Sorry Mr. President, I’m in But My Money Isn’t

Fearing that the Republicans would stop looking for excuses to attack him, and desperately in need of the attention, the President jumped into the 2012 campaign on Monday. With a paltry 19 months to go until the election, Barack Obama released a short video on his website announcing that he and Vice President Biden will seek reelection against ”Koch Brother’s Puppet Candidate TBA.”

In addition to announcing his re-election bid to the world, the Obama campaign machine has already swung into full fundraising mode.  Appropriating a version of an old Democratic strategy, it seems like Obama and Co. are asking donors to “give early and give often.”

Given that some estimate that the campaign will need close to $1B (yes, that’s a ‘B’, as in ‘billion’), it is a sensible move.  If I want to pay cash for a medium ticket item next year, I’m smarter to put $20 a week away starting now.  There’s not exactly a credit card for big media buys that I’m aware of.

So, it was little surprise to me when the package asking for money for the campaign landed in our mailbox this week.  After all, Organizing for America (the outfit that the 2008 Obama campaign morphed into) scarcely goes a week without emailing me, hat in hand, for cause ‘x’.

What may surprise Obama/Biden 2012 is this:  My wallet is closed to them for the foreseeable future.

Maybe Albert can slip you a few clams for this round

Why?  Simply put, he campaigned as a progressive Santa Claus, and gave me a Blue Dog for Christmas the last two years.  Sadly, I’m just not excited about a watered down health care bill or milquetoast finance reform, which were two big issues for me in 2008.   Add in zero movement on gay marriage and the disinterest in paring back a bloated military, and I question what side the guy is even on sometimes.  The Great Tax Cut Capitulation of 2010 made me want to strip the “Yes We Can” sticker off the bumper of my neighbor’s Prius.

Before someone throws the “What the f*ck has Obama done so far” website in the comments: I get it, he’s gotten further on some important issues than Clinton ever did.   He also folds like a Walmart tent the face of even token GOP opposition.  That’s not the guy I thought I was voting for, or donating to, in 2008.

He’ll undoubtedly get my vote, and that of my spouse.  We live in a battle ground state that went all crazy red in 2010, and I’m not dumb enough to risk throwing double-digit electoral votes to Mittchelle Huckawlenty (the GOP-zombie creation who appeals to creepy Evangelicals and big-business) in service of my progressive pouting.

Rather, I’m voicing my displeasure in the same way I do when my favorite sports teams make a series of moves I dislike.  Taking money out of their pockets, or rather, refusing to ever put it in there in the first place.  It is the only other way I know of to get a politicians’ attention.  Watch the way the 2012 campaigns (or any recent campaigns, for that matter) court the big money, and you’ll get evidence of this in abundance.

Do I expect that the loss of whatever relatively paltry sum my family would donate will have much effect on the Obama campaign?  Am I suddenly going to get an audience with the big guy to air my grievances?  No, of course not.

Yet, between a still-sagging economy and a general malaise among progressives, I sincerely doubt that we’re the only small money donors from 2008 whose checkbook stays on the sidelines in 2012.

Besides, if there’s a GOP victory in 2012, I’ll need to save every cent I can to pay for my privatized Medicare.

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