Barack Obama - A Political Profile
No one can deny that
Barack Obama is a fresh breeze blowing though the political landscape. In a
country where every President has been a Caucasian European, he is a mixed-race
candidate. When most Presidents lately tend to be on the old side, he is young.
He has an advantage of experience in foreign countries, a patch-work of
cultures and places in his background. He can blend in anywhere, identify with
anybody, and connect with both sides across almost any chasm. So what kind of
President is he going to make?
Upon being sworn into
office as Illinois Senator in 2005, his first move was to recruit Pete Rouse as
his Chief of Staff. Since Rouse was the former chief of staff to Senate
Democratic Leader Tom Daschle, this was hailed as a smart move. He has sat so
far on the Foreign Relations Committee, the Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee, the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee,
and the Veterans' Affairs Committee, as well as being a member of the
Congressional Black Caucus.
He has been a very live
wire in his position, having sponsored 152 bills and resolutions brought before
Congress, and cosponsored another 427. He has been at the forefront of issues
relating to border security and immigration reform. He has sponsored the
"Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act", which was introduced by
Senator John McCain, demonstrating that he can work across party lines. He also
partnered with two Republican Senators, Richard Lugar and Tom Coburn, on two
bills which bear his name today.
As a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he has made official trips to Eastern
Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Russia, the Ukraine, and Azerbaijan. He is
extremely good at diplomacy. After meeting with U.S. military members in Kuwait
and Iraq in January 2006, he also visited Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian
territories. He has worked to encourage peace in the Middle East. He also made
a special tour of South Africa, Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Chad, making
speeches denouncing ethnic rivalries and corruption in Kenya.
He has also made some
bold steps for campaign finance reform, especially denouncing situations in
which a public servant would feel indebted to a lobbyist. In these times of
grave concern over the increasing control that big corporations and monopolies
have over our government, voters respond well to this message. He worked with
other Democratic Senators after this to tighten regulations on what public
officials can do on the taxpayer's dollar, and passed a bill to criminalize
deceptive practices in federal elections.
He has also championed
some environment and energy causes, passing a climate change bill to reduce
greenhouse gasses, again with Senator John McCain, and promoting a bill for
liquefied coal production. He has also introduced a bill, the "Iraq War
De-Escalation Act," which proposes to cap troop levels in Iraq, begin
phased redeployment, and remove all combat brigades from Iraq before April
2008. This is something he can point to, to say, "Look, all the candidates
promise an end to the Iraq War, I actually did something about it." He has
also introduced legislation to prevent nuclear terrorism, showing that he is
still keeping national security in mind.
Obama has perhaps shined
best in being progressively pro-Internet. Now, when it comes to technology, the
United States has moved forward while its government seems to be stuck in the
Stone Age. Amidst paranoia about "hackers" used by officials who
don't even show a clear understanding of the definition of the word, the
complete inability to manage the monopoly behemoth that Microsoft has become,
meaningless and destructive software patents that are rubber-stamped without
even being read, and such ignorant statements as when United States Senator Ted
Stevens dismissed the Internet as nothing but a "series of tubes",
the voters who are technology professionals and avid Internet users have a very
good reason to believe that they might be members of some foreign country. It
is no exaggeration to say that trying to get government officials to understand
computing is like trying to explain rocket science to a cave man.
Enter stage left, Obama!He has met with executives at Google, has pledged to appoint a Chief Technology
Officer to oversee the U.S. government's management of IT resources, has a
commitment to net neutrality legislation, has said "once providers start
to privilege some applications or web sites over others, then the smaller
voices get squeezed out, and we all lose.", and to address the critical
state of science education in America, he has put forward a plan for investments
in early childhood education, math and science education, and expanded summer
learning opportunities.
There is no doubt that
Obama has the technology vote locked up. Any candidate who can actually mouth
the words "open document format" will make IT professionals
everywhere swoon. And likewise, he has some support from the non-white voter,
and has captured the attention of the young voters like no other. He is a fresh
thinker for a new generation of voters. Whether that's enough to get elected
remains to be seen, but there is no doubt that he is in touch with today's
issues.
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