Obama, Clinton Could Unite Country

Now that Barack Obama has become his party’s presumptive presidential nominee and Hillary Clinton is poised to announce the official end of her campaign this weekend, Democrats should demand the so-called “dream ticket” if they want to guarantee the change this country desperately needs after the nightmare of George Bush.
An Obama/Clinton ticket would be groundbreaking in historical terms and, more importantly, a formidable juggernaut in the general election.
The main argument I have heard so far against such a ticket seems petty. Some pundits and even some Democrats declare there is too much animosity between the two and between their supporters. Former President Jimmy Carter even says it will not work because the two appeal to separate groups of people. So, the logic seems to go, the Democrats should just accept a different, probably weaker ticket because, well, these two and their hardcore supporters just cannot get along and that could create political problems.
That is exactly the way major elections get lost and the manner in which great governments lose their way. Democrats should not stand for one minute of it. This is an historical moment. Obama, Clinton, all of us, must seize the opportunity.
These two great leaders should use, not deny, their different strengths for the good of the country, and, really, for the good of themselves as leading stewards of a nation that has lost its way in the quagmire of the Iraq occupation, in the ongoing Bush war against basic civil liberties and in the darkness of America’s new world reputation as a nation governed by despicable torturers and liars. Their supporters will follow their lead if the reconciliation is genuine, if Obama and Clinton can transcend the corporate media’s exaggerations about egos and grudges.
They need each other. If he wants to win the presidency, Obama needs Hillary’s political experience, her vast appeal to important voter groups and her intelligence and drive. Hillary now needs Obama if she truly wants to accomplish her admirable goals of providing adequate health care to all American citizens while giving average, hard-working people a break from financial insecurity. As a powerful vice president, she will be positioned to do much more than she could do as a senator.
The Beltway crowd—mostly a conservative and pampered crew—focuses on the election “game” triviality as if that is what matters as Americans lose their homes in record numbers, as parents deny themselves medical care so their children can eat, as senior citizens play medicine roulette by only taking the medications they can afford under the tyrannical and abusive corporate system we now call “health care” in this country.
This election is incredibly significant obviously because Obama is the country’s first African American presidential nominee of a major party and because Clinton broke new ground as a woman presidential candidate, and that is something to savor and think about in terms of an historic shift in the nation’s consciousness. It foretells a new day in this country, a new paradigm. But this election is truly not about Obama, and it is not about Clinton, and that is much more than easy political sloganeering.
This election is about people standing up against the tyranny of the few over the many, against the tyranny of an imperial presidency and against the tyranny of a neoconservative federal government now staunchly opposed to its ordinary working people, to basic human compassion, to legal justice, to science, to rationality, to truth, to democracy itself.
The Democratic Party’s presidential nomination process, for all its faults, showed the world Americans remain passionately concerned about democracy and the world around them, and it showed the time is nearing for a major positive correction in the great American Democracy experiment. It is a new era.
So Barack, Hillary, we have work to do. Let’s trounce McCain in November.
- dochoc's blog
- Login or register to post comments




I'm with you on the Obama/Clinton ticket
I'm not 100% happy with Obama or Clinton (both are way too moderate for my tastes, and aren't doing enough to end the war as Senators), but I do like the idea of an Obama/Clinton ticket.
1. It would help to unite folks who might otherwise drift over to McCain, who feel hurt by the ugliness of the Demo primary.
2. It would help clear the way for other women to be elected to national office. I do strongly think that Clinton was treated very badly by the press and pundits, and much of it was not because of her policies but rather was all about her gender.
3. It would free Edwards to take on a more substantive and active role in the Obama administration (I'm thinking something directly related to ending poverty in America).
4. I think Obama/Clinton would stomp McCain into the ground.
J. M. Branum
www.jmbzine.com
www.pineridgeoklahoma.com
Anybody but Clinton
There are many more good reasons to keep the Clintons out of this:
1. Hillary voted in favor of the Iraq war and parroted George Bush's propaganda to help sell the war to the American people. She was supportive of the war until it became politically convenient to change her mind. She has encouraged the president to be more aggressive with Iran. She voted to declare Iran's Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organization. She is a total warmonger.
2. Hillary voted for the Patriot Act, and voted to reauthorize the Patriot Act.
3. She has run a very dirty, divisive and even racist campaign. She has lied about herself and Obama. She and Bill really did treat Obama horribly. She plants questions in her rallies. She's used scare tactics and has been hypocritical at times. And she stayed in the race way too long, putting her own ego above the good of the country.
4. She is a divisive figure that might lose the Democrats more votes as she gains. I've heard a lot of Republicans lately talking about how much they like Obama. Putting Hillary on the ticket would probably lose him those votes.
Coming around
Well, I may be coming around on this. But there are compelling arguments against it, more than you alluded to. Sen. Clinton is stuck in the Democratic politics of the past. Her campaign reflected this, infested with DLCers. She was very ill-advised by that crowd, not to mention her husband, who just don't see or understand the new political dynamics.
That said though, she's remade herself before, and if she can adopt the new realities of Obama's party, begin to embrace the Netroots, and do it right quick, she may redeem herself in time to get on the ticket. Today was a good start.
Because such a team would be unbeatable. And Obama can't do squat if he doesn't win.
Rena
Peace Arena