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Obama, Poverty, Racial Politics, and the White Vote
By: Deborah FosterSep. 9th, 2012more from Deborah Foster
Recently, a man I respect very much, Bill Moyers, penned an article titled, “Invisible Americans Get the Silent Treatment.” In his article, he appears to be stunned that “for all his rhetorical skills,” President Obama “oddly…hasn’t made a single speech devoted to poverty since he moved into the White House.” Mr. Moyers points out that candidate Obama talked a great deal about poverty, even being “one of the few politicians who would talk about it.” Moyers bemoans the fact that Obama, as a candidate and author, talked about significant investment in anti-poverty programs that wouldn’t just temporarily ameliorate the symptoms of poverty, but would target education and training so that the poor could make permanent improvements in their life circumstances, while President Obama has not pushed for the “billions” he wanted spent on such programs. Moyers acknowledges the White House has explained the economic crisis required a diversion of attention and dollars from loftier goals to more immediate needs, but he still laments what he considers to be Obama’s neglect of the poor. I think Moyers is missing the most obvious explanation for Obama’s inability to attend to poverty, the very white, very racist Tea Party.
For an Obama supporter, election night 2008 was magical. The genuinely joyful crowds, large American flags waving everywhere, exuberant celebration in many households across the country. I was blessed at that time to be isolated from anyone who was horrified by Obama’s election, but I knew they were out there in large numbers. Racists, flagrant and closeted, were more than distraught. They were panicking. There were also the many conservatives, who don’t consider themselves racist, who were dismayed and fearful, just as they were when Clinton was elected. But it immediately became clearer than it was before that a hefty percentage of what passes for conservatism is simply reactionary to what they fear will be the extension of either rights or public/governmental help to racial minorities. So racism in their crowd, even if it’s latent or unconscious, is ever-present. Maybe they were feeling something similar to our horror watching Bush steal his first “election”, and then win his next.
But the illegal nature of Bush’s appointment to office wasn’t sufficient to rally a large number of Americans and get them organized for protests in cities nationwide, or to fill the Mall in Washington, D.C. with protestors. Given what a monstrosity his first term was, with unprovoked war, flagrant lies, unconstitutional attacks on our civil liberties, the widespread use of torture, and out-of-control deficit spending, one might expect that Bush’s reelection would have been sufficient to fill the Mall with protestors. Yet there was very little of that. In contrast, starting just months after Obama took office, conservatives and right wingers organized themselves for demonstrations in cities across the country, on April 15, 2009, followed by a semi-successful gathering in Washington, DC on September 12, 2009. (In fact, there were actually the beginnings of the Tea Party as early as February 2009). If it had been a movement that just fizzled out, perhaps there’d be nothing to talk about. But, instead, these people organized even further, brought mainstream Republicans straight over to their right-of-crazy positions, and managed to dominate the 2010 election. It was an unprecedented temper tantrum.
Obama no doubt expected opposition. But, did he plan for the American people to turn on him with this kind of virulence? Starting with high favorability numbers, his approval rating steadily dropped his first year until he had only an 8 point lead on the Tea Party, which should have been confined to the typical 32% of hardcore conservatives that always hate a Democratic president. Meanwhile, the Tea Party managed to gain higher favorability ratings than either the Democrats or Republicans by the end of 2009. By then, Americans who weren’t affiliated with the Tea Party were influenced by them, and had their own racial fears stoked. Coerced by the constant media attention to attend to the issues the Tea Party wanted to focus on, government spending (on those people) was on everyone’s mind. Never mind that Obama was spending less than the four previous Presidents, everyone was labeling him as a big spender. Never mind that he cut taxes for the middle class, people were saying he raised taxes on them. The Institute for Policy Integrity recently published a report showing that in U.S. newspapers alone, use of the term, “job killing regulations” has increased by 17,000%, no doubt most of it in Obama’s term. The mid-term election wiped away any upper hand Obama once had.
Obama was left with little political capital. Any plans he had to tackle poverty were waylaid. There was a dual dynamic going on. First, he had to deal with being labeled a tax-and-spend liberal facing the most obstructionist Congress in decades, so generating any new government spending for poverty was next to impossible. It’s a fantasy to believe that anything beyond fighting to maintain funding for existing programs was possible. But, the other issue is Obama’s race. The upsurge of racism apparent since the beginning of his Presidency has included efforts to paint Obama as a president who wanted to flood African Americans with government largesse, no matter how ridiculous the claim may be. Way too many Americans associate poverty with African Americans, despite the vastly higher number of white people in poverty. Forced to resist the accusations that he is “the Black President” and not the President of all Americans, Obama has had to distance himself from any policy that would appear to be minority-linked. It harms people in poverty (all of them), but nothing else was really possible politically. No doubt Obama has done this with his eye always on reelection, fully conscious that he cannot afford to alienate too many white Americans. And unfortunately, a huge number of white people, even those who voted for Obama and think they are not racist, are prone to be influenced by racial politics. It’s why Ronald Reagan launched his candidacy from Philadelphia, Mississippi and harped on “welfare queens.” It’s why Newt Gingrich tried to make Obama the food stamp president. And it is why Mitt Romney is going all out to make it seem like Obama is heavily in favor of welfare. It doesn’t just work with the conservative base. There are plenty of independents and centrists who unconsciously respond to these age-old tactics. As Rachel Maddow’s recent segment on “the White Vote” demonstrated, Romney will need to rely on the vote of white people to an unprecedented degree. No wonder that Romney-Ryan are employing these dog-whistle politics so heavily.
Any attempt Obama had made to address poverty amidst this toxic brew of racism and white fear would have only reinforced the crazy notion that he is the president of only African Americans and other minorities. It would have been self-defeating, both to him and to the policies proposed. Hopefully, should Obama win a second term, not have to worry so much about political capital, and face a less petulant Congress, he will pursue the poverty goals he originally spelled out as a candidate and author.
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Reynardine
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 12:07 pm
That is true. Even when white Americans have lost their jobs, their homes, their health coverage, and all, they cling to the illusion that they are middle-class, “salt of the Earth” “ril uhMericuns”. Even when they themselves accept food stamps and other assistance, the poor are “those Others”, and the War on Poverty – which was largely surrendered since 1980- is nothing but largesse lavished on unjustly pampered (you name the outgroup). It doesn’t matter if young George Romney or the Ryan family were helped. Those were ril uhMericuns, after all. The Others aren’t. And so we have downwardly mobile ril uhMericuns voting to cut the thread by which they are hanging, just to deny the Others a lifeline.
Jo Hargis
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 12:48 pm
Yup, Reynardine! It’s the most pervasive, but inexplicable, sentiment among the bigots that when they get “welfare”, it’s different than when THEY get “welfare”. Great example of this is Ryan’s use of his father’s SS to get himself through school. But that was different, right? SS good then, bad now. SS good for me, not for “you people”. “I worked hard, therefore I deserved it, but you’re a moocher and lazy so you don’t deserve anything”. That type mentality is just disgusting and I don’t know how we change that.
And this: “I think Moyers is missing the most obvious explanation for Obama’s inability to attend to poverty, the very white, very racist Tea Party.”
Spot on. There have been many instances when Pres. Obama has talked about the critical need for education and **training programs** to fill the new 21st century demands. That is a very indirect nod to training for the poor or near-poor, but about as far as he can go to outright say it. There is no way on God’s green earth this obstructionist republican congress is going to allow him to help poor people. And until we, as a nation, address poverty, our progress will always be severely hampered.
A Walkaway
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 5:06 pm
What is doubly horrible is that the programs are set up so that you’re penalized IF you try to better yourself.
For instance, if you return to school and try to get a degree – if you receive any sort of government aid while a student (specifically a Pell Grant), you’re automatically disqualified for Food Stamps (and other assistance) in this state. The problem is, the financial aid for students is geared towards KIDS with Mommy and Daddy who can take care of their needs outside of school (and away from the Campus, like between semesters). There is no provision for adults who don’t have “Mommy and Daddy” to take care of their needs… in that case you’re supposed to work full time while going to school full time, and of course you’re expected to do said work in places that only pay minimum wage and no benefits.
If you have a disability and can’t work, you are expected to be on Disability – but that whole system is set up to keep people out too, and is highly successful in this state at doing so. For someone unlucky enough to get a rabidly conservative (and bigoted) judge, it’s damned if you do – damned if you don’t.
That whole nasty combination led to my having to beg for food many times when I was an undergraduate. It was the only way we ate during a couple of summers.
The Student Loans can help, but they’re also geared towards the kids with Mommy and Daddy. There isn’t enough money there to keep a couple alive, even if one works part-time.
They want people to be self-sufficient, but they punish anyone who tries to become so. So either you’re trapped as a poor person, or you face potential starvation and incredible barriers if you try to improve your lot.
Paman Miner
Sep. 10th, 2012 at 11:09 pm
That is what I’ve noticed too!
Upfront I want to say I have dyslexia, I’ve improved a lot but still have trouble spelling.
Somehow I did manage to get on disability and at times felt I could work part-time. But if I did I would lose benefits like food card (snap) and maybe section 8 housing. so I would come out with less if I did work. So to volunteer is the only option.
Another thing is my disability isn’t visable unless I use my cane or walker, and I don’t need them most of the time.
Most people think it’s so easy to get on disability, but it isn’t and it’s the most disliked by the rightwing.
The rightwing nuts are so afraid that there are cheaters, and there probably are some, that they refuse to think about the old, the youngsters and the real needy, like homeless veterans, the mentally ill, the blind, autistics, and others. So they harden their hearts to the 40% of children growing u in poverty, and the 1 in 6 who are Already experiencing food insufeniantcy .
Also, the anti-abortionists don’t want to take care of the increasing amount of unwanted pregnancies, and the many more children that will be living in poverty.
This is the Most Hypocritical, making birth control harder and harder to get, yet not welcoming all the babies that will happen! If they want a much higher population explosion , they at least should shoulder the work of providing assistance to those poor moms living in ghettos and families living in their cars!
Reynardine
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 12:52 pm
I’d point out that Moyers is the product of a very different era, before the Randian ethos had polluted every ideal of fair dealing Americans had ever had. The New Deal era had formed him; he served under LBJ. It’s not like that any more. We have become lobsters in a bucket, pulling down others who are trying to climb out, and in the end eating each others, with the cannibal victors destined only to die in the pot of boiling water prepared by those who trapped us in the pail in the first place.
Shanadeen Begay
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 12:37 pm
Thanks for the post!
rikyrah
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 5:43 pm
good post, and I agree with you about the problems this President has faced.
dawn
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 7:35 pm
Wow. Love the adjectives … racist … flagrant or closeted … the multiple mentions of fear. Is it not possible that some people who didn’t vote for Obama might not have still thought, after he was elected, “well, let’s see what happens …” We’ve seen and experienced “what happened”. Maybe it’s easy enough to whip up the emotions of people who don’t think ahead or deeply … yet to keep emotion, or should we say passion, alive, requires more than doing the Wal-mart cheer or the party slogan? Maybe many of us are just tired of the cost, not to mention the intrusion, of the Federal government’s reach into our lives and not only our purses, but our futures. Over $500 million raised and spent by each major candidate for a job paying only $400k a year. Seems that sort of fund raising ability should have already have fixed the economy, if that was the point. Some of us are jaded by the glowing rhetoric and not so spectacular results. Please remember, too, that some of us “white looking” folks may have some other blood flowing through our veins … and are quite offended by the negative aspersions thrown out based on skin color alone.
Reynardine
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 8:40 pm
Dawn, you sound like a daybreak the roosters would snore right through.
RobM
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 7:54 pm
Your whole article proves what a coward he is. He let the Taliban box him in and he refused to fight back.
Shiva (Moderator)
Sep. 9th, 2012 at 8:13 pm
The taliban boxed Obama in? LOL
Now that’s special! Special news from Fox?
Gary Vaughn
Sep. 10th, 2012 at 6:19 am
Rob and Dawn, proving the dumbing down the last 32 years has definately taken it’s toll.
Gary Vaughn
Sep. 10th, 2012 at 6:21 am
Sorry definitely not definately LOL, proving the dumbing down hit me too LMAO.
A Walkaway
Sep. 10th, 2012 at 10:43 am
Yeah (Laugh). Well, the good news is staying away from the network news, conservatives, and the “Good Christians”, and getting an education (even taking classes) can do wonders for reversing the effects and undoing the damage. If the education is in some discipline that teaches you to think critically, so much the better!
(That’s why they’re trying so hard to gut higher education and force colleges and universities into a “business-driven model”.)
I just wish the politicians had been put through a program I believe in when they were kids (because it’s been shown to be effective) – one that fights against the inherent racism and bigotry in this country. It even gets kids to realize that just because someone is poor, that doesn’t mean that they’re lazy or stupid (or have a “bad work ethic”). I mentioned this in another thread, but it’s described in detail in H. Roy Kaplan’s book “Failing Grades”.
It even goes far to counter the religious bigotry in “Good Christian” “Christianity”!