This afternoon I attended a talk given by Bernie Sanders, the
socialist Senator from Vermont. Sanders was in the Boston area
promoting his new book The Speech. The book mostly
consists of the remarks Sanders made on the Senate floor last
December during his filibuster against the tax cut compromise made
by President Obama and the incoming Republican Congressional
leadership. Sanders’ address was essentially a condensed version of
the filibuster.
Sanders’ remarks took me back to my days with the New Democratic
Party (NDP) in my native Canada. His words weren’t substantially
different from the speeches given over the years by various NDP
politicians at which I was present.
Chief amongst Sanders concerns was “the collapse of the
middle-class.” So what were the signs of this apocalypse in
progress? Sanders said the signs were the necessity of two income
households, inadequate child care, the highest child poverty rate
(it wasn’t clear if he was talking about industrialized democracies
or the entire world), incarcerating more people in America than in
China (I think people in America and China are imprisoned for very
different reasons), the decline of the manufacturing sector,
outsourcing and the growing gap between the rich and the poor.
Well, Heavens to Betsy!!! What are we to do? Rest assured
Sanders had a solution. He said that we had “to demand corporate
America reinvest in this country.” And by reinvestment, Sanders
means infrastructure. While I don’t dispute that there is room for
improvement of our physical infrastructure do we really want to
saddle taxpayers with a thousand Big Digs?
Sanders also delivered his share of red meat. Of course, it
wasn’t exactly red meat. This was a latte crowd after all who drank
it up when Sanders said the War in Iraq was fought for oil. Sanders
also claimed that Republicans have moved to the extreme right. (Of
course, the Left has been saying this in earnest since 1964.) Now
no left-wing gathering is complete without a strong whif of
condescension. Sanders stated that “working-people who are hurting
and are told the enemy of everything is government are being
brainwashed.” In other words, working-people who listen to Rush
Limbaugh are too stupid to figure things out on their own because
of the “concentration of corporate media.” So what’s the remedy?
Sanders thinks there should be “a dozen Rachel Maddows.” I would
suggest that one is plenty.
Yet Sanders did catch my attention when he described our current
state of affairs as a “fairly dismal political situation.” There
wasn’t exactly a lot of talk about hope and change in Sanders’
speech. Although Sanders took the Senate floor because President
Obama made a compromise with GOP leaders, he otherwise scarcely
mentioned the President. This was question begging.
While I was unable to pose a question to Sanders during the
Q&A, I did speak with him briefly after the conclusion of his
remarks. Given Sanders’ bleak assessment I asked him if he thought
President Obama would face either a Democratic primary challenger
or an independent challenger on the Left. Sanders replied, “I
wouldn’t be surprised.” But then he quickly added, “But I don’t
have the answer to that.”
I did see a couple of people wearing a “Draft Bernie” sticker.
For his part, Sanders
has said he doesn’t plan to make a bid for the White House but will
seek re-election to the Senate in 2012. But the fact that it
would come as no surprise to Sanders that President Obama could
face a challenger from the Left (possibly within the Democratic
Party) indicates to me that Obama hasn’t made peace with the Left.
While Obama has time to rectify the situation if he doesn’t it
could prove fatal to his re-election campaign. Thus over the coming
months, I think it is worth our while to keep our eye on how the
Left behaves towards Obama.
C Bowen| 2.13.11 @ 7:40PM
"back to my days with the New Democratic Party"
Back?
Aaron Goldstein| 2.13.11 @ 8:37PM
Yes.
Ken (Old Texican)| 2.13.11 @ 7:47PM
Aaron,
Please forgive me.
SCREW THE LEFT!
If there aren't enough center-American votes remaining to curb these jerks, then let's just have it out once and for all. We producers quit producing, and the non-producers starve.
Interested Conservative| 2.13.11 @ 8:46PM
I doubt the left is so stupid as to challenge Obama. Look what happened the last time they tried that.
Bill Hussein O'Stalin| 2.13.11 @ 9:03PM
Obama can't be challenged by the left because he is the left.
Occam's Tool| 2.13.11 @ 10:39PM
I can certainly hope the Left fractures itself, and maybe sucks in the Paulites.
PCC| 2.13.11 @ 10:49PM
It is unsurprising that President Obama has not mollified Bernie Sanders. President Obama could not satisfy Mr. Sanders unless he introduced 100% tax rates.
beebop| 2.14.11 @ 5:57AM
Colonel Sanders made a heck of a lot more sense than Bernie ever could. And. Who does't like that finger licking good chicken?
Curly Smith| 2.14.11 @ 8:42AM
One of these days perhaps Bernie could reflect on how his policies destroy the middle class. Perhaps Bernie could consider that all those government programs do nothing but make the middle class poorer, force them into two-income households, and destroy their hopes for the future. But then Bernie would have to admit that he's a fraud, that's he's been working to destroy the greatest engine for "social justice" that the world has ever known.
ShalomMetsJets| 2.14.11 @ 11:22AM
Interesting. But what the good Senator does not appear to understand is that talking in cliches and warmed-over marxist nonsense does not serve as a good substitute for reality, which is something the left never seems to realize or understand.
Willy| 2.14.11 @ 2:24PM
Sanders should be worried that the same thing that happened in Maine in November will happen in Vermont in 2012. Let us hope so.
Aaron Goldstein| 2.14.11 @ 4:56PM
I think he is. Sanders noted that he was behind in his fundraising and how he hated doing it. Well, for better or for worse, that's politics.