Daily Press

PREACHING PRAGMATIC POLITICS

- Page is a member of the Chicago Tribune Editorial Board. Email at him cpage@chicagotri­bune.com.

Formerly defined as simply the opposite of being asleep, “woke” in the era of Black Lives Matter and the #MeToo movement frequently describes an awareness of important facts and issues, particular­ly in areas of racial and social justice.

However, as the crowdsourc­ed and up-to-theminute Urban Dictionary more recently offers, “woke” also can mean “the act of being very pretentiou­s about how much you care about a social issue.”

That’s the more current and plainly more sarcastic meaning of “woke” that Barack Obama was using in Chicago when he called on progressiv­es to cancel the current “call out” or “cancel culture” in their pursuit of ideologica­l purity.

“This idea of purity,” he said, speaking at the annual Obama Foundation Summit, “and (that) you’re never compromise­d and you’re always politicall­y woke and all that stuff — you should get over that quickly.”

In Obama’s sit-down with actress and activist Yara Shahidi and four of his Obama Foundation fellows, the former president’s criticism of progressiv­e “wokeness” offered a valuable message of tolerance for dissenting views.

“The world is messy,” he said. “There are ambiguitie­s. People who do really good stuff have flaws. People who you are fighting may love their kids and share certain things with you.”

Obama brought a necessary message at a time when the party is deeply divided over their crowded field of contenders and how capable they may be to take on a vulnerable President Donald Trump. With a woefully divided front against Trump’s united Republican­s, they could snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory.

Obama didn’t name names, but Hillary Clinton lost the Electoral College in 2016 partly because of her failure to unify the party’s left wing and moderates after she defeated Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in the primaries. People argue about how much low support from Sanders voters hurt her, but it clearly didn’t help.

Now Obama’s unity message aims to remind them of something he often told Democrats during his presidency: Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

As much as Obama offers a test of how well his party can hold itself together, it’s also a test of whether anyone is listening to him anymore. You can’t just be holier-than-thou about your politics, you have to persuade others to join your cause.

Obama’s message offers sound advice for pragmatic souls who see politics as what Otto von Bismarck called “the art of the possible.”

Progressiv­e Democrats should pay attention, in my view, if they want to avoid the debacle of 1972, when the party’s left, full of post-1960s exuberance, nominated Sen. George McGovern against President Richard Nixon and lost every state but Massachuse­tts and the District of Columbia.

Yet navigating such turbulent waters is what leadership is all about. Obama, too, was criticized by moderates for being too far left as an early opponent of the Iraq War — and later by progressiv­es for giving up too much in negotiatio­ns with a ferocious Republican opposition.

Obama managed to hold on to his base while attracting enough moderate swing voters to be elected and reelected. But, as Clinton’s loss showed, that doesn’t work for everybody.

Now as party activists have swung even more toward the further-left wing of Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, they can’t afford to get too far ahead of regular rank-and-file voters who tend to prefer change to come in smaller increments, if at all.

As Obama suggests, they can win a lot more support by trying to persuade those of differing views in the party rather than trying to intimidate them for insufficie­nt woke-ness.

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Page
Clarence Page

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