I had the equivalent of a political epiphany in the middle
of the night. The Republican strategic approach to the mid-terms elections has directed
their candidates to take an “anti everything Obama” approach; thus, they focus
on the Affordable Care Act or what they disparagingly refer to as Obamacare. Of
course, they do this as Republicans do everything, they do it with big money, which
means Koch Bothers type money,—thus those who would benefit from a plutocracy
control the campaign, a corporate controlled government. President Obama campaigned in 2008 and 2012 on
widening the middle class, expansion of government programs, shifting the pentagon
budget money to social programs, and standing for unionization; in other words,
he stood for a progressive platform, which put him solidly behind the working
class. He won handily in both campaigns.
Why can’t we do that again however, this time we would have Democratic senate candidates
across the nation as his surrogate.
Political history hyperbole, coupled with a “do nothing” House
of Representatives controlled by Republicans, has hidden the great success of
his entire presidency. To list all his successes would be to create a list a long,
long litany of economic, social, and foreign policy advances. Our political history
says that a mid term election classically goes to the opposite party from that
of the president. In addition, failures in domestic and world events have proved
time after time that corporate led Republican cuts, bribing Congressional representatives
to vote for tax cuts, tax loopholes, etc, with an eye on the vote getting position
of cutting taxes, has taken government out of our life. An example of current note is that congress cut the Communicable
disease Center (CDC) budget by 50% in the face of an EBOLA epidemic, cut
funding of public service workers (teachers, police, firefighters) drastically
in the face of racially motivated policing incidents as Ferguson, Mo. and evidence
of a worldwide falling education standing of drastic proportions, etc. The environment
is going to hell, all for the sake of profits. Look at what Republican Rod Portman
said will happen if Republicans take over the congress; Keystone pipe line will
be approve immediately; to hell with climate change, to hell with coal ash and
carbon cap, to hell with government regulations. In the Republican mind, it is
simply that profit wins over environment.
Worst of all, while the government should be in our economic
life, it is conspicuously absent. The evidence is there; we all know workers wages
are stagnant while their productivity is increasing and know that corporate profits
are skyrocketing. The Federal Reserve is obviously corporate friendly as evidenced
by corporate profits; just look at the record breaking increasing stock market
and our 3% National Productivity and Growth Rate, which should mean both workers
and corporations should be living the good life but they are not; workers suffer while corporations flourish.
Look at the simple example of student loan; average workers cannot send their children
to college because they cannot afford to borrow the sky rocking tuition; nor
can they afford to borrow the money at an inflated interest rate—evidence of corporate greed in the raw.
Thus, we have the stage set for the mid-term elections. The president
is doing a great job even though an ultraconservative congress has tied his hands.
Corporations are doing great because of their “bought and paid” for congress. A
conservative congress has crippled the middle class (workers), the strength of
the progressives but also conservative courts are killing us: suppression of voting
right, desegregation by increasing states rights, redistricting of even the
smallest districts, control of state election commissions and boards, etc.
The epiphany; Obama won decisively in two presidential elections
so Democrats should turn the mid-term elections of 2014 into a presidential election
campaign conducted in support of Obama; a replay of 2008 and 2012. We should campaign
across the nation on the obvious success of Obama and the obvious failure of the
conservative program to help the working-class in any way we can but campaign
in the particular states only on local issues. In other words, Democrats should
conduct a massive presidential like campaign nation wide. We should mount an unprecedented
“anti” Republican campaign against their general policies and tactics that are obviously
hurting the working-class, which is the power base of the Democrats. We should put
nation-wide pressure on all the political organization in states like Kentucky
to elect a Democrat to congress in spite of the economic pressure to support dirty
coal; the support of the environment is so much more important to this country
than support for a few local jobs that are on the way out regardless. Quality
of life for everyone is so much more important than short-term profits. Isn’t
this what greedy Republicans verses altruistic Democrats is all about? Isn’t
this real politics?
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