David Sirota

David Sirota
Location
Denver, Colorado,
Birthday
November 02
Title
Columnist
Bio
David Sirota is a political journalist, best-selling author and nationally syndicated newspaper columnist living in Denver, Colorado. He is a senior fellow at the Campaign for America's Future , the founder of the Progressive States Network and a Senior Editor at In These Times magazine, which in 2006 received the Utne Independent Press Award for political coverage. He also blogs for Credo Action. and the Denver Post's PoliticsWest website. His two books, Hostile Takeover (2006) and The Uprising (2008) were both New York Times bestsellers. In the years before becoming a full-time writer, Sirota worked as the press secretary for Vermont Independent Congressman Bernard Sanders, the chief spokesman for Democrats on the U.S. House Appropriations Committee, the Director of Strategic Communications for the Center for American Progress, a campaign consultant for Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer and a media strategist for Connecticut Senate candidate Ned Lamont. He also previously contributed writing to the website of the California Democratic Party. For more on Sirota, see these profiles of him in Newsweek or the Rocky Mountain News. Feel free to email him at lists [at] davidsirota.com

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
JULY 29, 2009 12:18PM

A Secret Link Between Affinity for Guns & Affinity for HMOs?

Rate: 9 Flag

In recent posts and in my last column, I noted that there's an unspoken deal between D.C. reporters and "Blue Dog" Democrats to explain Blue Dog opposition to health insurance regulation, unionization, Wall Street reform and pollution controls as a direct outgrowth of them representing culturally conservative heartland districts. This "they're just voting their districts" myth posits that culturally conservative working-class voters' affinity for guns, love for Jesus and/or hatred of gays somehow automatically means they are huge fans of health insurance corporations, air pollution, abusive employers and Goldman Sachs executives.

What's really amazing about this fairy tale is that it is so ingrained in Washington that it's preposterous supposition isn't even explained - it's just assumed fact, presented as so totally obvious as to go without examination. This story about health care reform from the Wall Street Journal's Naftali Bendavid provides a perfect example of what I'm talking about:

The Blue Dogs' numbers expanded with the election of lawmakers such as North Carolina Rep. Heath Shuler, an ex-Washington Redskins quarterback who opposes abortion, gun control and gay marriage...

Beyond health care, the Blue Dogs have helped delay a climate-change bill and block legislation that would make it easier for unions to organize...

Rep. Shuler, for his part, said that before agreeing to run, he spoke to Rep. Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer to make sure he'd have the freedom he needed.

"One conversation I had with both of them before coming to Congress was, 'I'm going to vote my district,'" Rep. Shuler said. "It's one of those swing districts that can go either way...They're aware of that."

Notice here that Shuler's entire rationale for siding with multinational corporations and the health insurance industry is "I'm going to vote my district" - or put another way, he's telling us that his rank-and-file working-class constituents supposedly want him to vote with Big Money. And, of course, Bendavid, the loyal D.C. bumlicker, doesn't bother to question the premise whatsoever.

It's just stunning that this is so assumed that neither the politician nor the reporter feels the need to bother explaining how this storyline makes any functional sense at all. As I noted in a Washington Post op-ed a few years ago, polls show many working class cultural conservatives are, in fact, very supportive of universal health care and taking on corporate power in general. And as Nate Silver has pointed out, it's idiotic to assume that just because Blue Dogs represent districts that host competitive elections, it means voters in those districts want corporate whores representing them in Washington.

Nonetheless, the lunacy continues. Evidently, politicians and reporters in Washington have secretly discovered a physiologically causative link between a voter's affinity for guns and their love of health insurance bureaucrats.

UPDATE: You'll note that some progressive Members of Congress are annoyed that even House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) has echoed Blue Dogs claims that they are shilling for insurance companies because their working-class constituents want them to. Roll Call quotes one progressive lawmaker as saying, "She won't criticize [the Blue Dogs]. She says they're representing their constituents. She's being very careful. But other Members are not being as charitable."

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Will someone please ASK these people if they want to be represented in this way for this issue? A good reporter (which I used to be, so I know) would try to find out. Of course, bumlickers are the ones Big Money conglomerate media bosses hire instead of reporters that try to find the truth. Thanks for this.
Your argument and your logic make a convincing case, but I must demur. In broader terms, there is certainly and undeniably an element of the population which statistically, at least, tends to end up in the same political place---whether for cultural or political or "religious" reasons. Their inherent distrust of anything the government might do (public-option health care) by default serves to support the criminals who run for-profit HMOs at the expense of us all. These same Rightists likewise tend to support gun rights in an extreme fashion. Why? Simply so that they can say they own one---or twelve.
David, this is a great piece. This is yet another issue where the right uses social wedge issues to paper over their undying love for corporate CEOs and Wall St. financial houses. In a way, it's an extension of the process that Thomas Frank wrote about in What's the Matter With Kansas?
Heath Shuler is a true puzzlement. Why is he even a Democrat in the first place? As a North Carolinian, his views are closer to those of Strom Thurmond than they are to John Edwards. Surely he could do the Democratic Party a favor and switch.
the right question is: "do you want to continue to be serfs dependent on politicians, or do you want to be citizens of a democratic republic?"

citizens would be offered a range of programs on health care through referenda, and could choose the one the majority wanted. majority rule! horrors!

majority rule beats the hell out of what you got. unless you are rich, or a lackey of the rich.

electing people instead of selecting referenda is a hold-over from medieval society, when the voting was done with spears instead of ballots. it's an improvement, the losers live, but mere survival is not good enough anymore.
it's an improvement, the losers live, but mere survival is not SAILBOATS!
And to this day I hear people - even those who identify themselves as Democrats - repeat the myth that Reagan was a good president.
The social contract really breaks down under Reagan. He promised political coverage to the president of the Air Traffic controllers union, and then breaks them. He tears down the 4th estate with the end of the Fairness Doctrine for public airways. He takes a large crap on the Constitution with Iran/Contra, and this after negotiating with Iran to keep the hostages until he is sworn in.
As Frank Zappa once said "America drinks and goes home."
It took the discomfort (soft word really) of the Great Depression to turn back the excesses of the teens and 20's. What will it take this time? Or have they really figured out how to dance us up to the edge and then pull back before we get too dizzy and actually revolt?