Conyers: “There is no one more disappointed than I am in Barack Obama.”

blackascoal

The Force is With Me
Congressman John Conyers says Barack Obama’s stance on health care has been wrong, and it’s going to cost the president “big time.” It might even cost Obama his second term in the White House.

Conyers gave that assessment at Washington’s Busboys and Poets restaurant, bookstore and bar, where the Progressive Democrats of America were celebrating their fifth anniversary. Conyers is the Congressional Black Caucus’s longest serving member, having represented Detroit since 1964, when Obama was a three-year-old. He’s also one of the most consistently progressive members of the House, chairman of the Judiciary Committee and author of single payer health care bill H.R. 676 – legislation the White House has done its best to smother. Obama once gave lip service to single payer health care, but as president has staked his reputation on a mishmash of corporate schemes and deals-with-the-devil masquerading as health care reform – a thoroughly confused and conflicted legislative concoction that Conyers describes, simply, as “crap.”

Conyers suggests that, at the end of the legislative process, progressive congresspersons may wind up voting against Obama on health carebecause the bill will be simply too bad for advocates of real reform to support.
Busboys and Poets is a favored gathering place for progressives of all races. On the January night last year when Obama won the South Carolina primary, the place was noisier and more boisterous than anybody’s sports bar – so many deliriously hopeful faces, such soaring expectations. Now, John Conyers was telling many of the same people: “There is no one more disappointed than I am in Barack Obama.”

“We’ve got to tell Obama now, or he’ll be a one term president.”

The president and his supporters often throw around the old cliché about not letting the “perfect become the enemy of the good.” That’s their way of defending the fatal compromises Obama keeps making with the right-wing before the fight has even begun. Whether because of lack of gumption or lack of real commitment on Obama’s part, this refusal to confront Power is what has brought us to the current health care debacle in Congress. It’s not a matter of the perfect being the enemy of the good, but that the health care legislation shaped by the White House and its allies in Congress is just no damn good.

As disappointed as Conyers is with Obama, he still feels compelled to blame someone else for Obama’s health care fiasco. It’s White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel’s fault, says the congressman. Emanuel wants to pass any kind of health care bill, “anything just to say we did” pass something.

Whether the villainous Rahm Emanuel is to blame or it’s Obama’s own fault, the president will pay a steep political price, says Conyers. If he passes a “weak bill,” Obama loses, and if no bill passes, he loses. Conyers says he’s speaking out in such stark terms because, “we’ve got to tell Obama now, or he’ll be a one term president.”

The truth is, Obama killed the prospects for real health care reform when, no sooner than he had taken the oath of office, he began threatening to cut Medicare and attempting to marginalize single payer advocates like John Conyers. What begins badly, usually ends badly.

http://blackagendareport.com/?q=content/conyers-“there-no-one-more-disappointed-i-am-barack-obama”
 
I think single-payer healthcare would be ideal, but this reform is almost as good and much more politically pragmatic. The best is the enemy of the good.
 
BAC - how is it possible to not understand the political & economic realities of this situation?

Even with the compromises, the bill will LIKELY fail. Now, you can say, why should he compromise then? He's got the majority...take the perfect bill & ram it down their throats. Two words for you: BLUE DOG.

That is just reality, and I'm tired of NOTHING being done on healthcare because people DO let the perfect be the enemy of the good. The perfect, in this case, is revolutionary reform. Since the '90's debacle, I have felt, and will likely always feel, that this can only be accomplished incrementally in this country.
 
As I said all along. Obama is a politician first and will not have the balls to do what is needed. Too many concessions to cons and the health care industry.
 
I think single-payer healthcare would be ideal, but this reform is almost as good and much more politically pragmatic. The best is the enemy of the good.

Yeah. Well, you're a little fascist fucktard idiot who think it's cool to be so.

Shit is always shit. Best and good are nowhere in sight.
 
There's nothing wrong with criticism from the left. There should be more of it. The biggest problem with the Democrats generally is that they always start from a compromise position whereas Republicans start from an extreme position. And on top of it criticims always come from the right moving the compromise position to an even more right-ward position.

Taking single-payer off the table from the start was a miscalculation.
 
if the Black Caucus doesn't get behind the current plan, it's dead in the water.....they will never get enough support from Republicans to offset all those votes.....
 
if the Black Caucus doesn't get behind the current plan, it's dead in the water.....they will never get enough support from Republicans to offset all those votes.....

I don't think a single Republican is going to vote for it, no matter what they present. They see this as their ticket to success in 2010 and 2012.


And the funny thing here is that it isn't going to be the liberals in their cozy districts losing their seats to Republicans. Nope, it's going to be the traitors in the center who vote it down.
 
There's nothing wrong with criticism from the left. There should be more of it. The biggest problem with the Democrats generally is that they always start from a compromise position whereas Republicans start from an extreme position. And on top of it criticims always come from the right moving the compromise position to an even more right-ward position.

Taking single-payer off the table from the start was a miscalculation.

QFT!

Big Health Care should be spending 1.4 mil a day to keep single payer out of the bill, not to keep a public option out of the bill!

This was the big tactical error, and liberals said so from day one.
 
it's ok to discriminate and ignore us white men, so we can just fuck off.

Do you not see any reason for minority groups to band together for their interests?

What would be the point of forming a white caucus besides establishing dominance over the minorities?

The situations are clearly different.
 
thank you, i guess i thought since there was a black caucus there should be a white caucus....or would that be racist to have a white caucus?

I can't imagine a white caucus forming that wouldn't be formed along racial domination lines. Can you? We're already the dominant ethnic group.
 
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