Sirotablog

The personal blog of David Sirota

Saturday, December 25, 2004

Bush's Holiday Insult

President Bush issued a Christmas-day radio address in which he said he believed America needs to "help heal the sick, comfort those who suffer, and bring hope to those who despair, one heart and one soul at a time."

What he didn't say was that, in recent weeks, he has slashed funding for grants to low-income college students, reduced resources to charities that help feed the hungry, began preparing plans to gut health care programs for the poor, and prepared to re-launch an effort to cut funding for low-income housing.

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

GOP Getting Nervous

See this new AP story about how Republicans are getting increasingly nervous about Bush's Social Security privatization scheme.

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

Dems & GOPers to Watch on SS Privatization

In pushing the Democrats to be unified against the President's Social Security privatization scheme, make sure to see the 20 Democrats who voted against this bill in 2001. This was a vote on the Filner Amendment, which I helped write while working on the Appropriations Committee. As Rep. Bob Filner (D-CA) noted in intoducing the amendment, his legislation would "prevent any funding being used for the purpose of implementing a Social Security privatization plan amendment." In other words, it would block any Social Security privatization plan.

These 20 Democrats who voted against the amendment are some of the key ones to worry about capitulating to the GOP. Among them is Rep. Allen Boyd (D-FL), who already announced he would be the "chief sponsor" of Social Security privatization legislation.

For more, see Rep. Filner's special site on his amendment.

On the GOP side, there are new cracks in the pro-privatization ranks. Bloomberg reports "deficit concerns have sparked some resistance" to the Bush privatization scheme from people like Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Charles Grassley (R-IA). The Providence Journal reports Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-RI) indicated he felt "President Bush's plans to revamp and privatize Social Security are ill-timed and will be difficult to support in light of the country's burgeoning deficit and costly war in Iraq."

Monday, December 20, 2004

Correcting the DLC

The Democratic Leadership Council's Ed Kilgore has a new piece in the American Prospect responding to my article called "The Democrats' Da Vinci Code." Kilgore, who used to work for Democratic-turncoat Zell Miller (albeit before he officially left the party), tries to take apart my article. But after you read his piece, you realize how appropriate his last name is – the DLC's attacks on economic populism clearly helped Kill Gore – and other Democrats. Here is my take on his piece:

CLAIM: "[Sirota's] article, of course, also featured several gratuitous shots at the 'corporate-backed' DLC and at the "big-business agenda" of Bill Clinton -- the only Democratic presidential candidate to have carried more than one western or southern state since 1980."

FACT: My article does discuss Clinton - and goes out of its way to praise him for the kind of campaign he ran in 1992: "Clinton’s 1992 campaign was not the free-trade, Republican-lite corporate shilling that many propose as a Democratic panacea. It was, by contrast, populist on all fronts." Sure, I point out that Clinton then, in various ways, unfortunately abandoned that populism as president. But I believe Clinton's 1992 campaign was exemplary: if you run as an economic populist, you can win in red states and red regions.

CLAIM: "Sirota argues that red-state success for Democrats is actually pretty simple, if they will simply abandon any policy positions or messages that interfere with 100-percent economic populism...[That assumes] an economic message can serve as an electoral 'silver bullet'...[But] there's this little matter of national security..."

FACT: The second sentence of my article makes clear the article is dealing with economic issues specifically, not ALL the issues (how much can one article really tackle?): "Yet encrypted within the 2004 election map is a clear national economic platform to build a lasting majority." If Kilgore is criticizing me for not addressing national security (which is clearly a key issue and worthy of a whole other discussion) in an article about economic policy, why did the DLC just hold a forum praising Peter Beinart's national security article, even though Beinart's piece didn't touch economic issues?

CLAIM: "[The DLC has] relentlessly opposed...providing special access for lobbyists who supply campaign contributions."

FACT: The DLC has made its way in Washington, D.C. raising huge amounts of money from business beheamoths like Enron, Philip Morris, Merck and others. As one pundit noted in 2001, a dinner honoring DLC leader Sen. Joe Lieberman and sponsored by DLC-affiliated groups "raised $1.2 million dollars from the likes of Aetna, American Airlines, AT&T, Citicorp and GE." Now, the DLC and the politicians who lead it might claim that they are not giving "special access" to these corporate interests when they are raising money from them, but who really believes that?

CLAIM: "John Spratt of South Carolina is much better known in his district for his tough-minded defense views than for any votes he's cast against trade agreements."

FACT: Kilgore is dishonest on this one – and provides no evidence. First, I never once discussed John Spratt's trade position. Instead, I discussed his work on the deficit, which, as ranking Democrat on the Budget Committee, he has made a national name for himself on. Second, he provides no evidence that Spratt is "much better known in his district" for issues other than his high-profile stance on budget/deficit issues.

CLAIM: "Democrats should agree that it's a good idea to frame economic policy positions in values terms, it's no substitute for coming to grips with cultural 'values issues' themselves...Sirota's account of the Schweitzer campaign, interestingly enough, doesn't mention the candidate's embrace of a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, or his vocal opposition to any form of gun control."

FACT: As I made clear in my article, the example candidates I used varied on their stands on these cultural/social issues: "The progressive populists profiled do not uniformly hew to the standard liberal line on social issues: some are pro-life, some pro-choice; some pro–gun ownership, some pro–gun control; some pro–gay marriage, some anti–gay marriage; some vociferous about religion, some subdued." But, as I stated, the candidates "have shown that there is another path that moves past wedge issues if the party is willing to fundamentally challenge the excesses of corporate America and big money."

CLAIM: "We're all opposed to unfair trade deals"

FACT: Last I checked, the DLC strongly pushed NAFTA and China PNTR (and is now pushing the FTAA deal). These corporate trade deals have forced American workers to compete with workers that have little-to-no labor or human rights, in countries that have little-to-no environmental standards. That seems a tad "unfair" to American workers, as it provides incentives for Corporate America to troll the globe in search of the most despotic regimes to exploit the most desperate people.

CLAIM: "[Sirota's article says] Democrats cannot win in red states without decisively opposing any sort of trade expansion, a subject he returns to repeatedly. Indeed, his animus toward the DLC, reflecting a less clearly stated but unmistakable animus toward Clinton, appears based on the assumption that the only possible rationale for being pro-trade is slavish devotion to corporate interests."

FACT: I never said (nor do I believe) Democrats must oppose "any sort of trade expansion" – I said they should specifically oppose the kind of corporate trade policy the DLC has pushed for years – a trade policy which includes all the strict patent/copyright protections for large corporate-funders of the DLC, and little (if any) provisions making sure American workers don't have to compete with workers that have no labor, human rights or environmental standards.

Sunday, December 19, 2004

Dem Supports Privatization; Others Following?

Per my last post, I wanted to point out that on December 8th, the first House Democrat came out in support of Social Security privatization. See Josh Marshall's post for more.

And today, the LA Times reports "there are now a handful of moderate Democrats, mostly from states Bush won in 2004, who are trying to keep an open mind about private accounts."

Not good.

Cause for Concern

There has been speculation around the blogosphere that some Democrats might actually try to help the Bush White House pass its Social Security privatization scheme. While I initially dismissed this concern as out of hand, my subsequent research into the situation now has me worried.

Check out this LA Times article from 2000 - it is important on a broad level, and also specifically on Social Security:

"DLC leaders such as Breaux and Will Marshall, the Progressive Policy Institute's president, say it's a mistake to transfer trillions of general revenue dollars into Social Security after 2011, as Clinton and Gore are proposing, without first restructuring the program. That's Bush's position too. He and the DLC both want to partially privatize Social Security by diverting part of the payroll tax into individual accounts that workers could invest in the stock market for their own retirement."

Also, see this piece by Robert Dreyfuss in The Nation from 1999. He specifically notes the DLC's work with Wall Street firms on privatization schemes.

I'm not quite sure where the DLC and other "centrist" organizations are right now on Social Security privatization - and if they've renounced privatization, that's a good thing. But if they are still pushing this position, it is a problem. First and foremost, this line of reasoning undercuts the argument that Social Security does not need to be radically changed and privatized because there is a huge crisis. The fact is, there isn't a major crisis, and the system can be fixed with a more rational plan - and Democrats need to make that clear to the public.

Secondly, if Democrat-affiliated groups help justify private accounts - even if their proposals are more responsible than Bush's - they will create a rationale for "centrists" to capitulate when the Bush proposal comes to a vote (see the end of my last post for more on how watering down the party's message creates an environment for capitulation). If there are too many Democratic defections, ultimately the Bush privatization scheme will pass. And that would be a real tragedy.