Obama's odious entourage
By Eric Walberg
ccun.org, December 1, 2008
Disappointment follows disappointment with each ‘new’ face,
bemoans Eric Walberg, but there is a sort of silver lining
Yes,
we mustn’t expect too much. We all know it is the establishment that
comes first in United States politics. Obama’s presidency could easily
be sabotaged by the powers that put him there.
But still. He
would never have made it past the first, obscure primary without his
army of selfless, grassroots activists, and his coffers were first
filled by millions of small, personal donations. Surely these are the
people he should honour with at least a few names. Even Clinton had his
Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala (at least until she
was tarred and feathered by the right). Obama’s one token progressive
appointment was Melody Barnes of the Center for American Progress, who
was chief counsel to Senator Edward Kennedy, and will head the toothless
Domestic Policy Council.
Not one of the 23 Senators and 133
House Representatives who voted against the war in Iraq are on his
transitional team or even on a short-list for an important post in his
Cabinet. The only promise that might be kept is to close Guantanamo,
though he could hardly do less. The entire US legal establishment seems
to be pushing to end this outrage.
Keeping on uberhawk Robert
Gates as secretary of war, despite the continued slaughter in Iraq and
Afghanistan under his capable mismanagement, his uncompromising position
on missiles for Poland, and his shady past (including Iran-Contra) gives
little cause for hope. Russia can probably kiss improved relations with
the US good-bye. It looks like there will be neocon policy as usual.
Hillary Clinton as secretary of state just confirms this.
Yes,
everyone in Washington is solidly Zionist, so Rahm Emanuel’s devotion to
Israel hardly changes much, as John Zogby argues. But, how is it he
served with the Israeli Defense Forces — during a war — and yet never
served with the US military? As an American, if he did this for any
other country but Israel, he would have been arrested and his political
career over at once. Instead, he is honoured with the key role of the
president’s chief of staff.
On a positive note, hinging that the
domestic crimes against personal freedom perpetrated under Bush are not
entirely forgotten, John Brennan, who supported extraordinary rendition
and warrantless wiretapping, was forced to excuse himself in the race
for CIA head. Still, no criminal charges against those who authorised or
conducted torture during the Bush years are foreseen.
As
Bloomberg notes, almost half the people on the Transition Economic
Advisory Board “have held fiduciary positions at companies that, to one
degree or another, either fried their financial statements, helped send
the world into an economic tailspin, or both.” This includes, for
example, Anne Mulcahy and Richard Parsons, both of whom were Fannie Mae
directors when the company fudged accounting rules. Mulcahy and Parsons
were executives of their respective companies, Xerox and Time Warner,
and were charged with accounting fraud by the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Also on this team is Robert Rubin, who as Bloomberg
notes, was “chairman of Citigroup’s executive committee when the bank
pushed bogus analyst research, helped Enron cook its books, and got
caught baking its own. He was a director from 2000 to 2006 at Ford,
which also committed accounting fouls and now is begging Uncle Sam for
Citigroup-style bailout cash.”
Larry Summers, who was Clinton ’s
treasury secretary, will head the National Economic Council — the
president’s senior economic adviser. This looks ominous. It was Summers
who forced through the deregulation of financial markets in the 1990s
and imposed disaster capitalism on Russia . Considering that he is a
chief architect of the current financial meltdown, we should be
wondering why Obama isn’t preparing an arrest warrant for him, instead
of offering him the most powerful economic role in the world. As chief
economist for the World Bank, Summers wrote a memo saying the WB should
actively encourage the dumping of toxic waste in developing countries,
particularly “under-polluted countries in Africa,” since poor people in
developing countries rarely live long enough to develop cancer, making
him a particularly bizarre appointment for Obama. This contradiction
will be interesting to watch unfold.
Summers, Timothy Geithner
as treasury secretary, and Peter Orszag as budget director are all
protégés of Robert Rubin, who held two of their jobs under President
Bill Clinton. All three advisers are believers in what has been dubbed
Rubin-omics: balanced budgets, free trade and financial deregulation, a
combination that supposedly was responsible for the prosperity of the
1990s.
But times have changed since then. Rubin is facing
questions about his role as director of Citigroup, which is the
benefactor of the government’s latest bailout. Obama has pledged to
introduce an era of re-regulation. Instead of balancing budgets, Obama
plans a two-year fiscal stimulus worth hundreds of billions of dollars
to aid the jobless, states and cities. “Everyone recognises that we’re
looking at deficits of considerable magnitude,” said Jared Bernstein, an
economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute. “Whether it’s Bob
Rubin, Larry Summers or the most conservative economist, that is a
widely shared recognition.”
The list of establishment appointees
to his transitional team devoted to “change” goes on and on, begging the
question: Is this really the best he could come up with? How about Nobel
prize winners Joseph Stiglitz and Paul Krugman, or James K Galbraith,
for starters? Someone who represents labour such as Arlene Holt Baker,
executive vice president of the AFL-CIO? Something to suggest that
change is really what this administration is about?
Remember
Obama’s Bush moment, as they enthused about Bush’s bailout bill. Others,
such as Senator Russ Feingold, realised the bill’s problems and voted
against it. Feingold said that the Wall Street bailout legislation
“fails to reform the flawed regulatory structure that permitted this
crisis to arise in the first place. And it doesn’t do enough to address
the root cause of the credit market collapse, namely the housing crisis.
Taxpayers deserve a plan that puts their concerns ahead of those who got
us into this mess.” Feingold was right. In short, Obama promised “Change
we can believe in,” but it’s looking a lot more like “Business as
usual.”
So far the only black to be appointed to a senior post
is former deputy attorney general Eric Holder, will be attorney general.
He is best known as the Chiquita Bananas lawyer who approved of
president Bill Clinton’s pardon for Marc Rich, the blatantly corrupt
financier whose former wife, Denise Rich, had contributed heavily to
Clinton’s presidential library.
Despite the extreme
disappointment that many are now experiencing, there are a few straws to
grasp at. Emanuel was forced to apologise publically for his father’s
now legendary anti-Arab remark about mopping floors in the White House,
and this incident will act as a bell-weather for anti-Arab policies. Is
this, plus the appointments of Gates, Summers and Clinton possibly a
wily Obama “keeping his enemies close”?
Despite the inexorable
march of the empire with a black commander-in-chief at the helm, at
least the Cabinet is filled with competent people, some — like Clinton —
with considerable authority and prestige around the world. Holder seems
to be genuinely against torture and hostile to the concept of the
imperial presidency. Obama himself is intelligent and will not have
circles spun around him as did Bush, nor will he take five-week
vacations and rely on comic book memos for snap decisions to go to war.
Despite his team’s credentials as Rubin-omists, they are hard at
work on a huge fiscal stimulus package and further tightening of
government regulations on banks and the financial sector. Conservation
and the long-overdue move away from fossil fuels are high on the agenda.
These bureaucrats are not fools (like Bush, Rice and many others in the
current administration), and taking a leaf from president Franklin
Roosevelt’s New Deal administration, will not be afraid to borrow from
the liberal handbook as the need arises.
What the progressives
in the US must now do is mobilise, mobilise, mobilise, and articulate a
clear, cogent agenda for real change. The old adage holds true more than
ever: No pain — no gain.
It seems the only thing we can truly
feel some exhilaration for at this point is the fact that Obama’s father
was a black Muslim and his mother an altruistic humanitarian who truly
loved other cultures and devoted her life to better understanding among
peoples. Let us hope for some sign that their spirit lives on in their
son to help fight off the demons who surround him at present. Perhaps a
good old-fashioned African exorcism is in order.
*** Eric Walberg
writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at
www.geocities.com/walberg2002/
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