Thursday, August 28, 2008

Chapman On Obama

Steve Chapman gives a libertarian view of Sen. Obama that I feel is quite nuanced. He's no libertarian, but...

Here's his conclusion:

"Those who favor a less expensive and less expansive federal government will find plenty to complain about should Obama become president. For consolation, they can try chanting this mantra: It could be worse."

I would argue that Chapman himself makes the point that Sen. Obama is open to new ideas, and some of them do have a libertarian bent.

However, I do not agree with this statement:

"There are no disciples of small government in the Democratic Party, and Barack Obama fits right in. His economic program is based on the assumption that the economy is to the president what a marionette is to a puppeteer, requiring his direction and responding to his every wish.

Anyone partial to free markets, restrained government, fiscal discipline and light taxation approaches a Democratic nominee's economic platform with trepidation, expecting one fright after another. Obama does not disappoint.

He offers a long list of things the federal government should be doing to rearrange the nation's productive sector—paying U.S. automakers to build fuel-efficient vehicles, confiscating allegedly excessive oil profits, and spending hundreds of billions to create jobs in environmental and infrastructure industries. Democrats have not given up their basic faith that the market, while useful, is always in need of Washington's whip hand."

I believe that there is currently much more pragmatism, and more libertarian thought than Chapman says in the Democratic party. It is certainly true that many of Sen. Obama's ideas advance government intervention, but the way that government intervenes and the general size of that intervention are still open to debate. As well, by focusing on areas that libertarians and Democrats can agree on, it might be possible to extend this agreement to other areas if libertarian ideas are advanced within the party. There are enough areas of agreement to at least begin to see if libertarian ideas can be applied to other policy positions in the Democratic party.

Chapman makes my point. It could be worse, but we can also make it better over time.

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