Obama’s
failed dream
S P
SETH
After eight years in the White House, Barack Obama is now a private
citizen. He had brought hope and yes, even excitement, when he became the
country’s president in 2009. The US needed that in the midst of the worst
financial crisis after the thirties’ depression. At the time it seemed that the
country needed a different direction from an altogether different man at the
helm in every sense of the word. The US never had an Afro American as the
country’s president and in Obama there appeared to be a young, personable,
intelligent, hopeful candidate with no evident bitterness that was
understandably ingrained among blacks. Indeed, he passionately believed and
talked about one country and one people, thus transcending all differences of
race, ethnicity, and partisan politics. And he believed too that the Americans
were ready for that kind of unity of purpose and commitment, both the Democrats
and the Republicans.
Obama was lyrical about his faith in America and the American people.
Speaking at a public rally in Chicago after he won the race for the White
House, he declared with pride, “If there is anyone out there who still doubts
that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the
dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of
our democracy, tonight is your answer.” And in the spirit of Martin Luther, he
added, “The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get
there in one year or even in one term. But America, I have never been more
hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there.”
But from the viewpoint of the Republican Party, Obama might have won
the election but he was hardly the one to lead the nation. First and foremost,
Obama’s message of uniting the nation and transcending differences seemed too
self-serving. Second: political partisanship of the country’s two major
parties, Democrats and Republicans, was the guiding principle of its politics. Sure,
both sides of the political divide sought to present themselves as advancing
national interests but they didn’t always see that in the same way. Obama’s
sincere effort to project himself as the all knowing wise man seemed brash and
abrupt, not only because of his young age, and for many, due to his race. He
was not only black but also suspiciously Muslim and probably not even born in
America.
According to a 2015 CNN poll, 29 per cent of Americans still
believed that Obama was Muslim. One in five Americans believed that Obama was
born outside the country. Indeed, the proportion of Republicans who mixed
Obama’s race, religion and birth was much higher. It is not for nothing that
Donald Trump continued to paddle the ‘birther’ lie almost to the end, even
after Obama had revealed his birth certificate. How humiliating and undignified
for the president of the country to be harangued about his origin and whatever
else!
But Obama maintained his dignity and continued to pursue his message
of national good. He certainly waited too long, hoping that on issues like health
cover for all Americans, he might be able to forge an agreement with the
Republicans and, in the process, much time and energy was expended without
substantive results. It would have been better for him to push necessary
legislation, like on health care, when Obama’s Democrats had majority in both
the House of Representatives and the Senate. Even the truncated Affordable Care
Act (Obama Care), which sought to extend cover to nearly 20 million Americans,
was highly controversial with the Republicans vowing to repeal it, which Donald
Trump as President has taken steps to dismantle.
In trying to be everyone’s consensual president, Obama sought to
present a highly varnished and idealized version of America. He incessantly
talked about American ‘exceptionalism’, of respect for human rights and so on,
which, at times, so starkly contrasted with US’ reality. The imagined
post-racial America was a myth when incidents of Afro American deaths by police
shooting and by a Nazi white youth at a Church service highlighted the problem
so starkly. While Obama expressed usual sorrow and sympathy for the victims, he
was very restrained on such occasions. It was very disappointing for many that
he was so ineffective in articulating and dealing with the whole range of
disadvantage and discrimination that affected the country’s Afro American
population and other minorities.
In his powerful book, Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates,
wrote that nothing had really changed for the blacks. He said, “ ‘White
America’ is a syndicate arrayed to protect its exclusive power to dominate and
control our [black] bodies. Sometimes this power is direct (lynching), and some
times it is insidious (redlining). But however it appears, the power of
domination and exclusion is central to the belief in being white, and without
it, ‘white people’ would cease to exist for want of reasons.” And the election
of Donald Trump as President is proof of the strong reaction to Obama’s presidency,
even as it was ineffectual in building bridges and creating unity in diversity.
Of course, Obama’s election as the country’s first black president
was highly symbolic and symbols are important at times, but Obama was too
decent, too dignified and too consensual to take it beyond that. In trying to
be everything to everyone, he had to even abandon his long time pastor Jeremiah
Wright during the 2008 election who had denounced the policies of his country.
Wright reportedly had said after the 9/11 terrorism attacks, “We bombed
Hiroshima, we bombed Nagasaki, and we nuked far more than the thousands in New
York and the Pentagon, and we never batted an eye… and now we are indignant,
because the stuff we have done overseas is now brought back into our front
yards. America’s chickens are coming home to roost.” It was hot stuff and when
it came out during the election, America’s consensual president-in-the making,
Barack Obama, had no choice but to disown his old church and the pastor. Obama
tried too hard to believe in his rhetoric and we know now that it didn’t work.
Under Obama’s administration, the country’s has made some economic
recovery but it is too patchy with so many people still in doldrums, not sure
of where the country is going. The hope that Obama generated has given way,
among many people, to despair and desperation. Which has contributed to the
Trump phenomena.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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