You are hereBlog / Sunlight on the Big Table


Sunlight on the Big Table

Dec 19 2007 4:52pm
Jonathan Alter, something of an FDR expert, challenges Paul Krugman's critique of Obama's health care strategy as naive, and argues that Obama is doing precisely what FDR, Clinton and every other successful Democratic president did to get results:

Krugman is a populist. He writes that if nominated, Obama would win, "but not as big as a candidate who ran on a more populist platform." This is facile and ahistorical. How many 20th Century American presidents have been elected on a populist platform? That would be zero, Paul. ...

Krugman says that pundits like me who reject sharp anti-corporate rhetoric and prefer cooperation are "projecting their own desires onto the public." We'll see. But last time I checked, millions of Americans still work for corporations or aspire to do so and bashing them wholesale is a loser politically. It works sometimes in Democratic primaries with a heavy labor vote (though not for Dick Gephardt). But not in general elections. ...

Just after Clinton was elected, he convened a meeting of economists, CEOs, labor leaders and many others in Little Rock. The purpose of the meeting was to argue out what should be done about the ailing economy, with many of the ideas expressed there later becoming part of Clinton's successful 1993 economic recovery package. The whole thing was on television.

Sound familiar? This is essentially what Obama is proposing for health care after he's elected. If Hillary Clinton had done this on health care in 1993—instead of convening a secret task force—she might have been able to build a stronger public case for reform. ...

Obama's idea is a better one: Get every special interest out in the open on television, where the new president can cross-examine them and expose their phony rationalizations for charging $100 a pill or denying coverage to sick people (and Edwards, the former trial attorney, would be especially good at this). Then, having triumphed over the drug and insurance companies in the court of public opinion, the legislative victories will follow. It is, indeed, a fantasy to think these interests will roll over entirely, but they will get a much worse deal. ...

To call Obama "anti-change," as Paul Krugman does, is anti-common sense. Leadership requires a mixture of confrontation and compromise, with room for the losers to save face. "They have to feel the heat to see the light," LBJ liked to say. That heat is best applied up close. In public. Across the big table.

Site News

  • BenBuckman.net 2.0 launched! (12/28)

Coming Soon

  • Blog topics & archives
  • Weewar game tracker
  • More time for actual blogging...

Recent Posts

Blog-only RSS feed
Jan 5 2009 2:26am
Sloppy Reporting
Jan 4 2009 11:32pm
What I did on New Years Eve
Jan 2 2009 3:36pm
If only we'd just get along...
Dec 31 2008 6:12pm
My new Yaris
Dec 31 2008 3:59pm
Phased-in Gas Tax
Dec 30 2008 2:37am
Bush's Legacy
Dec 29 2008 11:55pm
Catching up on Moyers
Dec 29 2008 11:50pm
The Buck St0p 2.0 Beta is LIVE!!!
Dec 28 2008 11:05pm
Happy Holidays
Dec 24 2008 1:07pm

Travels

Hawaii, Israel, and more coming soon