Don't Negotiate Against Yourselves, Lefties
Anyone who has experience haggling at a flea market has intuited the basics of negotiating. If a seller offers the item you want at a fire-sale price that you're unlikely to find elsewhere, smile, pay the asking price and walk away before they change their mind. If the requested price is many times higher than you're willing to pay, just walk away. Stratospheric pricing pretty much eliminates the odds that you'll be able to come to terms. Your time is better spent haggling with a different vendor. In other cases, offer a lowball rate and work toward middle ground.
In politics, liberals tend to negotiate against themselves. Rather than pushing for radical change, Democrats begin with an incremental approach that factors in their conservative opponents' counteroffer and begins from there. Since the Right is aggressive, they push back to the point that the resulting change is a smaller improvement that, in many cases, is so tiny as to be a rounding error. Former President Barack Obama's opening gambit in the health care reform debate illustrates this phenomenon.
We know what we wound up with: Obamacare, originally developed by the right-wing Heritage Foundation, is a free-market scheme that prioritizes insurance company profits, relies on economies of scale and assumes robust competition will reduce costs. (In practice, the health care business is de facto monopolized to the extent that there is little downward pressure on prices. The industry is disincentivized to participate in the public sector to the point that only a small fraction of the health plans available individually and via private employers can be purchased in the Affordable Care Act's online marketplace.)
The point is how the ACA as we know it came to pass. Obama, wielding considerable political capital at the start of his first term, decided to make health care reform his first major legislative priority. The public, long struggling under high costs for medical care and prescription pharmaceuticals, was supportive across party lines.
Right out of the gate, Obama negotiated against himself. Though he had promised during this campaign that the ACA would include a "public option," i.e. the right to join what Sen. Bernie Sanders called Medicare for All, he agreed to drop it from the bill because, Democrats explained, they were short one vote in the Senate. Joe Lieberman, a right-wing independent senator from Connecticut, home to many of the nation's major insurers, threatened to scuttle the measure via a filibuster parliamentary maneuver.
Rather than force Lieberman and his Republican allies to go on the record as having rejected a popular bill on a major issue, Obama dropped the public option. Obama noted the public option "has become a source of ideological contention between the left and right." Anyway, he lied, "I didn't campaign on the public option." Good news: the ACA passed. But the lack of a public option was so unpopular (88% of Democrats wanted one) that it was a significant factor behind Sanders' insurgent campaign in 2016. Instead of a towering achievement, Obamacare is widely viewed as a disappointment. The vast majority of Americans say its failure left the problem unsolved.
Shortly before he left office, Obama suggested that Congress add a public option to the ACA. This is what happens when you negotiate against yourself.
The 38% of Americans who oppose capitalism -- socialists, communists, left-libertarians and others to the left of the Democratic Party -- should take careful note of the Democrats' repeated refusals to seek big changes and the subsequent failures that have followed as a result. Unlike the Democrats, who negotiate in Congress against Republicans who share their basic political values and assumptions on the relationship between workers and their labor, militarism and social priorities, we on the actual Left are fighting to overturn the system entirely.
Our goal is Revolution. But we are completely, for the time being, disorganized. There is no viable leftist political party with a revolutionary orientation, no well-funded, highly distributed media outlet to disseminate news and opinion with our point of view. We have, even in the so-called progressive "Squad" in the House of Representatives, zero elected representatives who seek to abolish capitalism and prioritize the needs and desires of the people. Absent these basic organizational structures or an as-yet-undeveloped internet-driven organizational strategy that short-circuits traditional grassroots organizing and agitation strategies, emancipation by revolution will continue to elude us.
In the meantime, we must lay the groundwork for revolutionary foment. We must, within the constructs and limitations of the current capitalist system, expose the true nature of a government that claims to be by and for the people but is in truth nothing but a Ponzi scheme that extracts wealth from the poor and the working class upward to the tiny few at the top point of the pyramid. We can and must accomplish this by exposing the system's internal, self-evident contradictions.
This begins by asking why the powers that be repeatedly and continuously find billions of dollars for all manner of destructive nonsense -- foreign wars, corrupt defense contractors, tax breaks to for-profit corporations -- repeatedly and continuously inform us that there is never enough money to satisfy basic human needs.
We know, when we demand that everyone have enough to eat, that the political elites will refuse or ignore us. We expect, when we demand that everyone be housed, that we will be told to stuff it. We understand, when we demand that a day of work should be paid fairly, that we are asking for something that they will never agree to -- indeed, that they cannot because it would destroy them and their self-perceived identity in the power structure.
We make demands, not because we believe they will be achieved under this fake parliamentary-style democracy, but because they will be unreasonably refused, without just cause. We want people to hear us ask, and hear them say no, over and over in order to expose them and the fundamental nature of their system.
We are not, therefore, negotiating. We are demanding. Those who demand should appear reasonable. But we must also be ambitious. Our demands should be aggressive enough that we would genuinely be satisfied were we to achieve them and never so modest that there is a chance the ruling classes would ever seriously consider them.
Nothing less than a perfect world will do.
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Ted Rall (Twitter: @tedrall), the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, co-hosts the left-vs-right DMZ America podcast with fellow cartoonist Scott Stantis. His latest book, brand-new right now, is the graphic novel 2024: Revisited. You can support Ted's hard-hitting political cartoons and columns and see his work first by sponsoring his work on Patreon.
Copyright 2024 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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