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Comrade Grumpy

(13,184 posts)
8. Here's a brief discussion of him in the New Yorker last week:
Thu Nov 20, 2014, 01:27 AM
Nov 2014

The whole piece about "inevitable" candidates, Hillary, and other possible contenders is quite good.

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/11/17/inevitability-trap

Former Virginia Senator Jim Webb, who served one term, from 2007 to 2013, and then retired, has the potential to win the beer-track vote. In early October, I drove from Washington to a residential building that sits high on a hill in Arlington. On the eighth floor, in a condominium with a sweeping view of Washington’s monuments, Webb has been plotting his own path to defeating Clinton. “I do believe that I have the leadership and the experience and the sense of history and the kinds of ideas where I could lead this country,” he told me. “We’re just going to go out and put things on the table in the next four or five months and see if people support us. And if it looks viable, then we’ll do it.”

Webb is a moderate on foreign policy, but he is a Vietnam veteran from a long line of military men. His condo, which he uses as a study, is filled with antique weaponry and historical artifacts from his ancestors. He showed me a bookcase filled with collectibles. “I’ve been to a lot of battlefields,” he said. He pointed to some sand from Iwo Jima; glass from Tinian, the island from which the Enola Gay was launched before it dropped an atomic bomb on Japan; and some shrapnel from Vietnam. “I have that in my leg,” he said.

After the war, Webb became a writer. His most famous book, “Fields of Fire,” published in 1978, is a novel based on his own experiences and has been credibly compared to Stephen Crane’s “The Red Badge of Courage” for its realistic portrayal of war. Webb has always moved restlessly between the military and politics and the life of a writer. In the late seventies and early eighties, he worked as a counsel on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee and later as Ronald Reagan’s Secretary of the Navy. He has also travelled around the world as a journalist for Parade. In 2007, I interviewed him in his Senate office weeks after he was sworn in. He noted that he was having a hard time adjusting to life as a senator and missed his writing life. Now, in Arlington, he talked about the unfinished business of his Senate career.

In his senatorial race, Webb did well not only in northern Virginia, which is filled with Washington commuters and college-educated liberals, but also with rural, working-class white voters in Appalachia. In 2008, those voters were generally more loyal to Clinton than to Obama, but Webb believes that he could attract a national coalition of both groups of voters in the Presidential primaries. He laid out a view of Wall Street that differs sharply from Clinton’s.


“Because of the way that the financial sector dominates both parties, the distinctions that can be made on truly troubling issues are very minor,” he said. He told a story of an effort he led in the Senate in 2010 to try to pass a windfall-profits tax that would have targeted executives at banks and firms which were rescued by the government after the 2008 financial crisis. He said that when he was debating whether to vote for the original bailout package, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, he relied on the advice of an analyst on Wall Street, who told him, “No. 1, you have to do this, because otherwise the world economy will go into cataclysmic free fall. But, No. 2, you have to punish these guys. It is outrageous what they did.”

After the rescue, when Webb pushed for what he saw as a reasonable punishment, his own party blocked the legislation. “The Democrats wouldn’t let me vote on it,” he said. “Because either way you voted on that, you’re making somebody mad. And the financial sector was furious.” He added that one Northeastern senator—Webb wouldn’t say who—“was literally screaming at me on the Senate floor.”

When Clinton was a New York senator, from 2001 to 2009, she fiercely defended the financial industry, which was a crucial source of campaign contributions and of jobs in her state. “If you don’t have stock, and a lot of people in this country don’t have stock, you’re not doing very well,” Webb said. Webb is a populist, but a cautious one, especially on taxes, the issue that seems to have backfired against O’Malley’s administration. As a senator, Webb frustrated some Democrats because he refused to raise individual income-tax rates. But as President, he says, he would be aggressive about taxing income from investments: “Fairness says if you’re a hedge-fund manager or making deals where you’re making hundreds of millions of dollars and you’re paying capital-gains tax on that, rather than ordinary income tax, something’s wrong, and people know something’s wrong. ”

The Clintons and Obama have championed policies that help the poor by strengthening the safety net, but they have shown relatively little interest in structural changes that would reverse runaway income inequality. “There is a big tendency among a lot of Democratic leaders to feed some raw meat to the public on smaller issues that excite them, like the minimum wage, but don’t really address the larger problem,” Webb said. “A lot of the Democratic leaders who don’t want to scare away their financial supporters will say we’re going to raise the minimum wage, we’re going do these little things, when in reality we need to say we’re going to fundamentally change the tax code so that you will believe our system is fair.”

Webb could challenge Clinton on other domestic issues as well. In 1984, he spent some time as a reporter studying the prison system in Japan, which has a relatively low recidivism rate. In the Senate, he pushed for creating a national commission that would study the American prison system, and he convened hearings on the economic consequences of mass incarceration. He says he even hired three staffers who had criminal records. “If you have been in prison, God help you if you want to really rebuild your life,” Webb told me. “We’ve got seven million people somehow involved in the system right now, and they need a structured way to reënter society and be productive again.” He didn’t mention it, but he is aware that the prison population in the U.S. exploded after the Clinton Administration signed tough new sentencing laws.

The issue that Webb cares about the most, and which could cause serious trouble for Hillary Clinton, is the one that Obama used to defeat her: Clinton’s record on war. In the Obama Administration, Clinton took the more hawkish position in three major debates that divided the President’s national-security team. In 2009, she was an early advocate of the troop surge in Afghanistan. In 2011, along with Samantha Power, who was then a member of the White House National Security Council staff and is now the U.N. Ambassador, she pushed Obama to attack Libyan forces that were threatening the city of Benghazi. That year, Clinton also advocated arming Syrian rebels and intervening militarily in the Syrian civil war, a policy that Obama rejected. Now, as ISIS consolidates its control over parts of the Middle East and Iran’s influence grows, Clinton is still grappling with the consequences of her original vote for the war in Iraq.

Although Webb is by no means an isolationist, much of his appeal in his 2006 campaign was based on his unusual status as a veteran who opposed the Iraq war. “I’ve said for a very long time, since I was Secretary of the Navy, we do not belong as an occupying power in that part of the world,” he told me. “This incredible strategic blunder of invading caused the problems, because it allowed the breakup of Iraq along sectarian lines at the same time that Iran was empowering itself in the region.”

He thinks Obama, Clinton, and Power made things worse by intervening in Libya. “There’s three factions,” he said. “The John McCains of the world, who want to intervene everywhere. Then the people who cooked up this doctrine of humanitarian intervention, including Samantha Power, who don’t think they need to come to Congress if there’s a problem that they define as a humanitarian intervention, which could be anything. That doctrine is so vague.” Webb also disdains liberals who advocate military intervention without understanding the American military. Referring to Syria and Libya, Webb said, “I was saying in hearings at the time, What is going to replace it? What is going to replace the Assad regime? These are tribal countries. Where are all these weapons systems that Qaddafi had? Probably in Syria. Can you get to the airport at Tripoli today? Probably not. It was an enormous destabilizing impact with the Arab Spring.”

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Jim Webb Forms Exploratory Committee [View all] DemocraticWing Nov 2014 OP
I agree. elleng Nov 2014 #1
I welcome every Clinton primary challenger to the race. morningfog Nov 2014 #2
Webb could be interesting. Comrade Grumpy Nov 2014 #3
As expected. herding cats Nov 2014 #4
I used to think Democrats steered clear of people who had formerly lost elections or primaries, but merrily Nov 2014 #13
I think you really covered the differences in losses well in your post. herding cats Nov 2014 #14
A US Senate seat or a gubernatorial seat not what I would consider a local loss. merrily Nov 2014 #16
I hope Schweitzer isn't considering just because of a slip of the tongue. LawDeeDah Nov 2014 #19
It was a rather relevatory slip of the tongue, not an innocuous one. merrily Nov 2014 #36
To be fair, O'Malley himself did not lose - he was term limited and his Lt. Gov lost the race to Midwestern Democrat Nov 2014 #21
Thanks. I relied on a comment made by another poster, that O''Malley merrily Nov 2014 #40
Neither Webb nor O'Malley lost an election. What are you talking about? FSogol Nov 2014 #32
What are YOU talking about? I never said Webb lost an election. merrily Nov 2014 #34
Angry much? Get more sleep and I hope you have a better day. FSogol Nov 2014 #35
LOL. Who's angry? I almost always do have a great day. I wish you the same. merrily Nov 2014 #38
I'm looking forward to much more from the Castro Bros. Voice for Peace Nov 2014 #20
Damaged good? O'Malley didn't lose his election. FSogol Nov 2014 #37
I have reservations, clues to some of which can be found in his wiki. merrily Nov 2014 #5
How was he referencing White Culture? madville Nov 2014 #9
I can't recall the exact words, but I do recall I had a jaw drop reaction when I heard it. merrily Nov 2014 #11
Crickets on my question about your meaning? merrily Nov 2014 #15
What's he going to explore? bluestateguy Nov 2014 #6
Maybe whether he has a shot at being the nominee, finding donors, etc? merrily Nov 2014 #7
Here's a brief discussion of him in the New Yorker last week: Comrade Grumpy Nov 2014 #8
Thanks for posting that, very interesting pinboy3niner Nov 2014 #17
Donit Skeowes28 Nov 2014 #10
I like Webb as a person, but don't support some of the same thing he does davidpdx Nov 2014 #12
Looking for someone to get excited about during the primaries. Ykcutnek Nov 2014 #18
Some on DU will have to try REALLY REALLY hard to like this guy wyldwolf Nov 2014 #22
Because someone has to run to the right of Hillary PDittie Nov 2014 #23
Here's a link to op-ed "Class Struggle" which he sent to WSJ in 11/2006 : Faryn Balyncd Nov 2014 #24
Goodie, another republican! TBF Nov 2014 #25
Thank you! Le Taz Hot Nov 2014 #26
Agreed - I like Bernie. TBF Nov 2014 #28
Excluding Bernie, it's like a battle to see who's willing to be bullwinkle428 Nov 2014 #39
I have one bit of advice for Mr. Webb. Vinca Nov 2014 #27
+1 leftofcool Nov 2014 #29
If HRC does not run, Webb is my 2nd choice Algernon Moncrieff Nov 2014 #30
well Robbins Nov 2014 #31
So Hillary will have a challenger from the right. MohRokTah Nov 2014 #33
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