Obama Wins, But the People Can Still Lose
By Danny Schechter
New York, New York: A year into his presidency, Barack Obama began to plan his reelection bid. Having assessed the lessons of 2008, it was clear that grass roots mobilizations would be essential to assuring a turnout the next time around.
I made a film on that
political campaign, exploring how local organizers built networks based in
part on their candidates' community organizing experience. While most of the
media framed the issue as Obama versus McCain, I was more interested in how
he planned to win, than regurgitating the campaign's rituals and rhetoric.
From the beginning, the Obamanauts backed the idea of the "ground game" as essential to victory but it was soon enhanced with the latest new media applications--including blogs, facebooking, texting and tweeting.
The field director of that
2008 campaign David Plouffe became the campaign's organizer in chief in 2012.
He ran that ground game, the Democrat's antidote to the TV commercial-driven "air war" blitz engineered by Karl Rove
and his large list of wealthy right-wing benefactors.
USA today noted, "President Obama and his aides cited a single reason for their re-election success. Turnout. Obama campaign officials said their get-out-the-vote organization -- the people who make calls, knock on doors, micro-target potential voters and drive supporters to the polls -- was more than three years in the making, building on their record-breaking effort in 2008."
At first, Plouffe was the organizer picked by the candidate who had been an organizer to create a permanent campaign of organizers built on the model he engineered.
Initially, it was a network designed to build a more permanent movement, but soon turned into something else, as lawyer and former Yale Professor David Brown explained last April in a newspaper op-ed:
"It is disappointing that Organizing for America (OFA) has done so little to retool its successful campaign operation into something more. Much has been said about how from the beginning of Barack Obama's presidential campaign, he mobilized more of a "movement" than a traditional political campaign . But a movement it has not proved to be -- and one major reason has been the way Obama and his team have used his supporters since winning the presidency. Instead of encouraging Obama backers to get engaged in community initiatives, this remarkable network of citizens was essentially viewed as a lobbying arm to get top-down legislation moving inside the Beltway.
It was maneuvers like this that lost Obama support with the 18 to 29 year old youth vote this year. He won 66 percent of it in 2008, but dropped to 59 percent nationally this year
A candidate who had
been perceived an outsider was either co-opted or chose to become the ultimate
insider even on the symbolic level. Early on, he tried to set himself apart by
not conforming to wearing the American flag pin that seems to be part of the
American politicians uniform, a contrived emblem of patriotic loyalty. That
sartorial choice was soon abandoned
He was soon spending
more time with his Wall Street supporters and national security team than progressives.
His then chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, now the Mayor of Chicago, showed
outspoken contempt for cause-oriented supporters. Activists in the black
community like Jesse Jackson were frozen out.
The newly re-elected
Obama is now under pressure from Republicans and conservative Democrats to
compromise with them in the name of lowering the national debt run up by the
Bush wars. Former Bank regulator Bill Black calls such a compromise "the Great
Betrayal -- the adoption of self-destructive austerity programs and the opening
wedge of the effort to unravel the safety net (including Social Security)."
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).