mattw wrote:
I would define [progressive] as an attempt to move forward from the regressive (you like that?) policies of the Bush administration.
I actually think this definition risks playing into the solipsism and amnesia of electoral politics and the mass media. If the term is to have real meaning I don't think the last presidency or the last several presidencies should ever be the only frame of reference. Otherwise you end up with retrospective assessments of the Clinton presidency as a "progressive" one (compared with what followed), when it was anything but in terms of its own agenda and policies once in office.
The transformation of European and Commonwealth social democracies into liberal democracies over the past 3 decades - concurrent with trade and labor liberalization and privatization and deregulation - has been hastened by just as many "Labor" and "Social Democratic" governments as "Conservative" ones... and in this sense there's been very few, if any progressive administrations in power anywhere for a generation or more.
Neoliberalism has been like a global Counter-Reformation, in which the structural reforms made by organized labor (in particular) and progressive movements are systematically undone in favor of economic "progress." With the welfare state discredited, there's not much vision in the leftern hemispheres of parliamentary capitalism. "Green" capitalism and slightly less regressive taxation: yeehaw.
The most exciting thing about Obama has nothing to do with his policies, which as he constantly reminds us are very close to HRC's. What's exciting about Obama is precisely why he's dismissed by some: he moves people. He mobilizes people, especially young people, and makes them believe. I don't know where that will lead, but it's historically important. There's hardly a whiff of political courage in his platform, meanwhile. He actually wants to increase the size of the military, which is really depressing, for example.
As for Nader, Mark Lansing said it best up above.