Washington Free Press  Washington State's Nonprofit Journal of News, Ideas, & Culture
home |  subscribe/donate |  article archive |  issue archive |  organization |  volunteer/submit |  activism calendar |  contact us

PEACE & JUSTICE CALENDAR
compiled by
Jean Buskin

August
September
October
All Months



Cartoons of
Dan McConnell

featuring
Tiny the Worm



Latest Posts

TECHNOLOGY

Biodefense, Biolabs and Bugs Seattle City Council takes an important first step to safety Labwatch.org (Aug 9, 2010)

WAR

State of Denial After the big Wikileak, spinning for war Normon Solomon, cartoon by Dan McConnell (Aug 9, 2010)
Daniel Ellsberg to Testify in Tacoma Anti-war Trial event Aug 11 & 12 Lawrence Hildes (Aug 9, 2010)

AROUND WASHINGTON

DinoRossi-saurus, Traffic Ticket Cameras, West Nile Virus, etc. featuring cartoons by Dan McConnell (Aug 9, 2010)

MILITARY

Trident Nuclear Resisters Get Their Day in Court Ground Zero Center (Aug 9, 2010)
Washingtonians Arrested at Tennessee Anti-nuke Action Ground Zero Center (Aug 9, 2010)

LAW

News from the ACLU North Carolina and WA police would like to know your private information with cartoon by John Ambrosavage (Aug 9, 2010)

WORLD

11 Impressions of The West Bank Joel Hanson (Aug 9, 2010)
Israel divestment movement surges in WA OlympiaBDS and TESCdivest, cartoon by George Jartos (Aug 9, 2010)

MEDICINE

How Community Organizing Saved Washington Basic Health Sisters organized for survival Cee Fisher, cartoon by John Jonik (Aug 9, 2010)

ENVIRONMENT

Still More Cartoonists Look at the Oil Spill art by George Jartos, David Logan, and Dan McConnell (Aug 9, 2010)

POLITICS

What Color Is Your -Ism? American reactions to "socialism" and "capitalism" are changing; too bad we don't have either Doug Collins, cartoons by John Ambrosavage (June 5, 2010)

ELECTIONS

Third-Party Candidates Face Long Odds Americans want a change, but change is rarely elected in WA or elsewhere National Institute on Money in State Politics (June 1, 2010)

ENERGY

Cutting the Cost of Cooling Creative conservation for air conditioning and refrigeration Martin Nix (June 1, 2010)

WORKPLACE

Teenage Microsoft Sweatshop 15-hour shifts under poor conditions at Chinese factory from the National Labor Committee (May 16, 2010)

IMMIGRATION

Why US Immigration Policy Needs Tweaking Bill Costello, cartoon by David Logan (May 16, 2010)
Arizona Immigration Brouhaha Various opinions from near and far, cartoons by Logan and McConnell (May 2, 2010)

TRANSPORTATION

The Coming Microcar Revolution Martin Nix (May 16, 2010)

ECONOMY

What the Doomsayers Haven't Been Telling You About Greece Neocons use Europe as a punching bag Steven Hill (May 13, 2010)

POETRY

A Poetic Look at Tacoma Glass Art Museum; a limer-ICK Gerald McBreen (Mar 28, 2010)
Fall Is For Falling Out Of Love, etc. three poems Bob Markey (Mar 29, 2010)

BUSINESS

Who Rules America? Corporate conglomeration is leading to neofeudalism Don Monkerud, cartoon by John Jonik (Mar 27, 2010)

EDUCATION

South Korean Teachers Reach for the SKY Class size doesn't matter as much as teacher quality Bill Costello (Mar 27, 2010)

HEALTH

California Dental Association Says No Fluoridated Water for Infants fluorosis is affecting most children from NYSCOF, art by David Dees (Mar 27, 2010)

CULTURE

Delete the Meat One might become a vegetarian account by John F. Baker, poem by Steve Hood, and cartoon by John Jonik (Feb 22, 2010)
Anvils: An Appreciation essay and photos by Robert Pavlik (Jan 24, 2010)

HISTORY

History of International Women's Day The first celebration was a century ago this year Megan Cornish (Feb 21, 2010)

MILITARY

Why I Do It Resisting Trident for Love and Life Lynne Greenwald (Feb 20, 2010)

TRUTH

Architects and Engineers Ask for New Look at 9/11 Doug Collins (Feb 20, 2010)

MEDIA

Is Olympic Coverage Sexist? Media coverage rarely gives women equal treatment Univ. of Alberta (Jan 24, 2010)

RIGHT BRAIN

Why I Don't Come at Christmas Anymore not-so-jolly Saint Nick (Dec 18, 2009) Santa Gets Political art by Ambrosavage, Lande, and Dees (Dec 17, 2009)

WORKPLACE

No DIME for the Dems WA Labor Council leadership accepts activist platform for economic recovery. Will they follow through? Steve Hoffman (Nov 6, 2009)

RIGHTS

Puyallup Bans Door-to-door Religious Speech ACLU of WA (Oct 16, 2009)

LETTERS

Single-Payer Health; Toilet-Paper Tax READER MAIL with cartoons by Jonik and McConnell (Oct 16, 2009)

SUBSTANCES

FDA Cigarette Regulation is Bad News John Jonik (posted Aug 28, 2009)
A Dose of Reality: Drug Legalization Megan Cornish (posted Aug 28, 2009)

SPORTS

A People's History of Sports BOOK REVIEW Doreen McGrath (posted July 24, 2009)

CLIMATE

Cashing In On Earth's Cycles: Part 3 Alan Cheetham & Richard Kirby (posted July 24, 2009)
Obama: How Serious About Climate Change? Doug Collins (posted July 24, 2009)


What is the Washington Free Press?

The Washington Free Press exists to carry under-reported news and thought-provoking opinion out to a wider audience. We specialize in news related to Washington State. In order to get the news out, we need your reader support to help us pay for basic costs. That's why we ask you to please subscribe and donate. If you would like to help us with writing, editing, or "scouting" for writers and articles, please contact us.

Doug Collins, editor

Google
WWW Washington Free Press

Support the WA Free Press. Non-profit community journalism needs your support. Please subscribe and/or donate.



posted Jan.24, 2010    Bookmark and Share

cartoon by Dan McConnell


Democrats Boosting Right-Wing Populism

Aiming to please corporations is the crux of the healthcare-reform fiasco

By Norman Solomon


In his triumphant speech on election night, the next senator from Massachusetts should have thanked top Democrats in Washington for all they did to make his victory possible.

For a year now, leading Democrats have steadily embraced more corporate formulas for “healthcare reform.” In the name of political realism, they have demobilized and demoralized the Democratic base. In the process, they’ve fueled right-wing populism.

The Democratic leadership on healthcare and so much else—including bank bailouts, financial services, foreclosures and foreign policy—has been so corporate that Republicans have found it easy to play populist.

Fixated on passage of something that could be called “healthcare reform,” the Democratic establishment has propagated the myth that enacting such a law is vital to the political viability of the Obama presidency.

With few exceptions, the most progressive members of Congress have twisted themselves into knots to move with the choreography from the White House. The worse the healthcare bill got, the more they strained to lavish incongruous praise on it.

Defenders of the current healthcare legislation don’t like to acknowledge how thoroughly corporate it is. In the wake of the Senate election in Massachusetts, we’re sure to see a new wave of mass emails from progressive groups urging a renewed fight for a public option. But the Obama administration threw a public option under the Pennsylvania Avenue bus well before the GOP victory in Massachusetts finalized its burial.

Key provisions—such as a mandate requiring individuals to buy private health insurance without a public option—are giveaways to mega-corporations on a scale so vast that it boggles the mind.

Such a federal healthcare law—massively combining an intrusive government mandate with corporate power—would be a godsend to right-wing populism for decades.

Government power should be used for the common good, not for humongous profiteering. But on the near horizon is a law that would further bloat already-bloated corporate coffers while undermining basic precepts of a social compact.

The mandate places legal, financial and ideological burdens on the individual for healthcare. In the process, at best, many low-income people would only have access to inferior coverage with plenty of holes.

Rather than affirm the principle of healthcare as a human right, the current scenarios for healthcare reform lay out limited federal subsidies for private insurance premiums—in effect, an entitlement program in political terms, sure to be vulnerable to the kind of safety-net shredding that has done so much harm in recent decades.

The current versions of healthcare reform, New York Times economics writer David Leonhardt noted on Jan. 20, “are more conservative than Bill Clinton’s 1993 proposal. For that matter, they’re more conservative than Richard Nixon’s 1971 plan, which would have had the federal government provide insurance to people who didn’t get it through their job.”

One of the biggest themes—repeated endlessly by pundits and meme-prone Democrats—has been the assertion that getting “healthcare reform” signed into law is essential for the political viability of a Democratic Congress and the Obama presidency. But at this point, given what’s on the table under the Capitol Dome, the opposite is likely to be the case.

If Obama signs the kind of healthcare legislation now in the pipeline, it will be a political gift to the Republicans—and a crowning negative achievement of bad leadership for the congressional majority.

Key House Democrats declared throughout most of 2009 that they would only support a healthcare reform bill with a “robust” public option. Now the same members of Congress are saying they’ll be pleased to vote for a final bill with no public option at all.

Meanwhile, at the grassroots, many progressives are apt to buy into a false choice between capitulating inside the Democratic Party or staying away from it. But there’s another option: an inside/outside strategy that involves openly fighting for progressive power within the party while also organizing outside of it.

If we want more progressive officeholders, then elections are part of the process: beginning with Democratic primaries this year. Support genuine progressive candidates—and if you don’t see any, maybe you should do some recruiting. There’s no time to lose.◆


Norman Solomon is national co-chair of the Healthcare NOT Warfare campaign, launched by Progressive Democrats of America. His books include “Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America’s Warfare State.” For more information, go to: www.normansolomon.com

Bookmark and Share

Comments (1)

Please keep comments polite and related to the above page.



#1 - Fred M. - 01/29/2010 - 13:17
Seems to me that inside/outside strategies are the kind that usually work, but they require somewhat aggressive AND disciplined activists. It's a tough combination to find in modern day people. Maybe that's the problem!

Name
E-mail (Will not appear online)
Comment
This comment form is powered by GentleSource Comment Script. It can be included in PHP or HTML files and allows visitors to leave comments on the website.