Hey!! This is the argument I’ve been making with progressives since last winter.
Many Obama partisans detected a vague racial appeal in the anti-urban framing. But the attacks also highlighted an overlooked aspect of the Illinois senator’s rise: that in a country forever in thrall to its frontier and small-town heritage, he is the rare White House contender who really is a creature of the big city.
This raises two questions: Is Obama’s ascent a further sign — on top of volatile gas prices, plummeting home values in the exurbs and recent population upticks even in Baltimore and Newark — that our cities are back and that the country is making peace with its non-agrarian side? And would a big-city president address as never before the problems of our urban cores — blighted housing, shoddy public transit, dismal schools?
I know Ronald Reagan lived in Bel-Air, but c’mon, we haven’t had an urban president in memory. The closest is probably John F. Kennedy, who counted Boston as a home of sorts. America doesn’t elect urban politicians to national office. Our presidents are supposed to live in log cabins, chop wood, clear brush, that sort of thing. What have they known of the pulse of the city, the art, the crime, the poverty, the desperation?
It’s interesting to see how Obama has avoided the pitfalls of being an urban politician. It helped that he first became a U.S. Senator, representing all of Illinois. But his Urban Policy, while aggressive, has been downplayed in this election. And when he does discuss it, he frames it as a Metro policy, inclusive of the suburbs.
But casting Obama’s urban agenda in metropolitan terms also has political benefits. Although the country has re-embraced the city, its political battleground remains the suburbs, said Robert Lang, a demographer at Virginia Tech’s Metropolitan Institute. If elected, he says, Obama should find ways to address urban problems in a suburban context — focusing not just on West Baltimore or North Philadelphia, say, but also on suburban North Las Vegas, which has more concentrated poverty than Las Vegas proper. The same goes for spending on public transit. “If he frames something like that as being about metro competitiveness, he can do a lot,” Lang said. “It should be, ‘Hey, suburban guy sitting in traffic, would you like transit?’ instead of ‘I’m going to take your money and spend it in places you don’t visit.'”
It’s just another demonstration of Obama’s instinct to bring people together around common interests, rather than pit them against each other in a battle for resources. People that are expert at division, don’t understand how the new game is played.
Casting city issues as “metro” ones rankles some advocates of the urban poor, who see it as a way to gloss over the despair that remains very much an inner-city phenomenon in many metro areas. The Rev. Jesse Jackson acerbically suggested that Obama was playing down urban poverty to appeal to whites.
That is a perfect example of the pinched vision of Old School progressivism, and of why Obama’s appeal is so much greater than Jesse Jackson’s. Creating policies that help both the suburban commuter and the inner-city guy trying to get to his job in the burbs…that’s the kind of bigger-picture thinking Obama is known for. That is how you create a progressive consensus for change. After all, Obama’s Urban Policy is better than anything we’ve seen since LBJ.
Obama hasn’t entirely abandoned older conceptions of urban uplift. His platform includes Democratic standbys such as restoring funding to the Community Development Block Grant program, which Republicans deride as a money pit; expanding the earned-income tax credit; investing in job training; creating an affordable-housing trust fund; paying for more cops on the street. He talks of creating 20 “promise neighborhoods” modeled on the Harlem Children’s Zone, where an intensive application of services — from prenatal care on up — aims to lift an entire neighborhood…
…a big investment in infrastructure, including mass transit and inter-city rail, that he now also bills as a jobs measure; a network of public-private business incubators; [and] new green-technology industries…
Not to mention, creating a White House Office of Urban Policy ‘that will goad governments within metro areas into working together.’
We shouldn’t be surprised to see an old south-side community organizer thinking seriously about urban issues and urban poverty. Obama’s genius is to package it in a way that doesn’t pit people against each other. That’s why I have all along seen Obama as a true stealth progressive. But he does things his own way. A lot of people, like Jesse Jackson, don’t understand it.
The people of South Florida are responding.
Five hours? WTF?
Because Republicans believe in Democracy.
what is required is Federal electoral reform for presidential elections. Uniform ballots – pencil and paper. There’s no reason it can’t be done. None.
Voters should have 5 hours of work time to vote.
Until there’s reform..we’ll continue to have Boundless Opportunities for Election theft
Well, I think election day should be a full national holiday (in the middle of the week) just because it’s a lot more important than most of the holidays we have now. When the election is something you have to wedge in during your work day it takes on the feel of something trivial. It should be the most important day of the year if we really love democracy the way we claim to.
Don’t know that pencil and paper is the only way to go, either, but it would do.
On the central point I agree entirely. There’s no reason on earth that how we vote, and who gets to vote, for national officials should be left up to the states. Voting is the most basic of democratic rights, and the one we got through the most bitter struggle. It’s ridiculous to argue that some corrupt state government has a right to impose its will on an entire nation.
some of our NATO allies have tried those E-voting machines, said thanks, but no thanks, went back to paper and pencil
New York Magazine:
let’s hold on a minute until Inauguration Day.
Some are setting the table for this election be stolen, AGAIN…could it? Unreliable Zogby has a 5-point spread, headlining an Obama drop in the polls. IBD/TIPP has a 1-point lead.
McCain Guarantees victory telling us “we’re going to be up late.”
Hmmmmm.
Bush is up to some tricks in Ohio…Sets aside the SC ruling and asks DOJ to take up an investigation.
Speaking of urban presidents, didn’t GW live in a Dallas penthouse until he started his presidential run and bought a rural hogfarm? Remember, Laura didn’t move to DC for a couple of months into 2001 because she was still attending to renovations and interior decorating.
Obama’s urban outlook is the factor that makes me more forgiving of a few disappointments I have with his rhetoric and positions. He’s just not going to act out the silly old cliches that have had such insane power over out politics for at least the last quarter century. I don’t think he’s capable of it.
I’m very much an urban partisan, but the reality is that so many core issues just can’t be addressed by pandering to any one demographic, whether that’s urban, suburban, or rural/small town. Transportation, energy, the safety net, taxes, health, development all need support across geographic and class lines if we are to have any hope of remaining in the First World. To me, the important thing about Obama’s metropolist worldview is that, while he’s not above mouthing comforting old maxims, he’s interested in new ideas in a way we haven’t seen since maybe Kennedy. As an Illinois politician, he’s worked his way through one of the most parochial, self-destructive political cultures in the country and apparently come out of it with his curiousity and openness intact. Nobody has a better shot at pulling growth and change out of the chaotic mess he will face on January 20.