Brotherhood of Teamsters in Mexico, and her mother, a Nicaraguan, was a former assembly line worker.
A good left economist, Jared Bernstein of the Economic Policy Institute, is scheduled to be chief economist for vice-president Joe Biden.
At the Justice Department, now destined to be ruled virtually 100 per cent by graduates of the Harvard Law School, the Office of Legal Counsel has been given to Dawn Johnsen, most recently at the University of Indiana Law School, Bloomington.
This was the position held by the execrable John Yoo, friend of the thumb-screw and the water-board. Johnsen has been a fierce assailant of Yoo's constitutional abuses, writing at one point, "Where is the outrage, the public outcry?! The shockingly flawed content of this memo, the deficient processes that led to its issuance, the horrific acts it encouraged, the fact that it was kept secret for years and that the Bush administration continues to withhold other memos like it - all demand our outrage."
Johnsen has also attacked the Cheney-style "theory of a unified executive", otherwise known as untrammeled presidential power.
He's no radical, but the choice of Leon Panetta as CIA chief puts a relatively honest man not stained with blood in this position. The pick is already arousing criticism from all the right quarters, like Senator Dianne Feinstein.
Panetta, from Monterey on California's central coast, bailed out the Clintons by becoming chief of staff after the organisational and political disasters of 1993. Panetta may turn out to be a good choice along the same lines as Stansfield Turner, back in Carter time.
The other national security appointments are bad. Towering at Obama's other elbow from Emanuel looms National Security Advisor Jim Jones, a Marine, mustard-keen on Nato expansion.
As his special assistant on the Middle East, Obama has selected Dan Kurtzer, Ambassador to Egypt under Clinton and Israel under George Bush. Kurtzer allegedly helped write Obama's notorious piece of groveling to the Israeli lobbying organisation AIPAC in June 2008.
As National Intelligence Director we're scheduled to get Admiral Dennis Blair, recently exposed on the CounterPunch site as abetting the Indonesian generals in the infamous butchery known as the Church Killings in East Timor.
After he retired from the Navy, Blair joined the board of directors of the EDO Corporation which was a contractor for the scandal-scarred F-22. At the same time he was serving as head of a Pentagon board - the Institute for Defence Analyses - which was evaluating the F-22 contract, and endorsed another three years of subsidies for the programme.
Blair did not disclose his board membership and got publicly reprimanded by the Pentagon's Inspector General.
At almost every level, Obama's choices have been calibrated to appease the establishment, from the financial markets (or what's left of them), to the press (or what's left of it) to the think tanks and lobbyists of Washington (as strong as ever).
As an agent of change - we do not even mention hope - the age of Obama seems over before it begins, unless worsening economic circumstances force Obama pell-mell into uncharted territory. For the left, in other words, hope may flower only among the ruins.
This column was written with Jeffrey St Clair, coeditor with Cockburn of CounterPunch.
Filed under: Alexander Cockburn, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Lawrence Summers, America, Democrats
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Comments
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Did anyone really expect anything else, i find it amusing that all the press who feted Obama as the second coming are finally seeing that all he really is. is a politician. He's been tied up in the establishment for years, did anyone really think the he got as far as he has by being some kind of different maverick politician.
Posted by Gary O'Brien at 9:30am on January 9, 2009
Wholly predictable indeed. Obama will be as big a disappointment in the US as Blair was in the UK. Just wait for the sleaze and corruption to be seen.
Posted by Alan Dawes at 11:18am on January 9, 2009
People that are insecure, act in this way.
Posted by Bob Visser at 11:55am on January 9, 2009
Huge numbers voted Democrat last year because they wanted their country back. The name of that country is America. She is the country that long led the world in protecting high-wage, high-skilled, high-status jobs both against the exportation of that labour to un-unionised, child-exploiting sweatshops, and against the importation of those sweatshops themselves. And she is the country that could until very recently say that she led the world in that she "did not seek for monsters to destroy". For she is the country of big municipal government, of strong unions whose every red cent in political donations buys something specific, of very high levels of co-operative membership, of housing co-operatives even for the upper middle classes, of small farmers who own their own land, and of the pioneering of Keynesianism in practice. At the same time, those same voters made it clear at exactly the same polls that (in Florida and California) they wanted back the country where marriage only ever means one man and one woman, that (in Colorado) they wanted back the country that does not permit legal discrimination against working-class white men, and (in Missouri and Ohio) that they wanted to preserve the country where gambling is not deregulated. The name of that country is America, too. The betrayal of those voters by Obama where appointments are concerned has already cost the Democrats a Senate seat in Georgia, and thus a filibuster-proof Senate majority. Midterm meltdown awaits.
Posted by David Lindsay at 2:44pm on January 9, 2009
Can we give this president a chance? He has to be President for all Americans, not just for us "progressives" (and yes, I am one of you). Otherwise change will not happen and we will all be left with a lot to complain about, as usual. That is the easy way, the righteous way. Let's help with the hard work, healing America and moving forward together.
Posted by MHF at 4:41pm on January 9, 2009
The only politician who promised change, with definite policies to back those changes was Dr Ron Paul. Obama and McCain - same dog, different collar.
Posted by Alan Pond at 6:01pm on January 9, 2009
I would consider myself a grassroots Obama supporter, but I am mystified as to why people, who probably never even considered voting for him, should be so cynical about his appointments. Do we really expect him to fill government positions in this unprecedented critical time in America's history with people who have no idea how things work in Washington? Surely you need to know this before you could even think of effecting change. Give the fellow a chance, for God's sake. As to the post who talked about sleaze and corruption sounds as if he would have been happier with Mc Cain and Palin. What will disappoint me badly would be to see Obama continue the same one sided, biased, pro Israel view of previous administrations in the Palestinian Israeli conflict. Yolande M. Agble Queens NY
Posted by Yolande Agble at 6:53am on January 11, 2009
Mr. Cockburn, is his cogent yet coherent style has yet again named the poison of political power. When a person enters such a high office as this, this person has a grave and unenviable penchant for forgetting where the votes came from to enter this esteemed office. Mr. Obama, has proven this maxim true yet again. We the progressive left, are now faced with more of the same as far as governance goes. We are not rewarded for the hard work and sweat that we put into the election of a seemingly untried individual. We the people, must now demand that the policies and procedures that come about in the next four years, happen in a way that will further the progressive movement in the US. Policies must change if the US of A is to be regarded at all in any serious way as meeting the challenges that face our world in the near term. We cannot wait for the administration to figure out that they are not responsive to the people, we must take to the streets and make our voices heard in as loud and clear a voice as possible. We are at the crossroads when it comes to the governance of the US of A. We can no longer rest on our laurels, winning the Second World War, cannot sustain this country any longer, our policies have heightened the tensions between the Western World and the Middle East. We can no longer blindly capitulate to the American-Israeli-Political Action Committee. There must be changes in how our nation relates to the Islamic World and its adherents. This is especially glaring in the current Israeli/Palestinian conflict, where American policy has brought about the slaughter of innocnent men, women and children without impunity and with no modicum of sensiblility or guilt on the part of either America or the Israelis. Furthermore we can no longer be assured that we are safe, in our homes, businesses and jobs, because of the economic policies of the Bush 43 administration. Much more can be said, but suffice it to say, America can no longer stand business as usual and survive another 4 years.
Posted by nrobi at 2:36pm on January 12, 2009
The previous comments highlight exactly why people are cynical, appointing people who know how things work in Washington will ensure that nothing changes. We have the same in Westminster the main aim of insiders is to get re-elected or their careers are over.
Posted by Gary O'Brien at 2:41pm on January 12, 2009
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