The Primary Race: Views from England
It has been interesting following the American presidential primaries, as a Canadian, while in England, through the eyes of the BBC, the Sunday Times, the Guardian, etc. Almost without exception, the British news outlets are perhaps even more infatuated with Barack Obama than American news outlets are. And Hillary Clinton’s name is almost never mentioned; instead reports always speak of “the Clintons”–which, I guess, is what has gotten people like Gary Wills and Frank Rich concerned.
However, all we hear about Obama over here is a vacuous message about “change” and “hope.” I’ve yet to hear or read a report that actually lays out Obama’s stance on the issues; rather, it is what he represents (first black president, and therefore “change”) that is news. I’m wondering if the Obama campaign is communicating more concretely through the American media. A perusal of Obama’s website on “the issues” turns up rather thin statements. More importantly, Obama’s “Blueprint for Change” seems remarkably status quo. For instance, consider just one issue: taxes. In the “Blue Print for Change,” of six mentions regarding “taxes,” five of them speak about eliminating various taxes (sure, for the poor and middle class) while the sixth simply discusses simplifying tax forms. If one searches the document on “tax” more generally, one finds something like the following snippet from the Blueprint for so-called “change” (p. 12):
THE PROBLEM
Tax Cuts for Wealthy Instead of Middle Class
The Bush tax cuts give those who earn over $1 million dollars a tax cut nearly 160 times greater than that received by middle-income Americans. At the same time, this administration has refused to tackle health care, education and housing in a manner that benefits the middle class.BARACK OBAMA’S PLAN
Provide Middle Class Americans Tax Relief
Provide a Tax Cut for Working Families: Obama will restore fairness to the tax code and provide 150 million workers the tax relief they need. Obama will create a new “Making Work Pay” tax credit of up to $500 per person, or $1,000 per working family. The “Making Work Pay” tax credit will completely eliminate income taxes for 10 million Americans.
Granted, Obama’s plan does promise to repeal the Bush tax cuts that were provided to wealthy Americans (e.g., p. 29). But when it comes to the middle class, he lapses back into the Republican-speak of tax cuts. Such a rhetoric of tax cuts has been a staple of the Democratic lexicon since Bill Clinton’s shift of the party to pretty much right-of-center vis-a-vis the rest of the world. We’re all Republicans now; which is just to say that we’re all Reaganites now.