My point is if we come to the streets Obama will be able to do more. We loses a fight when we do not show support for the issues we care about.
[...]
And we stayed home.
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Public opinion has been on the liberal side of all of these issues and it makes no difference
.
People have been in the streets, people have marched, picketed and protested, called Congress, and it's made no difference
.
Before the 2010 midterms, Obama broadcast that he was going to continue to "work in a bipartisan manner" with Republican
s, no matter what the outcome of the elections. Whether Democrats gained seats or lost control of the Congress:
Aides say that the president’ s been spending “a lot of time talking about Obama 2.0,” brainstorming with administration officials about the best way to revamp the strategies and goals of the White House.
And despite the predictions that Democrats may relinquish a large degree of legislating power, including perhaps control of the House and even Senate, Obama isn’t thinking of the next two years as a period that’ll be marked with the same obstructive nature from the GOP.
“It may be that regardless of what happens after this election, [Republicans] feel more responsible, either because they didn’t do as well as they anticipated, and so the strategy of just saying no to everything and sitting on the sidelines and throwing bombs didn’t work for them,” Obama says. “Or they did reasonably well, in which case the American people are going to be looking to them to offer serious proposals and work with me in a serious way.”
Dick Durbin says Obama’s post-election agenda “will have to be limited and focused on the things that are achievable and high priorities for the American people.” Tom Daschle says Obama has to reach out more: “The keyword is inclusion. He’s got to find ways to be inclusive. “
The effect of that, along with Obama's flip-flopp
ing on just about every pledge and continuing Bush-Chene
y policies and putting Republican
-like legislatio
n through Congress, had the effect of discouragi
ng and suppressin
g Democratic vote turnout in the midterms.
The Democrats who did turn out thew Blue Dogs out in big numbers; progressives only lost 3 seats. Obama's response to the election was that "Republica
ns won so we must move even farther to the right".
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