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Barack Obama campaigning in New Hampshire, August 2007
Barack Obama has declared his position
on many political issues through his public comments and
legislative record. The Obama Administration has stated that its
general agenda is to "revive the economy; provide affordable,
accessible health care to all; strengthen our public education and
social security systems; define a clear path to energy independence
and tackle climate change; end the war in Iraq responsibly and
finish our mission in Afghanistan; and work with our allies to
prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon."
Economic policy
Barack
Obama's current economic advisors are Austan Goolsbee of the University of
Chicago
and Jeffrey Liebman
of Harvard
University
.
In 2006, Obama wrote: "We should be asking ourselves what mix of
policies will lead to a dynamic
free
market and widespread economic security, entrepreneurial
innovation and upward mobility [...] we should be guided by what
works."
Speaking before the
National
Press Club in April 2005, he defended the
New Deal social welfare policies of
Franklin D. Roosevelt, associating
Republican proposals to
establish private accounts for
Social Security with
Social Darwinism.
Corporate governance
On April 20, 2007, Obama introduced a bill in the Senate
(Shareholder Vote on Executive Compensation Act - S. 1181)
requiring public companies to give shareholders an annual
nonbinding vote on executive compensation, popularly called
"
Say on pay." A companion bill introduced
by Rep.
Barney Frank passed the House
the same day. Several corporations voluntarily have begun to give
shareholders such a vote because of concerns about excessive
CEO salaries.
Labor rights
Obama supports the
Employee
Free Choice Act, a bill that adds penalties for labor
violations and which would circumvent the
secret ballot requirement to organize a union.
Obama promises to sign the EFCA into law. He is also a cosponsor of
the "Re-empowerment of Skilled and Professional Employees and
Construction Tradesworkers" or RESPECT act (S. 969) that aims to
overturn the
National
Labor Relations Board's "Kentucky River" decision that
redefined many employees lacking the authority to hire, fire, or
discipline, as "supervisors" who are not protected by federal labor
laws.
Minimum wage
Obama favored the increase in the federal
minimum wage from $5.15 an hour to $7.25, and
he voted to end the
filibuster against a
bill to accomplish that.He favors raising it to $9.50 an hour by
2011, and then indexing it for inflation afterwards.
Equal pay
Obama favors the concept of equal pay (the abolition of
wage differences between genders). He has supported
legislation designed to improve the effectiveness of the
Equal Pay Act of 1963. In 2007, the
House of Representatives passed the
Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act,
which, according to the
National Federation
of Independent Business, would have allowed "employees to file
charges of pay discrimination within 180 days of the last received
paycheck affected by the alleged discriminatory decision."
The bill
would have overturned the Supreme
Court
decision in Ledbetter
v. Goodyear.
There the Court dismissed a woman's discrimination claim because
she had filed it more than 180 days after the
first
affected paycheck. The bill died in a 2008 Senate vote in which
Obama and other Democrats could not break a Republican
filibuster. In the 111th congress it was passed
again, and Obama signed it on January 29, 2009.
Education
During an October 2004 debate, Obama stated that he opposed
education vouchers for use at
private schools because he believes
they would undermine public schools. In May 2009, it was reported
that Obama would offer continued funding for the 1,716 Washington
D.C. students who were currently enrolled in the city's voucher
program until they graduated from high school, but that no new
students would be admitted into the program.
In a July 2007 address to the
National Education
Association, Obama supported
merit pay
for teachers, to be based on standards to be developed "with
teachers." Obama also called for higher pay for
teachers.
Obama's plan is estimated to cost $18 billion
annually and was originally planned to be partially funded by
delaying NASA
's Constellation program for five years
but he has since reconsidered and stated that he will look for "an
entirely different offset.""We owe it to our children to
invest in early-childhood education; and recruit an army of new
teachers and give them better pay and more support; and finally
decide that, in this global economy, the chance to get a college
education should not be a privilege for the few, but a birthright
of every American." He also is against the teaching of
intelligent design as science, but
supports teaching
theology.
Obama has proposed the
American Opportunity Tax
Credit, which would provide a refundable
tax credit for education in exchange for
community service.
Obama wants 5,000 failing schools to close, and then reopen with
new principals and teachers.
Energy policy
In his
New Energy For America
plan, Obama proposes to reduce overall U.S.
oil consumption by at least 35%, or 10
million barrels per day, by 2030 in order to offset imports from
OPEC nations.Obama voted in favor of the
Energy Policy Act of 2005,
which provided incentives (chiefly tax breaks) to reduce national
consumption of energy and to encourage a wide range of alternative
energy sources. It also resulted in a net tax increase on oil
companies.
Obama and other Senators introduced the
BioFuels Security Act in 2006. "It's
time for Congress to realize what farmers in America's heartland
have known all along - that we have the capacity and ingenuity to
decrease our dependence on foreign oil by growing our own fuel,"
Obama said. In a May 2006 letter to President
George W. Bush,
he joined four other
midwest farming state Senators in
calling for the preservation of a $0.54-per-gallon
tariff on imported
ethanol.
In an interview with
NBC's
Tim Russert on May 4, 2008, Obama said,
"...we've got a serious food problem around the world. We've got
rising food
prices here in the United States." "There's no doubt that
biofuels may be contributing to it. And what
I've said is, my top priority is making sure that people are able
to get enough to eat. And if it turns out that we've got to make
changes in our ethanol policy to help people get something to eat,
then that's got to be the step we take."
On the issue of
nuclear power, in
2005, Obama stated, "... as Congress considers policies to address
air quality and the deleterious effects of carbon emissions on the
global ecosystem, it is reasonable – and realistic – for nuclear
power to remain on the table for consideration. Illinois has 11
nuclear power plants – the most of any State in the country – and
nuclear power provides more than half of Illinois’ electricity
needs." Regarding McCain's plans for 45 new nuclear power plants,
Obama said that it's not serious, it's not new, it's not the kind
of energy policy that will give families the relief they need.
Obama
declared himself flatly opposed to building the Yucca
Mountain nuclear waste repository
in Nevada
.
Furthermore, he opposes new nuclear plants until the problems of
nuclear waste storage, safety and cost can be addressed.
In 2006, in response to Illinois residents' concerns about
unreported radioactive leaks by
Exelon Corporation, Obama introduced a
Senate bill to effect mandatory disclosure of such leaks. In 2008,
The New York Times,
which had endorsed
Hillary Rodham
Clinton, charged that, in revising his bill, Obama had "removed
language mandating prompt reporting and simply offered guidance to
regulators". In response, the Obama campaign cited a
National Journal analysis of the
revised bill, showing that "Obama's bill would require that any
leak of radioactive materials exceeding the levels set by the
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission and the
EPA be
reported to state and local authorities, and to the NRC within 24
hours."
Obama and other Senators introduced a bill in 2007 to promote the
development of commercially viable
plug-in hybrids and other electric-drive
vehicles in order to shift away from
petroleum fuels and "toward much cleaner – and
cheaper – electricity for transportation". Similar legislation is
now in effect in the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007.
Obama proposes that the U.S. Government invest in such developments
using revenue generated from an auction-based
cap-and-trade or
emissions trading program to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
Obama stresses innovation as a means to improve
energy efficiency, calling for a 50%
improvement by 2030. He has called for a rule, proposing
tax credits to automakers in order to ease the
transition.
He opposes
drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
.
On June 22, 2008 Obama proposed tightening regulations on oil
speculators in an effort to ease
record high prices of oil.
"My plan fully closes the
Enron
loophole and restores common-sense regulation," Obama
said.
Health care
On January 24, 2007 Obama spoke about his position on health care
at
Families USA, a health care advocacy
group. Obama said, "The time has come for
universal health care in America [...]
I am absolutely determined that by the end of the first term of the
next president, we should have universal health care in this
country." Obama went on to say that he believed that it was wrong
that forty-seven million Americans are uninsured, noting that
taxpayers already pay over $15 billion annually to care for the
uninsured. Obama cites cost as the reason so many Americans are
without health insurance. Obama's health care plan includes
implementing guaranteed eligibility for affordable health care for
all Americans, paid for by insurance reform, reducing costs,
removing
patent protection for
pharmaceuticals, and required employer contributions. He would
provide for mandatory health care insurance for children.
In July 2008
The New York
Times reported that Senator Obama has promised to “bring
down premiums by $2,500 for the typical family.” His advisers have
said that the $2,500 premium reduction includes, in addition to
direct premium savings, the average family's share of the reduction
in employer paid health insurance premiums and the reduction in the
cost of government health programs such as
Medicare and
Medicaid.
The
Associated Press reported in
September 2008 that Senator Obama was proposing a National Health
Insurance Exchange that would include both private insurance plans
and a Medicare-like government run option. Coverage would be
guaranteed regardless of health status, and premiums would not vary
based on health status either. The campaign estimates the cost of
the program at $60 billion annually. The plan requires that parents
cover their children, but does not require adults to buy
insurance.
According to an October 26, 2008 article in the New York Times,
Obama is considering a new payroll tax on large and medium
employers who do not already provide their employees with health
insurance, and this tax would be used to pay for health care for
uninsured people, but Obama has not cited the specific percentage
of payroll that the tax would be, or how small a number of
employees the employer would have to have in order to be exempt
from the tax.
Homes, mortgages, mortgage crisis, and real estate
industry
Obama voted for the $700 billion
Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008.
Obama introduced the Stop Fraud Act to increase penalties for
mortgage fraud by
mortgage brokers
and
real estate brokers and to
provide more protections for low-income homebuyers.
In regards to capital gains on house sales, Obama says he favors
increasing
capital gains tax above the
present 15% rate to 20% for families whose income is above
$250,000.
NASA
"As president, Obama will support the development of this vital new
platform
Crew Exploration
Vehicle to ensure that the United States' reliance on foreign
space capabilities is limited to the minimum possible time period."
Obama
advocated a delay of the NASA
Constellation Program by at least five
years in order to fund educational programs. He has since
reversed this position, stating "I know it's still being reported
that we were talking about delaying some aspects of the
Constellation program to pay for our early-education program ... I
told my staff we're going to find an entirely different offset,
because we've got to make sure that the money going into NASA for
basic research and development continues to go there. That has been
a top priority for us."
His Human Space Flight Plans Committee is reported to have
concluded that the budget allocation for NASA would not permit the
planned manned Mars mission.
Network neutrality and government use of information
technology
In a June 2006 podcast, Obama expressed support for
telecommunications legislation to protect
network neutrality on the
Internet, saying: "It is because the
Internet is a neutral platform that I can put out
this
podcast and transmit it over the
Internet without having to go through any corporate media
middleman. I can say what I want without
censorship or without having to pay a special
charge. But the big telephone and cable companies want to change
the Internet as we know it." Obama reaffirmed his commitment to net
neutrality at a meeting with
Google employees
in November 2007, at which he said, "once providers start to
privilege some applications or web sites over others, then the
smaller voices get squeezed out, and we all lose." At the same
event, Obama pledged to appoint a
Chief Technology Officer to oversee
the U.S. government's management of
IT resources and promote wider access
to government information and decision making.
Taxation
Under Obama's plan, middle-class families would see their income
taxes cut, with no family making less than $250,000 seeing an
increase. However, he did vote for a budget in June 2008, that
would raise the taxes on single people with a taxable income of
over $32,000 by pushing up their tax bracket from 25% to 28%. Obama
has proposed a tax plan which includes
tax
credits to lower the amount of taxes paid. It is argued that
the typical middle-class family would receive over $1,000 in tax
relief, with tax payments that are 20% lower than they faced under
President
Ronald Reagan. According to
the Tax Policy Center, the Obama plan provides three times as much
tax relief for middle-class families as the McCain plan. Obama's
plan includes a temporary "making work pay" program, which gives a
tax credit at 6.2% of earned income
up to $400 for single
workers (making less than $75,000/yr), and an $800 for married
couples (making less than $150,000/yr), expiring at the end of
2010. Families making more than $250,000 would pay either the same
or lower income tax rates than they paid in the 1990s, leaving no
family to pay higher income tax rates than they would have paid in
the 1990s. For the wealthiest 2% of families, Obama plans to
reverse a portion of the tax cuts they have received over the past
eight years. Dividend rates would be 39 percent lower than what
President
George W. Bush proposed in his 2001 tax cut.
Obama’s plan is to cut income taxes overall, which he states would
reduce revenues to below the levels that prevailed under Ronald
Reagan (less than 18.2 percent of GDP). Obama argues that his plan
is a net tax cut, and that his tax relief for middle class families
is larger than the revenue raised by his tax changes for families
over $250,000. Obama plans to pay for the tax changes while
bringing down the budget deficit by cutting unnecessary
spending.
Speaking
in November 2006 to members of Wake Up
Wal-Mart, a union-backed campaign
group, Obama said: "You need to pay your workers enough that
they can actually not only shop at Wal-Mart
, but
ultimately send their kids to college and save for
retirement." His tax plan is projected to bring in an
additional $700 billion in taxes over the next 10 years.
In
The Audacity of
Hope and the
Blueprint for Change Obama advocates
responding to the "precarious budget situation" by eliminating "tax
credits that have outlived their usefulness", closing corporate tax
loopholes, and restoring the
PAYGO policy that
prohibits increases in federal spending without a way to compensate
for the lost revenue.
During an
October 13, 2008 speech at Toledo, Ohio
, Obama said that for the next two years, he favors
a $3,000 tax credit to businesses for each new full time employee
whom they hire above the number in their current work
force.
For people with incomes above $250,000, Obama wants to reduce their
charitable tax deduction from 35 cents for each dollar donated to
28 cents for each dollar donated, to match the level of deductions
for people making less than $250,000. In a press conference on
March 24, 2009, Obama stated that he wanted to return to the rate
that existed in the Reagan administration. "There's very little
evidence that this has a significant impact on charitable giving,"
said Obama. "I'll tell you what has a significant impact on
charitable giving, is a financial crisis and an economy that's
contracting. And so the most important thing that I can do for
charitable giving is to fix the economy, to get banks lending
again, to get businesses opening their doors again, to get people
back to work again."
Obama said he wanted to "look at raising the capital gains tax for
purposes of fairness."
Social Security
In response to a possible shortfall in
Social Security funding,
Obama has endorsed imposition of a new
FICA tax on incomes
above $250,000. Currently, income above $106,800 is exempt from
such taxation. Obama opposed Bush's proposal for
privatization of Social
Security.
Lobbying and campaign finance reform
Obama has spoken out numerous times against the influence of
lobbying in the United
States. He also co-sponsored legislation that limits lobbyists'
influence by mandating that lawmakers pay full charter fare when
flying on lobbyists' corporate jets.
On January 24, 2007, in reference to his stated plan to take public
financing should he procure the nomination, he said, "I think that
for a time, the presidential public financing system works." On
November 27, he said, "I will aggressively pursue an agreement with
the Republican nominee to preserve a publicly financed general
election," and on February 28, 2008, he wrote that he planned to
"aggressively pursue" a publicly financed campaign, later promising
to sit down with John McCain to ensure "a public system" of
campaign financing is preserved. However, on June 19, 2008, he
opted out of public campaign financing and declared, "I support a
robust system of public financing of elections (...) but the public
financing of presidential elections as it exists today is broken."
Furthermore he has maintained that he will not take contributions
from federal lobbyists and special interests during his 2008
presidential campaign.
According to his website, Obama would create an online database of
lobbying reports, campaign finance filings and ethics records, and
would create an independent watchdog agency to oversee
congressional ethical violations.
Immigration
Obama supports a
guest worker
program, and voted in favor of the Bush administration backed
Comprehensive
Immigration Reform Act of 2007. Obama has said that he "will
not support any bill that does not provide [an] earned path to
citizenship for the undocumented population."
Obama has said that he does not believe that the 12 million
illegal immigrants should be
deported. He said "It's not going to
happen. We're not going to go round them up ... We should give them
a pathway to citizenship."
In September 2006, Obama voted for the
Secure Fence Act, authorizing the
construction of of fencing along the
United States–Mexico
border.
Obama has supported granting
driver's
licenses to illegal immigrants.
In June 2007, Obama voted against declaring English as the
official language of the federal
government.
In November 2007, Obama stated that, "We can … go a long way toward
meeting industry’s need for skilled workers with Americans. Until
we have achieved that, I will support a temporary increase in the
H-1B visa program as a stopgap measure
until we can reform our immigration system comprehensively."
In July 2007, Obama said, "Find out how many senators appeared
before an immigration rally last year. Who was talking the talk,
and who walked the walk -- because I walked…I didn't run away from
the issue, and I didn't just talk about it in front of
Latino audiences."
"I believe we must secure our borders, fix our broken immigration
bureaucracy, and require the 12 million
undocumented to get on a responsible
path to
citizenship. I
will also increase the number of people we allow in the country
legally to a level
that unites families and meets the demand for jobs employers cannot
fill" "I support comprehensive
immigration reform that includes
improving our visa programmes, including the
H-1B programme, to attract some of the world's
most talented people to America", Obama said in an interview with
IANS in October 2008.
Affirmative action
In reference to state ballot initiatives on affirmative action,
Obama's spokesperson
Candice Toliver
said that "Senator Obama believes in a country in which opportunity
is available to all Americans, regardless of race, gender or
economic status. That's why he opposes these ballot initiatives,
which would roll back opportunity for millions of Americans and
cripple efforts to break down historic barriers to the progress of
qualified women and minorities."
Obama writes in his most recent book,
The Audacity of Hope: "
Affirmative action
programs, when properly structured, can open up opportunities
otherwise closed to qualified minorities without diminishing
opportunities for white students." In July, Obama stated, "I am a
strong supporter of affirmative action when properly structured so
that it is not just a quota, but it is acknowledging and taking
into account some of the hardships and difficulties that
communities of color may have experienced, continue to experience,
and it also speaks to the value of diversity in all walks of
American life." He has indicated support for affirmative action
based on class, not just race, (q.v.
redistributive change) in comments
where he said that his daughters should be treated by prospective
colleges and employers as people that grew up with a privileged
background.
Trade
Barack Obama made critical statements about the
North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) during the Democratic primaries, calling the
trade agreement "devastating" and "a big mistake". In February
2008, a Canadian diplomatic memo surfaced, which alleged that
Obama's economic advisor
Austan
Goolsbee had met with Canadian consular officials in Chicago
and told them to disregard Obama's campaign rhetoric regarding
NAFTA, a charge the Obama campaign later denied (see
Barack Obama presidential primary campaign, 2008#NAFTA
controversy). Obama also noted that free trade comes with its
own costs: he believes the displacement of Mexican farmers by more
efficient American counterparts has led to increased immigration to
the United States from that country.
Faith based programs
In July 2008, after winning the primary, Obama announced that he
wants to expand federal funding of
faith-based programs and establish a "Council
for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships". He specified that,
under his plan, federal money given to places of worship could only
be used on secular programs.
In particular, he mentioned, on July 1 in
Zanesville,
Ohio
, that "support for social services to the poor and
the needy have consistently been underfunded". He went on to
praise President Bush's efforts, but contended that the current
administration's plan never managed to "rally the armies of
compassion."
Government waste
On September 22, 2008, Obama said, "I am not a Democrat who
believes that we can or should defend every government program just
because it's there... We will fire government managers who aren't
getting results, we will cut funding for programs that are wasting
your money and we will use technology and lessons from the private
sector to improve efficiency across every level of government...
The only way we can do all this without leaving our children with
an even larger debt is if Washington starts taking responsibility
for every dime that it spends."
U.S. automobile industry loan guarantees
On October 13, 2008, Obama said that he wanted Congress to double
its guaranteed loans to the U.S. automobile industry from $25
billion to $50 billion.
Foreign policy
Obama's overall foreign policy philosophy has been postulated as
"The Obama Doctrine" by
Washington
Post columnist
E.J. Dionne, which Dionne explains as "a form of
realism unafraid to deploy
American power but mindful that its use must be tempered by
practical limits and a dose of self-awareness."
Overview
His
first major speech on
foreign
policy was delivered on April 23, 2007 to the
Chicago Council on Global
Affairs. He identified the problems that he believes the
current foreign policy has caused, and the five ways the United
States can lead again, focused on "common security", "common
humanity", and remaining "a beacon of freedom and justice for the
world":
- "Bringing a responsible end" to the war in
Iraq and refocusing on the broader region.
- "Building the first truly 21st century military and showing
wisdom in how we deploy it."
- "Marshalling a global effort" to secure, destroy, and stop the
spread of weapons of mass
destruction.
- "Rebuild and construct the alliances and partnerships necessary
to meet common challenges and confront common threats," including
global warming.
- "Invest in our common humanity" through foreign aid and
supporting the "pillars of a sustainable democracy – a strong
legislature, an independent judiciary, the rule of law, a vibrant
civil society, a free press, and an
honest police force."
During the speech Obama called for an expansion of the
United States Armed Forces "by
adding 65,000 soldiers to the
Army and 27,000
Marines", an idea previously
introduced by
Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates.
In a Washington, DC speech entitled "A New Strategy for a New
World" delivered July 15, 2008, Obama stated five main foreign
policy goals:
- ending the war in Iraq responsibly;
- finishing the fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban;
- securing all nuclear weapons and materials from terrorists and
rogue states;
- achieving true energy security; and,
- rebuilding our alliances to meet the challenges of the 21st
century.
Foreign policy advisors
Barack Obama is currently advised on foreign policy by a support
group of approximately 300 people organized into 20 teams based
upon subject. A core group of advisors, led by
Susan E. Rice and
Anthony Lake, filters hundreds of
papers and messages daily to provide the Senator with more concise
positions on foreign policy and more specific reactions to
international developments. Obama's foreign policy advisers have
included
Richard Danzig,
Mark Lippert,
Gregory
Craig,
Denis McDonough,
Daniel Shapiro,
Scott Gration,
Sarah
Sewall,
Ivo Daalder,
Jeffrey Bader,
Mark
Brzezinski,
Zbigniew
Brzezinski,
Richard Clarke,
Roger Cressey,
Philip Gordon,
Lawrence Korb,
James
Ludes,
Robert Malley,
Bruce Riedel,
Dennis
Ross,
Mona Sutphen, and
Samantha Power (resigned March 7,
2008).
Foreign policy issues
Diplomacy and negotiations
Obama's campaign website states:
The United States is trapped by the Bush-Cheney
approach to diplomacy that refuses to talk to leaders we don't
like. Not talking doesn't make us look tough — it makes us look
arrogant, it denies us opportunities to make progress, and it makes
it harder for America to rally international support for our
leadership.
Obama is willing to meet with the leaders of all nations, friend
and foe. He will do the careful preparation necessary, but will
signal that America is ready to come to the table, and that he is
willing to lead.
Returning
to that theme on May 18, 2008, Obama told a crowd in Pendleton,
Oregon
that "strong countries and strong presidents talk
to their adversaries. ... That’s what
Reagan did with
Gorbachev."
He continued, "Iran
, Cuba
, Venezuela
— these countries are tiny compared to the Soviet Union
. They don’t pose a serious threat to us the
way the Soviet Union posed a threat to us. And yet we were willing
to talk to the Soviet Union at the time when they were saying,
'We’re going to wipe you off the planet.'"Michael Luo,
"Obama Talk on Iranians Draws Fire From
McCain", New York Times,
May 20, 2008
After
John McCain criticized those
remarks as evidence of Obama's "inexperience and reckless
judgment," Obama responded that the United States should have "the
courage and confidence" to talk to its adversaries. "Demanding that
a country meets all your conditions before you meet with them,
that’s not a strategy. It’s just naive, wishful thinking."
Intelligence
In a
broad foreign policy address at Chicago's DePaul
University
on October 2, 2007, Obama touched on intelligence
concerns and government secrecy, saying:
I'll turn the page on a growing empire of classified
information, and restore the balance we've lost between the
necessarily secret and the necessity of openness in a democratic
society by creating a new National Declassification Center. We'll
protect sources and methods, but we won't use sources and methods
as pretexts to hide the truth.
Obama proposes giving the
Director of National
Intelligence a fixed term independent of Presidential control
as one means of depoliticizing the intelligence process and
reforming the
U.S.
intelligence community.In a 2007 article appearing in
Foreign Affairs, Obama wrote, "...we should
institutionalize the practice of developing competitive assessments
of critical threats and strengthen our methodologies of
(intelligence) analysis.
He originally opposed efforts to include any legal immunity,
especially retroactive immunity, for government officials and
telecommunications firms alleged to have taken part in the
Bush administration's
warrantless eavesdropping program as part of legislation to
modernize the
Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act. However, on June 20, 2008, Obama issued a
statement saying that he would support the
FISA Amendments Act of 2008
passed the previous week by the House of Representatives, although
he would attempt to have a retroactive immunity provision included
in the bill removed before it came to a Senate floor vote. Obama's
decision to vote in favor of a bill containing an immunity
provision attracted criticism from some of his activist supporters.
Obama voted for an amendment to strip retroactive immunity from the
bill, but the amendment failed to pass. On July 9, he voted for the
entire FISA amendments bill which still included retroactive
immunity.
Military
Obama said he would institute an "Independent Defense Priorities
Board," cut investments from an “unproven
missile defense system,” "set a
goal for a world without nuclear weapons," "work with Russia to
take our ICBM's off hair trigger alert" and "slow the development
of
Future Combat
Systems."
On April 23, 2007 Barack Obama addressed the Chicago Council on
Global Affairs and called for an expansion of the United States
Armed Forces "by adding 65,000 soldiers to the Army and 27,000
Marines", an idea previously introduced by Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates, and "providing them with the first-rate equipment,
armor, training, and incentives they deserve"; despite his
incentives to slow the development of
Future Combat Systems. This plan was
eventually made manifest in the form of the
Grow the Army initiative.
Although he opposes reviving the military draft, Obama favors
changing the Selective Service requirements so that women as well
as men must register at age 18.
Nuclear proliferation
Obama has spoken out against
nuclear proliferation. According to
his campaign website, Obama will "crack down on nuclear
proliferation by strengthening the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty." Obama has also vowed to stop the development of new
American nuclear arms, pursuing an ultimate goal of "a world
without nuclear weapons."
Foreign aid
Obama is the principal sponsor of the Global Poverty Act of 2007
(S.2433), co-sponsored by Senators
Chuck
Hagel (R-NE) and
Maria Cantwell
(D-WA). It calls for a "comprehensive strategy to further the
United States foreign policy objective of promoting the reduction
of global poverty". A similar bill, H.R. 1302, was passed by the
House of Representatives on September 25, 2007. On August 6, 2008
the Republican National Committee also described the bill as
costing $845 billion. The Congressional Budget Office, however, has
stated that "implementing S. 2433 would cost less than $1 million
per year...."
Countries and regions
Afghanistan
Obama
announced a plan — if elected — to deploy an additional 7,000
troops to Afghanistan
. "As president, I would pursue a new
strategy, and begin by providing at least two additional combat
brigades to support our effort in Afghanistan" "We need more
troops, more helicopters, better intelligence-gathering and more
nonmilitary assistance to accomplish the mission there" "I would
not hold our military, our resources and our foreign policy hostage
to a misguided desire to maintain permanent bases in Iraq
," Obama said
on July 14, 2008.
After
meeting with French President Nicolas
Sarkozy in Paris on July 25 as part of a world tour, Obama said
in the joint news conference with Sarkozy, "Afghanistan
is a war that we have to win" because al-Qaeda and the radical Islamic Taliban movement cannot be allowed to establish new
havens for planning "terrorist attacks . . . that could
affect Paris or New York." Obama declared that there were no
effective options to this policy, saying, "So we don't have a
choice; we've got to finish the job." Obama said the United States
"needs to send two additional brigades at least" to Afghanistan and
praised Sarkozy for his willingness to send more French troops to
that country.
Africa
"Ultimately, a new generation of
Africans have to recognize the international
community, the international relief organizations or the United
States can't help
Africa if its own leaders
are undermining the possibilities of progress," Obama said.
"The
United States must continue to stand strongly against the Mugabe government’s abuses of power in
Zimbabwe
. We must join with our European allies, the
United Nations, and – most importantly – the countries and
institutions of the region to press for positive change in
Zimbabwe", Obama said on March 15, 2007.
Obama paid tribute to
South Africa's
ANC fight for freedom,
saying they taught lessons to the world and helped inspire his own
political career. "If it wasn't for some of the activities that
happened here, I might not be involved in politics and might not be
doing what I am doing in the United States," he said.
In a
nationally televised speech at the University of Nairobi
, he spoke forcefully on the influence of ethnic rivalries and
corruption in Kenya. The
speech touched off a public debate among rival leaders, some
formally challenging Obama's remarks as unfair and improper, others
defending his positions.
Obama
expressed his concerns about the growing number of systematic
sexual assaults against women in the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo
(DRC) since Congo Civil
War erupted. In December 2006, President Bush signed
into law the
The Democratic Republic of the Congo Relief,
Security and Democracy Promotion Act, the first federal
legislation to be enacted with Obama as its primary sponsor, which
identifies such systematic sexual violence as a particular threat
in Congo.
Antarctica
Obama
wants to amend the Antarctic Treaty
to make mandatory what had been voluntary restrictions on tourism
to Antarctica
in order to help protect its fragile
environment.
Armenian genocide
On October 31, 2008 Obama issued a statement to Armenians for Obama
including the passage: "Barack Obama shares with
Armenian Americans a principled commitment
to ending genocide. That starts with acknowledging the tragic
instances of genocide in world history…Barack Obama strongly
supports passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106 and
S.Res.106) and will recognize the
Armenian Genocide."
On January 19, 2008 Obama announced that as a U.S.
Senator, he has stood
with the Armenian American community in calling for Turkey
's
acknowledgement of the Armenian
Genocide, and supports its recognition. In
2006, Obama criticized
Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice for
firing
United States
Ambassador to Armenia,
John
Evans, after he used the term "genocide" to describe Turkey's
killing of hundreds of thousands of
Armenians. Obama said that he shared with
Evans his "firmly held conviction that the Armenian Genocide is not
an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a
widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of
historical evidence".
On June, 2008 Obama restated his commitment to U.S. recognition of
the Armenian Genocide in a letter to
ANCA Chairman
Ken Hachikian. "I share your view that
the United States must recognize the events of 1915 to 1923,
carried out by the Ottoman Empire, as genocide. As you know, this
resulted in the deportation of nearly 2,000,000 Armenians, of whom
1,500,000 men, women, and children were killed", wrote Obama.
In 2007 Obama supported
House Resolution
106 which recognized the killings as genocide.
Cuba
In an
August opinion piece in the Miami
Herald, he stated: "A democratic opening in Cuba
is, and
should be, the foremost objective of our policy." He then
went on to note: "We need a clear strategy to achieve it – one that
takes some limited steps now to spread the message of freedom on
the island, but preserves our ability to bargain on behalf of
democracy with a post-Fidel government." More to the point, his
administration would recognize that "bilateral talks would be the
best means of promoting Cuban freedom."
In a speech before
the Cuban American National Foundation in Miami
Obama
hardened his position, vowing to maintain the economic embargo
against Cuba and not to begin normalizing relations with the US
until the island nation took "significant steps towards democracy"
including the "freeing of all political prisoners". He
characterized his position as "strong, smart, and principled"
diplomacy.
According to
Hillary Clinton's
written statement during her Senate confirmation hearings for
Secretary of State, Obama believes in lifting the restrictions on
Cuban-Americans making visits and sending cash to their families in
Cuba. She reaffirmed that he has no current intention to remove the
embargo itself.
China
On March 20, 2008 Obama criticized his rivals for undermining
America’s security: "Because of the Bush-McCain policies, our
debt has ballooned. This
is creating problems in our fragile
economy." "It also means we’re
having to pay for this war with loans from China. Having China as
our banker isn’t good for our economy, it isn’t good for our global
leadership, and it isn’t good for our national security. History
teaches us that for a nation to remain a preeminent military power,
it must remain a preeminent economic power."
Obama appealed to China on grounds of co-operation and increased
friendship following Obama's election victory on November 4, 2008.
On November 8, 2008,
Hu Jintao and
Barack Obama had a phone conversation
in which the Chinese President congratulated Obama on his recent
election victory. During the conversation both parties agreed that
the development of US-China relations is not only in the interest
of both nations, but also in the interests of the world.
Darfur
In a
December 2005 Washington
Post opinion column, and at the Save Darfur rally in April 2006, Obama
called for more assertive action to oppose genocide in the Darfur
region of Sudan
. He
has
divested $180,000 in personal
holdings of Sudan-related stock, and has urged divestment from
companies doing business in Iran. In the July-August 2007 issue of
Foreign Affairs, Obama
called for an outward looking post-Iraq War foreign policy and the
renewal of American military, diplomatic, and moral leadership in
the world. Saying "we can neither retreat from the world nor try to
bully it into submission," he called on Americans to "lead the
world, by deed and by example."
Europe
Obama
said he would "ask more from our European allies" to win the
struggle in Afghanistan
. "You can't have a situation where the United
States is called upon to do the dirty work, or the United States
and Britain
are called upon to do the dirty work, and nobody
else wants to engage in actual firefights with the Taliban."
India
Barack
Obama has pledged to "build a close strategic
partnership" between US and India
if
elected. "Already, in communities across this country,
Indian Americans are lifting up our
economy and creating jobs," he said. "Leading entrepreneurs,
innovators, lawyers, doctors, engineers, and hardworking
professionals are adding to the richness and success of the
American society." "Too often, flawed strategies like racial
profiling have had a disproportionate effect on Indian Americans.
Too often, restrictions at our
borders have
prevented entry for many students and family members who seek
nothing more than opportunity and reunification with loved ones",
Obama argued in an article he has written for
India Abroad. Obama said in an interview with
IANS he would support
"comprehensive
immigration
reform", including the
H-1B visa
programme "to attract some of the world most talented people to
America". "We know that we cannot and should not put up walls
around our economy."
Iran
During
his 2004 Senate campaign, Obama stated that he had not ruled out
military action against Iran
. In a
meeting with the
Chicago
Tribune editorial board, Obama stated: "The big question
is going to be, if Iran is resistant to these pressures, including
economic sanctions, which I hope
will be imposed if they do not cooperate, at what point are we
going to take military action, if any?" Obama stressed that he
would only use force as a last resort. Obama has not declared a
change in this stance since the 2004 campaign. In 2006, he called
on Iran to "take some ownership for creating some stability" in
Iraq.
In an interview with
NBC's
Tim Russert on October 22, 2006, Obama said, "I
think that military options have to be on the table when you're
dealing with
rogue states that have
shown constant hostility towards the United States. The point that
I would make, though, is that we have not explored all of our
options...We have not explored any kind of dialogue with either
Iran or North Korea, and I think that has been a mistake. As a
consequence, we have almost no leverage over them."
Speaking to the
American Israel Public
Affairs Committee on March 2, 2007, Obama stated that he
regards Iran's government as "a threat to all of us," stating that
the US "should take no option, including military action, off the
table. Sustained and aggressive diplomacy combined with tough
sanctions should be our primary means to prevent Iran from building
nuclear weapons." Diplomacy would include "more determined U.S.
diplomacy at the United Nations," "harnessing the collective power
of our friends in Europe who are Iran's major trading partners,"
and "a cooperative strategy with Gulf States who supply Iran with
much of the energy resources it needs." He formulated a strategy of
"direct engagement with Iran similar to the meetings we conducted
with the Soviets at the height of the Cold War."
In a
September 2007 speech in Iowa
, Obama
voiced concern over Bush administration policy on Iran:
...we hear eerie echoes of the run-up to the war in
Iraq in the way that the President and Vice President talk about
Iran. ... They issue veiled threats. They suggest that the time for
diplomacy and pressure is running out when we haven't even tried
direct diplomacy. Well George Bush and Dick Cheney must hear — loud
and clear — from the American people and the Congress: you don't
have our support, and you don't have our authorization for another
war.
Obama has criticized
Hillary Clinton
for supporting the Kyl-Lieberman amendment, which would classify
the Iranian
Quds Force as a terrorist
organization, saying the measure could enable Bush to launch
military action against Iran. While specifying that he "would have
supported a stand-alone piece of legislation identifying the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organization."
Obama
stated that he would have voted against the Kyl-Lieberman amendment
if he had not been in New Hampshire
campaigning. The Clinton campaign has
countered that this was inconsistent with Obama's co-sponsorship of
a 2006 Iran sanctions bill which contained a similar designation.
In a June 2008 speech to
AIPAC Obama endorsed
a boycott of "firms associated with the Iranian Revolutionary
Guard, whose Quds force has rightly been labeled a terrorist
organization."
On June 4, 2008, Obama spoke at an
AIPAC
conference where he stated that the Iraq war had endangered Israel
because Iran posed a much greater threat.
During his speech,
Obama stated that "There's no greater threat to Israel
or to the
peace and stability of the region than Iran" and pledged that "I
will do everything in my power to prevent Iran from obtaining a
nuclear weapon.”
After meeting with French President
Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris on July 25 as part
of a world tour, Obama issued his strongest warning yet to Tehran
with Sarkozy at his side. Obama urged Iran to "end its illicit
nuclear program" or face increased pressure from a unified
international community, saying that the Iranian government should
not "wait for the next president" before accepting proposals to
resolve the current stalemate with Western countries.
Obama said that the world faced an "extraordinarily grave
situation" from Iran's pursuit of a uranium enrichment program,
which the United States and its allies fear could be used
eventually to build nuclear weapons. Obama said that he had found
"uniform concern about Iran" in his meetings with leaders in the
Middle East and Europe on his trip.
In July
2008, Obama warned Iran
that "A
nuclear Iran would pose a grave threat and the world must prevent
Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon." Obama said no options
were "off the table" in dealing with a nuclear threat from Iran but
that the country should be offered diplomatic incentives in the
form of "big carrots" as well as punitive measures or threats in
the form of "big sticks." Obama said, "I think there are
opportunities for us to mobilize a much more serious regime of
sanctions on Iran, but also to offer them the possibility of
improved relations in the international community if they stand
down on these nuclear weapons."
In December 2008, Obama gave an interview on Sunday's "Meet the
Press" with host
Tom Brokaw. During the
interview Obama stated that Iran's "threats against Israel are
contrary to everything that we believe in and what the
international community should accept" and that the United States
needs to "ratchet up tough but direct diplomacy with Iran" and make
it clear to the Iranians that their development of nuclear weapons
and their funding of terrorist organizations "like Hamas and
Hezbollah," and threats against Israel are "unacceptable."
Iraq
Obama was an early opponent of
Bush administration policies on
Iraq, when many Democratic leaders supported the
Congressional joint resolution authorizing
the
Iraq War. Obama was not yet in the
United States Senate, and
therefore unable to vote on the joint resolution.
On October 2, 2002,
the day President Bush and Congress agreed on the joint
resolution authorizing the Iraq War, Illinois State Senator Obama addressed the
first high-profile Chicago anti-Iraq War rally in
Federal
Plaza
at noon and said: "I am not opposed to all
wars. I'm opposed to dumb wars. [...] You want a fight,
President Bush? Let's finish the fight with
Bin Laden and
al-Qaeda, through effective, coordinated
intelligence, and a shutting down of the financial networks that
support terrorism, and a
homeland
security program that involves more than
color-coded
warnings."
During a July 2004 interview reported by
The New York Times when asked how he
would have acted in regard to the
Iraq
resolution in 2002, Obama answered "What would I have done? I
don't know. What I know is that from my vantage point the case
[against invading Iraq] was not made" and that he was "not privy to
Senate Intelligence reports," using it as a reason to support
John Kerry and
John Edwards in the
2004 election.
Obama defended his words on a later edition of
Meet the
Press saying that he made the statement because it was during
the middle of an
election in which
his party's presidential nominees had both voted to authorize the
war and noting that he was openly opposed to the war as early as
2002.
Speaking before the
Chicago Council on Global
Affairs in November 2006, he said: "The days of using the
war on terror as a
political football are over. [...] It is
time to give Iraqis their country back, and it is time to refocus
America's efforts on the wider struggle yet to be won."
In his
speech Obama also called for a phased withdrawal of American troops
starting in 2007, and an opening of diplomatic dialogue with Iraq's
neighbors, Syria
and Iran
.
On January 30, 2007, Obama introduced the
Iraq War De-Escalation Act of
2007 into Congress. Among other things, the Act calls for
capping the level of troops in Iraq at January 2007 levels, and for
commencing a phased redeployment of US forces from Iraq "with the
goal of removing all combat brigades from Iraq by March 31, 2008, a
date that is consistent with the expectation of the bipartisan Iraq
Study Group. Announcing the act on the Senate floor, Obama stated
that "no amount of American soldiers can solve the political
differences at the heart of
somebody
else's civil war."
Obama has not supported cutting funding to the war as a way to end
U.S. involvement in the conflict. He stated that, "Once we were in,
we were going to have some responsibility to try to make it work as
best we can". Obama was however one of 14 senators who voted
against the successful passage of
H.R.2206 in May 2007, a bill meant to
provide continued funding for the Iraq war free from any withdrawal
deadlines.
In an interview with
BBC's HARDtalk on March 6, 2008, Obama foreign
policy adviser Samantha Power stated that Obama's pledge to "have
all [US] combat brigades out of Iraq within 16 months" was a "best
case scenario" that "he will revisit when he becomes president."
She continued, saying that "what we can take seriously is that he
will try to get US forces out of Iraq as quickly and responsibly as
possible."
Although Obama had previously said he wanted all the U.S. troops
out of Iraq within 16 months of becoming President, after he won
the primary, he said he might "refine" that promise.
On July 3, Obama reasserted his position on withdrawal saying "I
have always said I would listen to commanders on the ground. I have
always said the pace of withdrawal would be dictated by the safety
and security of our troops and the need to maintain stability. That
assessment has not changed and when I go to Iraq and I have a
chance to talk to some of the commanders on the ground, I’m sure
I’ll have more information and will continue to refine my
policies."
Obama
said he would set a goal of having all U.S. combat brigades out
of Iraq by summer 2010 and shift more resources to fighting
Taliban in Afghanistan
. "We can safely redeploy our combat brigades
at a pace that would remove them in 16 months" "That would be the
summer of 2010 -- two years from now, and more than seven years
after the war began," Obama said on July 14, 2008.
Obama will provide at least $2 billion to expand services to
Iraqi refugees in neighboring
countries.
Israel
Speaking
to the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee on March 2, 2007, Obama called
Israel
"our
strongest ally in the region," and stated: "We must preserve our
total commitment to our unique defense relationship with Israel by
fully funding military assistance and continuing work on the Arrow
and related missile defense programs." On the
Palestinian Authority's new unity
government, Obama said: "We should all be concerned about the
agreement negotiated among Palestinians in Mecca last month."
Obama denounced former President
Jimmy
Carter for meeting with
Hamas. Obama said
"Hamas is not a state, Hamas is a terrorist organization."
In June
2008, Obama became the first presidential
candidate ever to publicly back the traditional Israeli
position that Jerusalem
remain forever undivided under Israel rule.
"Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel, and it must remain
undivided," Obama declared on June 4, 2008. Days later, he said,
"obviously, it's going to be up to the parties to negotiate a range
of these issues. And Jerusalem will be part of those
negotiations."
On a July 2008 world tour focused on trouble spots for U.S.
national security interests, Obama met with Israeli president
Shimon Peres, prime minister
Ehud Olmert, opposition party leader
Benjamin Netanyahu, and
Palestinian Authority president
Mahmoud Abbas and prime minister
Salam Fayyad. Obama reiterated that
Jerusalem should be the capital of Israel, but that territorial
disputes regarding that city and elsewhere needed to be resolved
without direct U.S. involvement. "That’s an issue that has to be
dealt with by the parties involved, the Palestinians and the
Israelis, and it is not the job of the United States to dictate the
form in which that will take, but rather to support the efforts
that are being made right now to resolve these very difficult
issues that have a long history." On the same trip, Obama said,
"The state of Israel faces determined enemies who seek its
destruction, but it also has a friend and ally in the United States
that will always stand by the people of Israel."
Obama's selection for his Vice-Presidential candidate,
Joe Biden, has stressed that Obama is strongly
pro-Israel. In a speech in September 2008, Biden stated "I am
chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. I give you my word as
a Biden, I would not have given up that job to be
Barack Obama's vice president if I didn't in my
gut and in my heart and in my head know that
Barack Obama is exactly where I am on Israel.
And he is...I promise you ... we will make [Israel] more
secure."
In February 2009, Obama announced that the United States will
boycott the
2009 Durban Review
Conference due to concerns that, like its predecessor, the
2001 World
Conference against Racism, the conference will become a
platform for
anti-Semitism and
anti-Zionism. The decision was praised
by the
National Post - a conservative
newspaper - where columnist Jonathan Kay stated that this decision
"signifies that — contrary to overheated campaign propaganda
contained in GOP smear-campaign email blasts — Obama is hardly soft
on the Israeli file."
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Referring
to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict in January 2006, Obama denounced Hamas while praising former Prime Minister of Israel
Ariel Sharon. At a meeting with then
Israeli Foreign Minister
Silvan Shalom on the eve of
Hamas' sweeping election
victory, Obama stated that Sharon's role in the conflict had
always been "absolutely important and constructive." At a meeting
with Palestinian students two days later, Obama stated opposition
to Hamas in favor of rival party
Fatah, noting
his desire to "consolidate behind a single government with a single
authority that can then negotiate as a reliable partner with
Israel." In a comment aimed at Hamas, he said that "the US will
always side with Israel if Israel is threatened with
destruction."
In March
2007, Obama told Democratic activists in Iowa
, "Nobody is
suffering more than the Palestinian
people. ...if we could get some movement among
Palestinian leadership, what I'd like to see is a loosening up of
some of the restrictions on providing aid directly to the
Palestinian people."
Obama has also discussed in more general terms his views about the
Palestinians vis-à-vis the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. On June 4,
2007, he stated that:
...resolution [to the conflict] and a better life for
all people... is something that can be achieved, but it's going to
require some soul-searching on the Palestinian side. They have to
recognize Israel's right to exist; they have to renounce violence
and terrorism as a tool to achieve their political ends; they have
to abide by agreements. In that context, I think the Israelis will
gladly say, "Let's move forward negotiations that would allow them
to live side by side with the Palestinians in peace and
security."
Obama was also a co-sponsor of the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act
of 2006, which in part calls on "members of the international
community to avoid contact with and refrain from financially
supporting the
terrorist organization
Hamas until it agrees to recognize Israel, renounce violence,
disarm, and accept prior agreements, including the Roadmap."
On April
7, 2009, Obama spoke to university students at a round table in
Istanbul,
Turkey
in which he stated that he was committed to
achieving a peace settlement between Israel and the Palestinians
and praised Turkey
for its role
as a peace broker during the conflict. Obama stated that:
"It will depend on young people like you being open to
new ideas and new possibilities and it will require young people
like you never to stereotype or assume the worst about other
people. In the Muslim world, this notion that somehow everything is
the fault of the Israelis lacks balance -- because there's two
sides to every question. That doesn't mean that sometimes one side
has done something wrong and should not be condemned. But it does
mean there's always two sides to an issue. I say the same thing to
my Jewish friends, which is you have to see the perspective of the
Palestinians. Learning to stand in somebody else's shoes to see
through their eyes, that's how peace begins. And it's up to you to
make that happen."
2006 Israel-Hezbollah War
Obama
defended Israel's response to the killing of eight Israeli soldiers and
kidnapping of two others near the border with Lebanon
, telling NBC's Tim
Russert on August 22, 2006, "I don't think there is any nation
that would not have reacted the way Israel did after two soldiers
had been snatched. I support Israel's response to take some
action in protecting themselves."
Discussing the
2006 Israel-Hezbollah
War Obama said, "don't fault Israel for wanting to rid their
border with Lebanon from those
Katyusha missiles that can fire in
and harm Israeli citizens, so I think that any cease fire would
have to be premised on the removal of those missiles."
Kosovo
Obama's
reaction to Kosovo
's
unilateral declaration of independence in 2008 was that the
"announcement of independence by the leadership of Kosovo ends a
chain of events that began with the bloody break-up of the former
Yugoslavia. Kosovo’s independence
is a unique situation resulting from the irreparable rupture
Slobodan Milosevic’s actions
caused; it is in no way a precedent for anyone else in the region
or around the world."
He expressed hope that "Serbia
and Kosovo
can emerge as models of democratic and
economic growth, and their people can know a bright future."
The Obama administration has expressed strong support for Kosovar
independence, and Obama dispatched Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton to meet with the republic's
leaders to affirm his administration's commitment to seeking
greater international recognition for the state.
Middle East
In his first formal television interview as President, Obama
addressed the
Muslim world through an
Arabic-language satellite TV network
Al-Arabiya. He expressed interest and a
commitment to repair relations that have continued to deteriorate
under the previous administration. He called for a new partnership
with the Muslim world, "based on mutual respect and mutual
interest." The American envoy to the region is former Sen.
George J. Mitchell.
Pakistan
In an
address on national security to the Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars
on August 1, 2007, Obama stated that as President
he would consider military action in Pakistan
in order to attack al-Qaeda, even if the Pakistani government did not
give approval. Obama said, "I will not hesitate to use
military force to take out terrorists who pose a direct threat to
America." He also said "As President, I would deploy at least two
additional brigades to Afghanistan to reinforce our
counter-terrorism operations".
On August
1, 2007 Obama declared in a foreign policy speech that the United
States must be willing to strike al Qaeda targets inside Pakistan
, with or without the consent of the Pakistani
government. He said, "If we have actionable intelligence
about high value terrorist targets and
President Musharraf won't act, we will". On
the same day in response, then-White House press secretary
Tony Snow highlighted the policy's shift from the
position established by the Bush Administration, he said: "Our
approach to Pakistan is one that not only respects the sovereignty
of Pakistan as a sovereign government, but is also designed to work
in a way where we are working in cooperation with the local
government".
After
weeks of discourse surrounding the policy, Obama said there was
misreporting of his comments, saying that, "I never called for an
invasion of Pakistan or Afghanistan
." He clarified that rather than a surge in
the number of troops in Iraq, there needs to be a "diplomatic
surge" and that if there were "actionable intelligence reports"
showing
al-Qaida leader
Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, the U.S. troops
as a last resort should enter and try to capture terrorists. That
would happen, he added, only if "the Pakistani government was
unable or unwilling" to go after the terrorists.
Obama has said that he would hold Pakistan accountable for the
massive military aid it has received from Washington if he were
elected to the White House. He said his administration will
increase pressure on Pakistan to come to terms with terrorist safe
havens along its northern border with Afghanistan. He noted that
the US was providing Pakistan military aid which he said was being
misused by that country to prepare for a war against India.
South Ossetia
"I
wholeheartedly condemn the violation of Georgia
's sovereignty. I think it is important at
this point for all sides to show restraint and to stop this arms
conflict. Georgia's territorial integrity needs to be preserved and
now is the time for direct talks," Obama said on August 8, 2008.
Moscow
sent tanks into the pro-Russian separatist region of South Ossetia
when Georgia, a staunch U.S. ally, launched a
military offensive to retake
the breakaway province.
Zimbabwe
Obama
supports Zimbabweean
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai and congratulated him
upon his swearing-in as Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, but he has
historically been a critic of President Robert Mugabe. Obama's position is that
sanctions should remain against the Zimbabwean government until
Mugabe shows signs of cooperating with Tsvangirai.
Social policy
The
Almanac of American
Politics (2008) rated Obama's overall social policies in
2006 as more
conservative than 21 percent of the
Senate, and more
liberal than 77
percent of the Senate (18 percent and 77 percent, respectively, in
2005).
Abortion and contraception
In his write-in response to a 1998 survey, Obama stated his
abortion position as conforming with the
Democratic platform: "Abortions should be legally available in
accordance with
Roe v.
Wade." His presidential
candidacy was endorsed by several groups which advocate for legal
abortion, including
NARAL
Pro-Choice America and
Planned
Parenthood.
In August 2008, in Lake Forest,
California
, Obama responded to the question as to when life begins, "Whether you're
looking at it from a theological perspective or a scientific
perspective, answering that question with specificity is above my
pay grade."
In the Illinois state legislature, Obama opposed the Induced Infant
Liability Act and repeatedly voted against requirements and
restrictions on what opponents label "born alive" abortions. Obama
said his opposition was because of technical language he felt might
have "interfered with a woman's right to choose" and said Illinois
law already required medical care in such situations.
Obama voted against the
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban
Act, saying "On an issue like
partial birth abortion, I strongly
believe that the state can properly restrict late-term abortions. I
have said so repeatedly. All I've said is we should have a
provision to protect the health of the mother, and many of the
bills that came before me didn't have that." Obama voted against a
bill that would have made it a federal crime for anyone other than
a parent to accompany a minor across state lines to obtain an
abortion. Obama has, however, expressed support of bans on some
late-term abortions, provided they include exemptions for the
mental and physical health of the mother.
During the third debate during the 2008 presidential campaign,
Obama further detailed his stance on abortion:
"...there surely is some common ground when both those
who believe in choice and those who are opposed to abortion can
come together and say, 'We should try to prevent unintended
pregnancies by providing appropriate education to our youth,
communicating that sexuality is sacred and that they should not be
engaged in cavalier activity, and providing options for adoption,
and helping single mothers if they want to choose to keep the
baby'. Those are all things that we put in the Democratic platform
for the first time this year, and I think that's where we can find
some common ground, because nobody's pro-abortion. I think it's
always a tragic situation. We should try to reduce these
circumstances."
Obama voted for a $100 million education initiative to reduce teen
pregnancy and provide contraceptives
to young people.
Disability rights
Obama was the only Democratic presidential candidate to issue an
unsolicited statement expressing his views on disability community
issues. For example, he stated his intention to sign the UN
Convention
on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and expressed his
support of the ADA Restoration
Act.
Environmental policy and record
Addressing global warming, Obama
stated:
The issue of climate
change is one that we ignore at our own peril. There may still
be disputes about exactly how much is naturally occurring, but what
we can be scientifically certain of is that our continued use of
fossil fuels is pushing us to a point of no return. And unless we
free ourselves from a dependence on these fossil fuels and chart a
new course on energy in this country, we are condemning future
generations to global catastrophe.
He has pledged to cut greenhouse gas
emissions 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050 by creating a
market-based cap-and-trade system.
Obama also has plans for improving air and water quality through
reduced carbon emissions.
Obama worked as a member of the US Senate Committee on Environment
and Public Works during the 109th Congress. During the
presidential campaign Obama rejected John
McCain's proposed suspension of
federal gas taxes claiming it would hurt consumers, hinder
highway construction, and endanger jobs. Obama criticized the idea
of a gas tax "holiday" as a ploy by his rivals "designed to get
them through an election" and not actually help "struggling
consumers".
Native Americans
Obama has stated, "The bond that I would like to create between an
Obama administration and the [Native American] nations all across
this country...is something that is going to be a top priority."
Obama added that "few have been ignored by Washington for as long
as native Americans – the first Americans" and that "too often
Washington has paid lip service to working with tribes while taking
a one-size-fits-all approach" and promised "that will change when I
am president".
Obama is the first presidential candidate to have been given
honorary membership into a Native American tribe,
the Crow Nation. At a private adoption
ceremony, Obama was given the Crow name "One Who Helps People
Throughout the Land".
African Americans
Obama opposes offering reparations to the descendants of
slaves. "I have said in the past — and I'll
repeat again — that the best reparations we can provide are good
schools in the inner city and jobs for people who are unemployed,"
Obama said. An apology for slavery would be appropriate but not
particularly helpful in improving the lives of African Americans, he said. Reparations
could also be a distraction, Obama said. "I consistently believe
that when it comes to whether it's Native Americans or
African-American issues or reparations, the most important thing
for the U.S. government to do is not just offer words, but offer
deeds," Obama told a meeting in Chicago in July 2008.
LGBT issues
Obama supported legalizing same-sex
marriage when he first ran for the Illinois Senate in 1996, was
undecided about legalizing same-sex marriage when he ran for
re-election to the Illinois Senate in 1998, and supported civil unions but not same-sex marriage when he
ran for the U.S. Senate in 2004 and for U.S. President in 2008.
Obama voted against the Federal Marriage Amendment which
would have defined marriage as between one man and one woman, but
stated in a 2008 interview that he personally believes that
marriage is "between a man and a woman" and that he is "not in
favor of gay marriage." He supports
civil unions that would carry equal legal standing to that of
marriage for same-sex couples, but
believes that decisions about the title of marriage should be left
to the states.
Obama has called for the repeal of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA).
However,
Obama's Department of Justice
is defending the constitutionality of
DOMA.
Obama stated on March 15, 2007, that "I do not agree...that
homosexuality is immoral." During the
July 23, 2007 CNN/YouTube
debate, Obama further stated that "... we've got to make sure that
everybody is equal under the law. And the civil unions that I
proposed would be equivalent in terms of making sure that all the
rights that are conferred by the state are equal for same-sex
couples as well as for heterosexual
couples." Obama supports expanding the protections afforded by
hate crimes statutes to cover crimes
committed against individuals because of sexual orientation or gender identity. He has also stated his
opposition to the United States' military's "Don't ask, don't tell" policy, and has
affirmed his intention to repeal it during his Presidency.
Obama was
criticized for inviting Reverend Donnie
McClurkin, Mary Mary and Reverend
Hezekiah Walker — who all have a
history of making anti-gay remarks — to
participate in a three-day gospel music campaign tour called
"Embrace the Courage", as part of Obama's "40 Days of Faith and
Family" campaign in South Carolina
. The Obama campaign responded to criticism
in a press release, saying, "I strongly believe that African Americans and the LGBT community must stand together in the fight for
equal rights. And so I strongly disagree with Reverend McClurkin's
views and will continue to fight for these rights as president of
the United States to ensure that America is a country that spreads
tolerance instead of division." For events held Sunday, October 28,
2007, Obama added Reverend Andy Sidden, an openly gay pastor.
On May
15, 2008, in a statement in response to the ruling of the California
Supreme Court
in In re
Marriage Cases, Obama announced his opposition to Proposition 8, an initiative
measure proposed for the 2008 California General Election ballot
that, if passed, would amend the California Constitution to define
marriage as between only a man and a woman. In a letter read
to the Alice B.
Toklas LGBT
Democratic Club on June 29, 2008, Obama reiterated his
opposition to the proposed amendment, stating that he supports
extending "fully equal rights and benefits to same-sex couples
under both state and federal law."
Sex education
As an Illinois State Senator, Obama supported Senate bill 0099 for
“age and developmentally appropriate” sex
education, which would have allowed parents to choose to
withdraw their children from the classes. The bill was endorsed by
the Illinois Parent Teacher Association, the Illinois State Medical
Society, the Illinois Public Health Association, and the Illinois
Education Association. In a debate in 2004, when questioned by
Alan Keyes about what kind of sex
education was "age appropriate" for kindergarteners, Obama said, "I'll give you an
example, because I have a six-year-old daughter and a
three-year-old daughter, and one of the things my wife and I talked
to our daughter about is the possibility of somebody touching them
inappropriately, and what that might mean. And that was included
specifically in the law, so that kindergarteners are able to
exercise some possible protection against abuse...." In 2007, in
response to a similar attack from Mitt
Romney, an Obama spokesperson stated his position that
communities should determine the curriculum. The Illinois bill did
not call for addressing all sex-related issues in kindergarten
classes, and Obama has said that he "does not support teaching
explicit sex education to children in kindergarten."
HIV
Obama has encouraged Democrats to reach out to evangelicals and other religious groups. In
December 2006, he joined Sen. Sam Brownback
(R-KS
) at the
"Global Summit on AIDS and the Church"
organized by church leaders Kay and Rick
Warren. Together with Warren and Brownback, Obama took
an HIV test, as he had done in Kenya less than four months earlier.
He encouraged "others in public life to do the same" and not be
ashamed of it. Addressing over 8,000 United Church of Christ members in
June 2007, Obama challenged "so-called leaders of the Christian Right" for being "all too eager to
exploit what divides us."
Gun policy
As a state legislator in Illinois, Obama supported banning the sale
or transfer of all forms of semi-automatic firearms, increasing
state restrictions on the purchase and possession of firearms and
requiring manufacturers to provide child-safety locks with
firearms.
In 1996, during Obama's run for the Illinois State Senate, he was
surveyed by a Chicago nonprofit, Independent Voters of Illinois
about criminal justice and other issues. Obama's questionnaire
showed that he supported a ban on the manufacture, sale and
possession of handguns. Subsequently, Obama denied that his writing
was on the document and said that he never favored a ban on the
sale and possession of handguns. In 1999, he urged prohibiting the
operation of any gun store within five miles of a school or park,
which according to gun-rights advocates would eliminate gun stores
from most of the inhabited portion of the United States.
He sponsored a bill in 2000 limiting handgun purchases to one per month.
As state senator, he voted against a 2004 measure that allowed
self-defense as an affirmative defense for those charged with
violating local laws making it otherwise unlawful for such persons
to possess firearms. He also voted against allowing persons who had
obtained domestic violence protective orders to carry handguns for
their protection.
From 1994 through 2002, Obama was a board member of the Joyce Foundation, which amongst other
non-gun related activities provides funds for gun control
organizations in the United States.
While in the U.S. Senate, Obama has supported several gun control
measures, including restricting the purchase of firearms at
gun shows and the reauthorization of the
Federal Assault Weapons
Ban. Obama voted against legislation protecting firearm
manufacturers from certain liability suits, which
gun-rights advocates say are designed to bankrupt the firearms
industry. Obama did vote in favor of the 2006 Vitter Amendment to prohibit the
confiscation of lawful firearms during an emergency or major
disaster, which passed 84-16.
During a February 15, 2008 press conference, Obama stated, "I think
there is an individual right to bear arms, but it's subject to
commonsense regulation."
Obama has also stated his opposition to allowing citizens to carry concealed firearms and supports a national law outlawing the practice,
saying on Chicago Public Radio
in 2004 "I continue to support a ban on concealed carry
laws".
Obama initially voiced support of Washington, D.C.'s handgun ban.
Following the Supreme Court decision that the ban was
unconstitutional, he revised his position in support of the
decision overturning the law, saying, "Today's decision reinforces
that if we act responsibly, we can both protect the constitutional
right to bear arms and keep our communities and our children safe."
He also said, in response to the ruling, "I have always believed
that the Second Amendment protects the right of individuals to bear
arms... The Supreme Court has now endorsed that view."
After being elected as President, Obama announced that he favors
measures that respect Second
Amendment rights, while at the same time keeping guns away from
children and criminals. He further stated that he supports banning
private transfers of firearms at gun shows (referred to as "closing
the gun show
loophole"), "making guns in this country childproof", and
permanently reinstating the expired Assault Weapons Ban.
Death penalty
Obama has said that the death penalty
is used too frequently and inconsistently. However, he favors it
for cases in which "the community is justified in expressing the
full measure of its outrage." Speaking as a state senator about the
Illinois legislature's constant additions to the list of factors
that render a defendant eligible for the death penalty, Obama said,
"We certainly don't think that we should [...] have this laundry
list that does not make any distinctions between the
run-of-the-mill armed robbery that results in death and systematic
killings by a terrorist organization. And I think essentially what
the reduction of aggravating factors does is, it says, 'Here's a
narrower set of crimes that we think potentially at least could
deserve the death penalty.'" In his own words, "While the evidence
tells me that the death penalty does little to deter crime, I
believe there are some crimes — mass
murder, the rape and murder of a child — so heinous that the community is
justified in expressing the full measure of its outrage by meting
out the ultimate punishment. On the other hand, the way capital
cases were tried in Illinois at the time was so rife with error,
questionable police tactics, racial bias, and shoddy lawyering,
that 13 death row inmates had been
exonerated."
On June
25, 2008, Obama condemned United States Supreme Court
decision Kennedy v. Louisiana, which outlawed the
death penalty for a child rapist when the victim was not killed. He
said that states have the right to consider capital punishment, but
cited concern about the possibility of unfairness in some
sentences.
Civil liberties
Obama voted in favor of the 2006 version of the USA PATRIOT Act. He voted against the
Military Commissions
Act of 2006 and later voted to restore habeas corpus to those detained by the
U.S. (which had been stripped by the Military Commissions Act).
He has
advocated closing the Guantanamo Bay detention camp
, but has not supported two specific bills that
would have done so. Obama still opposes the use of torture
and used to oppose warrantless domestic wiretaps by the U.S. He voted against the
Flag Desecration
Amendment in 2006, arguing that flag burning didn't justify a
constitutional amendment, but said that he would support a law
banning flag burning on federal property. As of August 8, 2008, the
ACLU has given Obama a score of 80% on civil liberty issues for the
110th Congress U.S. Senate.
USA PATRIOT Act
As noted above, Obama voted to reauthorize the USA PATRIOT Act, which extended the Act, but
with some amendments. Such amendments would clarify the rights of
an individual who has received FISA orders to
challenge nondisclosure requirements and to refuse disclosure of
the name of their attorney.
He voted against extending the USA PATRIOT Act’s Wiretap Provision
on March 1, 2006. This bill would give the FBI
the
authority to conduct “roving wiretaps” and access to business
records. Voting against this bill would prolong the debate,
keeping the USA PATRIOT Act provisional whereas voting for this
bill would extend the USA PATRIOT Act as permanent.
Warrantless wiretaps
Obama had previously opposed legislation that granted legal immunity for telecommunications
companies that helped the Bush administration to conduct wiretaps without warrants but later voted in favor of a
compromise bill that included such provisions.
Religion
Obama has encouraged Democrats to reach out to evangelicals and other church-going people,
saying, "if we truly hope to speak to people where they’re at — to
communicate our hopes and values in a way that’s relevant to their
own — we cannot abandon the field of religious discourse." He
supports separation of
church and state and contends that: "I also think that we are
under obligation in public life to translate our religious values
into moral terms that all people can share, including those who are
not believers. And that is how our democracy’s functioning, will
continue to function. That’s what the founding fathers intended."
In July 2008, Obama said that if elected president he would expand
the delivery of social services through churches and other
religious organizations, vowing to achieve what he said President
Bush had fallen short on.His 2008 campaign web site contains his
Faith Statement.
Embryonic stem cell research
Obama supports embryonic
stem cell research and was a co-sponsor of the 2005 Stem Cell Research
Enhancement Act which was passed by both houses of Congress but
vetoed by President Bush. Obama condemned Bush's veto, saying,
"Democrats want this bill to pass. Conservative, pro-life
Republicans want this bill to pass. By large margins, the American
people want this bill to pass. It is only the White House
standing in the way of progress - standing in the
way of so many potential cures." He also voted in favor of
the 2007 bill lifting restrictions on embryonic stem cell research
that was passed but was also vetoed by President Bush.
On March 9, 2009, President Obama signed Executive Order 13505,
Allowing "responsible, scientifically worthy human stem cell
research, including human embryonic stem cell research, to the
extent permitted by law". This executive order also served to
revoke Executive Order 13435, signed on June 20, 2007 by President
Bush.
Marijuana decriminalization and medical marijuana
"I think
we need to rethink and decriminalize our marijuana laws," Mr. Obama
told an audience during a debate at Northwestern
University
in 2004. "But I'm not somebody who believes
in legalization of
marijuana." His campaign said, "Senator Obama does not believe
in legalization of marijuana, but agrees with President Bush that
long minimum sentences for first-time drug users may not be the
best way to occupy jail space or heal people from their
disease."
When asked if he would curtail Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) raids of medical marijuana growers he said "I would
because I think our federal agents have better things to do, like
catching criminals and preventing terrorism. The way I want to
approach the issue of medical marijuana is to base it on science,
and if there is sound science that supports the use of medical
marijuana and if it is controlled and prescribed in a way that
other medicine is prescribed, then it's something that I think we
should consider."
In May 2008, Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt told the
San Francisco
Chronicle that Obama would end DEA raids on medical
marijuana suppliers in states with their own laws. In March 2009,
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said the DEA would only raid medical
marijuana suppliers who violate both state and federal laws.
Parental responsibility
During a
February 28, 2008 speech in Beaumont, Texas
, Obama said, "It's not good enough for you to say
to your child, 'Do good in school,' and then when that child comes
home, you got the TV set on, you got the radio on, you don't check
their homework, there is not a book in the house, you've got the
video game playing... So turn off the TV set, put the video
game away. Buy a little desk or put that child by the kitchen
table. Watch them do their homework. If they don't know how to do
it, give them help. If you don't know how to do it, call the
teacher. Make them go to bed at a reasonable time. Keep them off
the streets. Give 'em some breakfast... I also know that if folks
letting our children drink eight sodas a day, which some parents
do, or, you know, eat a bag of potato chips for lunch, or Popeyes for breakfast [...] You can't do
that. Children have to have proper nutrition. That affects also how
they study, how they learn in school."According to the
White
House
website: "The President has also proposed an
historic investment in providing home visits to low-income,
first-time parents by trained professionals. The President
and First Lady are also committed to ensuring that children have
nutritious meals to eat at home and at school, so that they grow up
healthy and strong."
Criteria for selecting judges
On October 15, 2008, during the third and final presidential
debate, Obama said, "I will look for those judges who have an
outstanding judicial record, who have the intellect, and who
hopefully have a sense of what real-world folks are going through."
According to MSNBC, on July 17, 2007, Obama
said, "We need somebody who's got the heart, the empathy, to
recognize what it's like to be a young teenage mom. The empathy to
understand what it's like to be poor, or African-American, or gay,
or disabled, or old. And that's the criteria by which I'm going to
be selecting my judges." However, he stated at the final debate
that "the most important thing in any judge is their capacity to
provide fairness and justice to the American people."
District of Columbia voting rights
Residents
of the Washington,
D.C.
do not have voting representation in
Congress, as residents of states do,
under the United States
Constitution. Instead, Washington currently elects a
non-voting delegate to the United States House of
Representatives and has no representation in the United States Senate.
Obama supports "full representation in Congress" for residents of
the District of Columbia. As a Senator, Obama co-sponsored the
failed Voting Rights Act of 2007, which would have granted the
District of Columbia full voting representation in the House.
See also
References
External links
- Official sites
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- General
- Disability issues
- Environment
- Foreign affairs
- Health care
- Israel and the Middle East conflict