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David Sirota
David Sirota
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Laying Bare the Myth of "The Left"

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I'm always amused by popular references to the allegedly all-powerful American "Left." The term suggests that progressives today possess the same kind of robust, ideologically driven political apparatus as the Right — a machine putting principles before party affiliation.

This notion is hilarious because it is so absurd.

Yes, there are certainly well-funded groups in Washington that call themselves "progressive," that get media billing as "The Left," and that purport to advocate liberal causes regardless of party. But unlike the Right's network, which has sometimes ideologically opposed Republicans on court nominations and legislation, many "progressive" institutions are not principled at all — sadly, lots of them are just propagandists for Democrats, regardless of what Democrats do.

Everyone in professional "Left" politics knows this reality "deep down in places they don't talk about at parties," as Jack Nicholson might say — and they don't discuss it for fear of both jeopardizing their employers' non-profit tax status and/or undermining their employers' dishonest fundraising appeals to liberal donors' ideals.

During the Bush years, this truth was easily obscured, as bashing the Republican president for trampling progressive initiatives was equivalent to aiding Democrats. But in the Obama era, the "The Left's" destructive, party-over-principles motivation has become impossible to hide, especially recently.

Behold, for instance, major environmental groups' attitude toward the Gulf oil spill.

We know that before the disaster, President Obama recklessly pushed to expand offshore drilling. We also know that his Interior Department gave British Petroleum's rig a "categorical exclusion" from environmental scrutiny and, according to The New York Times, "gave permission to BP and dozens of other oil companies to drill in the Gulf without first getting required (environmental) permits." Worse, we know that after the spill, the same Interior Department kept issuing "categorical exclusions" for new Gulf oil operations, and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar still refuses "to rule out continued use of categorical exclusions," as the Denver Post reported (heckuva job, Kenny!).

Undoubtedly, had this been the behavior of a Republican administration, "The Left's" big environmental organizations would be scheduling D.C. protests and calling for firings, if not criminal charges. Yet, somehow, there are no protests. Somehow, there have been almost no calls for the resignation of Salazar, who oversaw this disaster and who, before that, took $323,000 in campaign contributions from energy interests and backed more offshore drilling as a U.S. senator. Somehow, facing environmental apocalypse, there has been mostly silence from "The Left."

That silence is similarly deafening when it comes to Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan.

We know Kagan was among the Clinton administration advisers urging the president to support a serious abortion restriction and to avoid reducing racist disparities in criminal sentencing. We know that as Harvard Law School dean, Kagan "hired 29 tenured or tenure-track faculty members (and) did not hire a single black, Latino, or American Indian — not one, not even a token," reports Duke University's Guy-Uriel Charles. And we know that in her solicitor general confirmation hearings, Kagan stated her radical belief that the government can hold terrorism suspects without trial.

Again, if this were a Republican nominee's record, "The Left's" pro-choice and civil rights groups would be frantically mounting opposition — or at least raising concerns. But this is a Democratic nominee, so they've fallen in line. Planned Parenthood celebrated Kagan's "dedication," the NAACP trumpeted her "commitment to diversity" and the liberal Alliance for Justice said it "applauds" her nomination.

Surveying the hypocrisy, CNN's Roland Martin wrote that "The Left's" organizations "need to decide what matters: their principles or their politics ... their convictions or chicken dinners in the White House."

He's too late: They've already made their decision, which is why — regrettably — a powerful Left does not exist in America.

David Sirota is the author of the best-selling books "Hostile Takeover" and "The Uprising." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado and blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
Powerful is not the word. With the willing accompliace of the MSM the left is powerful enough. The proper word is Sane.
Comment: #1
Posted by: james bentley
Fri May 21, 2010 12:15 AM
Mr Sirota, you are correct in your observation but i would add that 1. we are burned out fighting oppressive predatory capitalism on a 360* front ... We are not for Kagan or happy with the Dodd bill for Stockholders profits. We are simply overwhelmed.
i despise Kagan and Dodd is a criminal not to mention Eric Holder is a Punk and Obama is a DLC puppet. We are just overwhelmed and now we have unleashed a 'Chernobyl ' on the worlds Oceans...
We real activists - (not the Sympathizers) are fighting many difficult battles... i recently said good bye to Col Ann Wright who was headed to help break the naval blockade of Gaza...
Complacency is not our only enemy - Blue Dawg DLC Neo-Liberal sympathizers are the root of the battle.
William Crain
Billings, MT
Comment: #2
Posted by: Darwin26
Fri May 21, 2010 10:25 AM
Sadly true, David. I know that you don't hang around much over a dkos these days, but this very discussion has torn the place asunder. Aside from the Obama idolators, with whom reasonable discussion is impossible, there is a group who believe that we have to make the best of what we have (and not undermine it) because we are never likely to do better. Pragmatism or craven defeatism? I lean toward the latter.
Comment: #3
Posted by: chuckvw
Fri May 21, 2010 10:35 AM
I agree with your premise about the lack of a all-powerful American "Left." But I think your comparisions are off base. What we saw on the right during the Bush debacle was a complete and utter lockstep in support for the Shrub. There were no criticisms of him from the right until the end of his 2nd term. Fastforward to today and there are plenty of criticisms of Obama from the left, it's just that those with the bigest megaphones who aren't doing the criticising get all the attention. That's where the power is. But the left/right analogy doesn't hold water I'm afraid. Look no further than what James Carvell critically said this weekend about Obama and BP. And what happens whenever any Republican (like David Frum) says anything about his own party? Also see "I'm Sorry Rush dot Com" for further examples.
Comment: #4
Posted by: A Smith
Mon May 24, 2010 10:13 AM
Re: Charles Van Wey: Perfectly said. And Twitter's lib/prog community, like dKos, has been "torn asunder" in a most painful way.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Aviva Gabriel
Thu Jul 15, 2010 2:17 AM
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