Murmurs of Primary Challenge to
Obama
WASHINGTON &
SANTA FE, NM
(By Mai Bai, NYT) December 8, 2010
—
President Obama’s compromise with
Republicans on extending tax cuts
for the wealthy, which his
self-described progressive critics
see as a profound betrayal, is bound
to intensify a debate that has been
bubbling up on liberal blogs and
e-mail lists in recent weeks —
whether or not the president who
embodied “hope and change” in 2008
should face a primary challenge in
2012.
The idea seems to have little
momentum for now, not least because
there isn’t an obvious candidate,
and because such a challenge would
seem to have about as much chance of
success as, say, a reality show
about David Hasselhoff. That a
primary is being openly discussed,
though, reflects how fully Mr.
Obama’s relationship with his
party’s liberal activists has
ruptured and the considerable
confusion on the left over what to
do about it.
Just last weekend, three liberal
writers made the case for taking on
Mr. Obama in 2012. Michael Lerner,
longtime editor of Tikkun magazine,
argued in The Washington Post that a
primary represented a “real way to
save the Obama presidency,” by
forcing Mr. Obama to move leftward.
Robert Kuttner, co-founder of The
American Prospect and one of the
party’s most scathing populist
voices, issued a similar call on The
Huffington Post, suggesting Iowa as
the ideal incubator.
On the same site, Clarence B. Jones,
a one-time confidant of the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr., suggested
that liberals should break with Mr.
Obama now, just as Dr. King and
others did with Lyndon B. Johnson in
1968. “It is not easy to consider
challenging the first
African-American to be elected
president of the United States,” Mr.
Jones wrote. “But, regrettably, I
believe the time has come to do
this.”
Meanwhile, in Iowa, a group known as
the Progressive Change Campaign
Committee, originally founded to aid
Democratic Congressional candidates
in 2010, has started broadcasting an
advertisement that shows Mr. Obama,
in 2008, promising to reverse the
tax cuts for the most affluent
Americans. The group isn’t
advocating a primary challenge just
yet — but then, the choice of Iowa
as a market seems intended to send a
pretty clear warning to the White
House.
“On issue after issue, when the
public is on his side, this
president just refuses to fight,”
says Adam Green, the group’s
co-founder. “At this point, the
strategy is to shame him into
fighting.”
All of this would have seemed
unthinkable in 2008, when Mr.
Obama’s red-white-and-blue visage
seemed omnipresent on campuses and
along city streets, a symbol to many
of liberalism reborn. That, of
course, was before the abandonment
of “card-check” legislation for
unions and of the so-called public
option in health care, the
escalation in Afghanistan and the
formation of the deficit-reduction
commission.
After this week’s reversal, quips
the progressive commentator Cenk
Uygur, it may be time for his fellow
progressives to face the fact that
Mr. Obama “is just not that into
you.”
Of course, Mr. Obama is only the
latest in a long line of Democratic
presidents, going back to Franklin
D. Roosevelt, to disappoint the
liberal wing of his party and to at
least hear rumblings of a challenge.
In 1960, the hipster John F. Kennedy
represented for liberals something
similar to what Mr. Obama embodied
as a candidate; two years later, the
writer Norman Mailer acidly
concluded that Kennedy stood for
nothing but the pursuit of power,
“without light or principle.”
Both Johnson and President Jimmy
Carter faced liberal primary
challenges when they stood for
re-election: Mr. Johnson because of
the Vietnam War and Mr. Carter
because he was deemed to be
ineffectual in advancing liberal
ideals. Bill Clinton’s stances on
issues like free trade and welfare
reform similarly infuriated the
left, though he managed to avoid a
primary.
Echoing his Democratic predecessors,
Mr. Obama seemed frustrated at a
news conference on Tuesday about
being pilloried by liberals who
haven’t had to wrestle with the
realities of governing. “I’ve got a
whole bunch of lines in the sand,”
Mr. Obama protested.
The White House seems to view the
notion of a serious primary
challenge as far-fetched, and you
can see why. For one thing, there
seems to be no perfect vehicle out
there, no Edward M. Kennedy biding
his time.
The closest approximation appears to
be Howard Dean, the former
presidential candidate and party
chairman who criticized the
president’s deal on taxes. But Mr.
Dean hasn’t shown any interest to
this point in running, and you might
recall that his 2004 campaign, for
all its passion and fund-raising
prowess, yielded just two primary
victories, in the District of
Columbia and in his home state of
Vermont.
There’s also the unique nature of
this president himself, which makes
the sheer math of any primary effort
seem especially daunting. Mr. Obama,
after all, drew his most monolithic
support in 2008 from
African-Americans and younger
voters, two groups who are pivotal
in Democratic primaries and whom you
would expect to be essential
constituencies for any kind of
insurgent, take-it-to-the-Man
candidacy.
All that said, Mr. Obama must be
aware that not all primary
challenges to sitting presidents are
about winning. Some, like Edward
Kennedy’s in 1980 and Ronald
Reagan’s in 1976, are in fact
designed to unseat the incumbent and
capture the presidency. But other
ideological challengers, like Eugene
J. McCarthy in 1968 and Patrick J.
Buchanan 24 years later, measure
their success not by where they’re
standing on Inauguration Day, but by
whether they have changed the
trajectory of their parties.
Such protests candidates don’t have
to win more than a state or two to
have an impact; they merely have to
show up and sow division. It
probably isn’t coincidental that
none of the last four American
presidents to face primaries while
seeking re-election — Johnson,
Gerald R. Ford, Carter and George H.
W. Bush — survived to serve another
term.
In other words, should the
president’s progressive critics warm
to the idea, it might not take a
particularly credible primary
challenge to weaken Mr. Obama’s
chances for re-election. It might
only take a challenge designed to do
exactly that.