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The Candidate vs. President Canard
Allegedly, there is an inherent difference between what a candidate can tell voters and what that candidate can support as president.
Every now and then, an insider inadvertently exposes the hideous rationalizations that run the American political grotesquerie. The best known of these statements are memorialized on TV as “gaffes.” But the ones that never become famous tend to reveal the ugliest assumptions of all.
Case in point is the comment the pharmaceutical industry recently let fly in the Washington Post. The newspaper this week examined how the Obama administration crushed legislation that would have allowed Americans to purchase lower-priced FDA-approved medicines from abroad – legislation that President Obama promised to support as a presidential candidate; legislation that would have reduced drug profiteering and saved the government and consumers $100 billion.
“It’s about being a candidate as opposed to being president,” said the drug industry’s top lobbyist in defense of Obama’s flip-flop.
This explanation is common among politicos – we last heard it when the New York Times’ John Harwood quoted an administration aide attacking those demanding Obama fulfill his campaign pledges. Disenchanted activists, said the White House, “need to take off (their) pajamas, get dressed and realize that governing a closely divided country is complicated.”
These “candidate vs. president” idioms are standard among Beltway elites who belong to what New York University’s Jay Rosen calls “The Church of the Savvy.” Their catechism says that anyone demanding a president deliver on campaign promises is naive because, allegedly, there is an inherent difference between what a candidate can tell voters and what that candidate can support as president. Those rejecting this “savvy” interpretation are therefore lambasted as petulant children who refuse to “take off their pajamas” and “get dressed.”
It’s a canard, of course – one sculpted to excuse selling out. And there are two huge problems with it.
First, ignoring presidents’ broken promises defiles our republican democracy. In America, we only get to choose presidents every four years, meaning we must rely on campaign promises as metrics for electoral choices. But if the entire idea of the campaign promise becomes an assumed joke, then we have zero metrics by which to elect leaders.
Second, an obvious but taboo truth: There are almost no substantive reasons candidates cannot champion their election-year promises once in office. These pledges are made through deliberative processes. Candidates shouldn’t make them if they’re not serious about follow through – and it’s not unreasonable to ask officeholders to at least try to honor the campaign commitments that informed voters’ electoral decisions. That’s especially true on something like drug importation, whose opposition is about enlarging profits, not, as Obama aides argue, about protecting consumer safety.
Drug companies already manufacture medicines in the developing world so as to evade U.S. labor, environmental and safety regulations. They then legally import those products for sale to Americans at inflated prices. The new bill would have merely let wholesalers, not just manufacturers, also import medicines – but at the lower prices the manufacturers concurrently sell those medicines abroad. Such wholesale importation is permitted throughout Europe and the rest of the industrialized world. So two questions: If the administration actually believes importation is unsafe, why isn’t it banning current drug imports? And if the administration specifically insists wholesale importation is unsafe, then where are the dead Europeans?
Certainly, some “candidate vs. president” differences might justify rare instances of dishonesty. A president might momentarily dissemble to, say, protect soldiers on the battlefield.
But fibbing for the public good is different than breaking promises for private gain. In the latter cases, “candidate vs. president” apologias are non sequiturs. They justify nothing – and they clearly do not rationalize an importation U-turn by Obama designed only to protect a drug cartel.
That kind of power-coddling reversal insults voters, and absolving such an insult isn’t savvy – it betrays our nation’s founding principles.
ABOUT THIS AUTHOR
David Sirota, an In These Times senior editor and syndicated columnist, is a bestselling author whose book Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now—Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Everything was released in 2011. Sirota, whose previous books include The Uprising and Hostile Takeover, hosts the morning show on AM760 in Denver. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Reader Comments
There are several reasons which would cause an incoming
president to abandon some campaign promises. The most
common and most important one, is the lack of truthfulness
of the previous administration. And this manipulation of the
American people continued right up to the month before the
election of 2008, when the banks were bailed out at our expense. We then watched in disbelief as obscene bonuses
were given to those who actually caused the crisis.
This may explain our president’s decision to send additional
troops into Afghanistan. Perhaps the importance of this matter
was constantly clouded by our preoccupation with Iraq.
An ‘up-front’ outgoing administration, in the interest of our
country, would have been more supportive of the new
president.
I believe the pharmaceutical issue which you speak of, will be
addressed after the healthcare reform is passed. And I do believe that there should be concerns about the quality of
imported medications. Look at the problems we’ve had with
many products imported from China. The first thing that is
pushed aside when a production company is overwhelmed
with orders for their products, is their quality control.
I also have a feeling that President Obama may be looking at ways to recover the lost pharmaceutical jobs that you mention,
but I do not yet know how.
You bring up very interesting questions. But our president was
faced with more challenges than any president before him. And
if those senators from across the aisle would finally break
from their blind loyalty to the worst administration in our history,
and become ‘thinking individuals’, we might see some real
progress in this country.
Posted by Eugene Connolly on Dec 21, 2009 at 12:56 AM
Quite apart from Obama’s political orientation (he is a Marxist), every single person we know of in Obama’s circumscribed history is (or was) a radical, a Marxist, a terrorist, a racist, a criminal, or a corrupt Chicago politician. Name one who was not, I defy you.
Marxism, like Islam, makes a holy sacrament of dishonesty, the better to fool the intended victims.
So, you expect Obama to tell the truth? About anything?
The supreme good in the Marxist catechism is the seizure of power (historical inevtability and all that). Facts and the accurate communication of facts are simply not a factor that Marxists take into account. All Marxist statements are predicated on the accomplishment of their goal of seizing power, not on whether their statements are accurate.
The workers of the world were originally supposed, by Marx, to be the ones who seized power, but that idea has long since gone away. Impatient with the workers, who were not inclined to seize power in accordance with Marx’s script, elitists have taken upon themselves to seize power. More’s the pity, because elitists are infinitely less qualified to exercise power than workers, who have the advantage of practical experience.
That is why LBJ’s War on Poverty wasted $6.6 trillion and barely moved the poverty rates; the War on Poverty was run by elitists who did not know what they were doing and were corrupt, or became corrupted, in the process. The poor who were supposed to be helped by the War on Poverty were made worse off.
That is why Carter’s and Clinton’s “affordable housing” program collapsed; the “affordable housing” program was run by elitists who did not know what they were doing and were corrupt, or became corrupted, in the process. The poor who were supposed to be helped by affordable housing were made worse off.
Obama’s “health care” program is already corrupt, as is becoming obvious to even such naifs as Sirota.
Now some are expressing amazement that Marxists do not tell the truth. I am amazed that people are so gullible
Posted by scorp on Dec 25, 2009 at 10:07 PM
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