Go for the Jugular
I agree with Deepak Bhargava that President Obamas record is more mixed than critics and admirers admit, that progressives must refocus our attention on Congress and statehouse elections, and that elections are a necessary but not sufficient condition for a revival of progressive politics.
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While Bhargava is right that we need to build a deep alliance of movement forces to pursue and win on a progressive agenda, we also need to become more hard-nosed, strategic and indeed ruthless in our effort to weaken the legitimacy and power of the right. Much as conservatives went for our collective jugular after the 2010 midterm elections by targeting the public sector labor movement, we must be willing to go for theirsregardless of how much more money and power they might have.
What would a principled attack strategy look like? It must proceed on at least three tracks: ideological, organizational and structural. On all three, the Occupy movement has been a spark in jump-starting such a national campaign.
Ideologically, we need to put forward an alternative economic narrativeand demand that our elected officials embrace it, toothat powerfully counters market fundamentalism and trickle-down economics. One way to do this is to be relentless and repetitive about identifying the Bush-Romney economy as the exemplar of right-wing economics and remind people how that worked out for them in the last decadefollowed by our alternative vision of shared prosperity and economic justice.
http://www.thenation.com/article/170308/go-jugular