Skip to main content

The myth of the reactionary working class | SocialistWorker.org

Popularity Report

Total Popularity Score: 0

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Rank

URL Tag Cloud

Bookmark History

Saved by 1 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2008-05-10


Public Sticky notes

If he wanted, Obama could rally workers--Black, white and Latino--around a campaign that spoke to their concerns, with strong proposals to help working-class people deal with the consequences of being hammered by recession.

But Obama doesn't want to campaign on this basis. He wants to assure Wall Street and Corporate America, which have shifted sharply away from the Republicans to supporting the Democrats, that he is not a real threat. And so Obama tilts to the right--in a very similar manner to Bill Clinton's triangulation--to try to win over "swing voters."

Highlighted by pickinjava

on 2008-05-10 by pickinjava

Obama seems very similar to Lula here, attempting to pacify Wall Street. Of course Brazil and most other places with contested elections have much more substantive choices of who to vote for. However, Lula's accomodationist stance throws those differences into some question.

But Obama doesn't want to campaign on this basis. He wants to assure Wall Street and Corporate America, which have shifted sharply away from the Republicans to supporting the Democrats, that he is not a real threat. And so Obama tilts to the right--in a very similar manner to Bill Clinton's triangulation--to try to win over "swing voters."

Highlighted by pickinjava

Readers (1)