To understand Beto OāRourke as a candidate, itās vital to go beneath the surface of his political backstory. News watchers are already well aware of the former Texas congressmanās good looks, charisma, youthful energy and fundraising prowess. But most remain unaware of an inconvenient truth that could undermine the OāRourke campaign among the people who matter most — the ones whoāll be voting to choose the Democratic presidential nominee next year.
OāRourke is hardly eager for those upcoming voters to realize that the growth of his political career is rooted in an alliance with powerful Republicans that began 15 years ago. Or that he supported raising the minimum age for Social Security in 2012. Or that — during six years in Congress, through the end of 2018 — he often aligned himself with Republican positions.
If facts matter, such weighty facts could sink the āBeto for Americaā presidential campaign. Since his announcement, information gaining traction nationwide runs directly counter to the Beto brand.
āBefore becoming a rising star in the Democratic Party,ā the Wall Street Journal reported a week ago, āBeto OāRourke relied on a core group of business-minded Republicans in his Texas hometown to launch and sustain his political career. To win their backing, Mr. OāRourke opposed Obamacare, voted against Nancy Pelosi as the House Democratic leader and called for a raise in the Social Security eligibility age.ā
Meanwhile, a Washington Post news article — under the headline āBeto OāRourkeās Political Career Drew on Donations From the Pro-Republican Business Establishmentā — also foreshadowed a bumpy ride on the campaign trail. In the eyes of most people who donāt like the GOP, key points in the Postās reporting are apt to be concerning. For instance:
**Ā āSeveral of El Pasoās richest business moguls donated to and raised money for OāRourkeās city council campaigns, drawn to his support for a plan to redevelop El Pasoās poorer neighborhoods. Some later backed a super PAC that would play a key role in helping him defeat an incumbent Democratic congressman.ā
**Ā āOāRourke worked on issues that had the potential to make money for some of his benefactors. His support as a council member for the redevelopment plan, which sparked controversy at the time because it involved relocating low-income residents, many of them Hispanic, coincided with property investments by some of his benefactors.ā
**Ā āAs a congressman, he supported a $2Ā billion military funding increase that benefited a company controlled by another major donor. That donor, real estate developer Woody Hunt, was friends with OāRourkeās late father. Hunt also co-founded and funds an El Paso nonprofit organization that has employed OāRourkeās wife since 2016.ā
Central features of Trumpism are budgets that add billions to already-bloated Pentagon spending while cutting essential programs. In Betoās last year in Congress, whenĀ nearly one-third of House Democrats opposedĀ the record-breaking 2019 National Defense Authorization Act of $717 billion, Beto voted with Trump. (Four senators who are running against OāRourke voted no: Kirsten Gillibrand, Kamala Harris, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.)
Overall, the Post reports, āin contrast to the aspirational image he has fostered in recent years,ā OāRourkeās political career has gone along a path of āwinning support from a typically pro-GOP business establishment interested in swaying public policy. Born into one politically potent family and married into another, he benefited repeatedly from his relationships with El Pasoās most powerful residents, including several nationally known Republican moneymen.ā
To put his more conservative actions in context, OāRourke cannot plausibly claim that he was striving to be in sync with the voters who elected him. El Paso and the House district that OāRourke represented are heavily Democratic. The Wall Street Journal summed up this way: āIn a one-party town — the Democrats have held El Pasoās congressional seat for all but one term since 1902 — local Republicans viewed Mr. OāRourke as one of their own.ā
Naturally, OāRourke would much rather talk in upbeat generalities than answer pointed questions about why anti-Republican voters should cast ballots for him — when he has a long record of going along with many GOP positions they find abhorrent. It may be better for him if unflattering coverage fixates instead on matters like youthful stints as a punk rocker and early computer hacker.
It was just seven years ago when — during his first run for Congress — OāRourke did a campaign video to tell people in the blue West Texas district that āweāll have to look at future generations . . . retiring at a later age, paying a greater percentage of their income into Social Security and making other necessary adjustments.ā And, the Wall Street Journal reports, āin a candidate questionnaire published two days before the May 2012 primary, Mr. OāRourke called for raising the Social Security eligibility age and means-testing federal entitlements.ā According to exit polling, OāRourke won that election with major help from Republicans who opted to vote in the Democratic primary and cast their ballots for him by a ratio of more than 7 to 1.
After becoming a congressman, OāRourke backtracked and, as Politico reports, āco-sponsored legislation that would increase Social Security benefits — without raising the retirement age.ā Yet his wobbly stance on Social Security in this decade is a warning flag.
OāRourke affinity with Republican sensibilities related to corporate power has continued. So has largesse from interests that are the antithesis of progressive values. Notably, for his final term, Beto retired from the House as the member of Congress who was the second-highest recipient of campaign cash from the oil and gas industry.
In June 2015, OāRourke was one of only 28 Democrats — out of 188 members of the party in the House — who voted to give President Obama the power to negotiate the corporate-oriented Trans-Pacific Partnership. The measure squeaked through the House, propelled by support from 190 Republicans.
A year later, the TPP was a highly visible and contentious issue at the 2016 Democratic National Convention, where hundreds of Bernie Sanders delegates held anti-TPP signs. (I was one of those delegates and still support Sanders.) These days, OāRourke is typically aiming to have it both ways, as Vanity Fair reported in a campaign kickoff cover story last week: āOāRourke now says he would have voted ānoā on the ultimate agreement. But in 2015, he traveled with Obama on a trip to Asia to help build support for the deal.ā
At the end of last year, the GuardianĀ publishedĀ an exhaustively researched article under the headline āBeto OāRourke Frequently Voted for Republican Legislation, Analysis Reveals.ā The piece reported that āeven as OāRourke represented one of the most solidly Democratic congressional districts in the United States,Ā he has frequently voted against the majority of House Democrats in support of Republican bills andĀ Trump administration priorities.ā
Written by investigative journalist David Sirota (who days ago joined the Sanders presidential campaign as a speechwriter), the Dec. 20 article reviewed āthe 167 votesĀ OāRourke has cast in the House in opposition to the majority of his own party during his six-year tenure in Congress. Many of those votes were not progressive dissents alongside other left-leaning lawmakers, but instead votes to help pass Republican-sponsored legislation.ā
A cautionary tale comes from David Romo, an activist and historian in El Paso who describes Beto OāRourke as a āmasterful politician. . . Itās all fluff, itās all style, itās all looks.ā Romo clashed with City Councilman OāRourke when he went all-out for redevelopment that would enrich some of his wealthy backers. Romo said recently: āOāRourke, because of his charisma, can kind of pull off some of this behind-the-scenes power peddling. He was the pretty face in the really ugly gentrification plan that negatively affected the most vulnerable people in El Paso.ā
To the casual listener, however, OāRourke might sound lovely. Consider this verbiage from the presidential campaign trail: āWe want to be for everybody, work with everybody. Could care less about your party affiliation or any other difference that might otherwise divide us at this moment of truth, where I really feel we will either make or break this great country and our democracy.ā
From OāRourke, that kind of talk has sometimes overlapped with disinterest in defeating Republicans. Last year, while running for the Senate, OāRourke helped a friend in need — Texas GOP Congressman Will Hurd — by notably refusing to endorse his Democratic opponent.Ā Gina Ortiz Jones, a gay Filipina-American, had momentum in a district with a majority of Hispanics. But OāRourkeās solidarity with his Republican colleague may well have saved Hurdās seat.
Hurd won re-election by under one-half of a percentage point, while OāRourke won in the district by a five-point margin. As the New York Times reported, OāRourke āhad elevatedā his Republican colleague Hurd āwith frequent praise and, most memorably, a live-streamed bipartisan road trip that helped jump-start their midterm campaigns.ā During the campaign, OāRourke tried to justify his refusal to endorse Hurdās Democratic opponent by declaring: āThis is a place where my politics and my job and my commitment to this country come into conflict. Iām going to put country over party.ā
When Politico asked OāRourke late last year whether he considered himself to be a progressive Democrat, OāRourke replied: āI donāt know. Iām just, as you may have seen and heard over the course of the campaign, Iām not big on labels. I donāt get all fired up about party or classifying or defining people based on a label or a group. Iām for everyone.ā
Everyone?
After OāRourke campaigned in the Detroit area a few days ago, the Detroit Metro Times published information that would concern anyone with minimally progressive leanings: āHe supported Republican efforts toĀ limit the authorityĀ of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was established by Obama and Democrats to protect Americans from Wall Street following the recession. OāRourke also broke with the party to support Trump and GOP attempts to loosen requirements in hiring border patrol agents;Ā chip away at the Affordable Care Act; killĀ a banĀ on oil drilling in parts of the Gulf of Mexico; and lift the 40-year-old oil export ban. He alsoĀ supported Republican legislationĀ that protected utility companies that start wildfires.ā
Itās understandable that many progressives came out of 2018 with a favorable view of OāRourke. He ran a strong campaign that got remarkably close to unseating the odious Sen. Ted Cruz. Along the way, OāRourke showed himself to be eloquent and tireless. Some of his stances are both enlightened and longstanding, as with his advocacy for legalizing marijuana. And OāRourke provided some stunning moments of oratory, as in a viralĀ videoĀ that showed his response to a question about NFL players kneeling in protest during the national anthem; his support for dissent in the context of civil rights history was exemplary.
Yet, overall, thereās a good reason why OāRourke declines to call himself āprogressive.ā He isnāt. His alliances and sensibilities, when you strip away some cultural affinities and limited social-justice positions, are bedrock corporate.
In his quest for a Democratic nomination that will require support from a primary electorate that leans progressive, Beto OāRourke will be running to elude his actual record. If it catches up with him, heās going to lose.
Norman Solomon is cofounder and national coordinator of RootsAction.org.Ā He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention and is currently a coordinator of the relaunched Bernie Delegates Network.Ā Solomon is the author of a dozen books includeĀ War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.
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2 Comments
Corporate Democrats play “progressive” by hiding their reactionary positions behind easy to support social issues like pot legalisation and the right of black athletes to kneel in protest during the national anthem. While this is tempting to the Democratic base, it is very unconvincing to anyone paying attention.
Spin doctors or public relations specialists dominate today. The line between what actually happens or happened is increasingly fuzzy, even for folks that are well-educated, read, and seek to be informed. Perhaps this is something of an intentional thing and part of a chaos theory/plan to govern, control, and manipulate perceptions. Norman’s commentary is as expected, intelligent, knowledgeable, and perceptive. Much needed.