to leverage his appeal to the political center to pass progressive legislation. For example, passing health care reform, under any circumstances will be an impressive accomplishment, but passing meaningful health care legislation while being viewed as governing from the center will be a paradigm shifting accomplishment.



Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lincoln-mitchell/obama-and-the-political-c_b_329763.html

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albertacowpoke

I guess the Huffington Post is real news.  I think there is a difference between the far left, which this article calls the left, the left and Centre.  I would rate Obama as governing from the Left.  Have a look at his advisors and Czars and their political views.

Nice piece of propaganda by the Huffington Post.  God Bless Ariana.


0
AGK

God blast all cowpokes from Alberta,  just doing my job. Of course Huffington is as far left as FOX is right.  Just playing with words here......grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr smk

>:(

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