The Obama Syndrome

The Obama Syndrome

by TariqAli (Author)

Synopsis

Written in early 2010 and initially published in September, The Obama Syndrome predicted the Obama administration's historic midterm defeat. But unlike myriad commentators who have since pinned responsibility for that Democratic Party collapse on the reform president's lack of firm resolve, Ali's critique located the problem in Obama's notion of reform itself. Barack Obama campaigned for the presidency by promising to escalate the war in Afghanistan, and his economic team brought the architects of the financial crisis into the White House. Small wonder then that the War on Terror - torture in Bagram, occupation in Iraq, appeasement in Israel, and escalation in Pakistan - continues. And that Wall Street and the country's biggest corporations have all profited at the expense of America's working class and poor. Now a thoroughly updated paperback continues the story through the midterms, including a trenchant analysis of the Tea Party, and Obama's decision to continue with his predecessor's tax cuts for the rich. Ali asks whether - in the absence of a progressive upheaval from below - US politics is permanently mired in moderate Republicanism. Already called a comprehensive account of the problems with Obama (The Huffington Post), this new edition is sure to provide a more powerful boost to Obama dissenters on the left (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette).

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 156
Edition: 2nd Revised edition
Publisher: Verso
Published: 12 Sep 2011

ISBN 10: 1844677575
ISBN 13: 9781844677573

Media Reviews
The Obama Syndrome documents the collapse of the Myth into a thousand pieces. Vijay Prashad, author of The Darker Nations. Ali remains an outlier and intellectual bomb-thrower; an urbane, Oxford-educated polemicist. Observer. Ali is smart as fire. Ian Epstein, New City
Author Bio
TARIQ ALI is a writer and filmmaker. He has written more than a dozen books on world history and politics, as well as scripts for the stage and screen. He is an editor of New Left Review and lives in London.