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Robert Borosage

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Robert L. Borosage is the president of the Institute for America's Future and co-director of its sister organization, the Campaign for America's Future. The organizations were launched by 100 prominent Americans to challenge the rightward drift in U.S. politics, and to develop the policies, message and issue campaigns to help forge an enduring majority for progressive change in America. Most recently, Borosage spearheaded the Campaign's 2006 issues book, StraightTalk 2006, providing activists and candidates with distilled messages on kitchen table concerns, from jobs to affordable health care. Borosage also helped to found and chairs the Progressive Majority Political Action Committee, developing a national base of small donors and skilled activists. Progressive Majority recruits, staffs, and funds progressive candidates for political office.

Mr. Borosage writes widely on political, economic and national security issues for a range of publications including The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and the Philadelphia Inquirer. He is a Contributing Editor at The Nation magazine, and a regular contributor to The American Prospect magazine. He is a frequent commentator on television and radio, including Fox Morning News, RadioNation, National Public Radio, C-SPAN and Pacifica Radio. He teaches on presidential power and national security as an adjunct professor at American University's Washington School of Law.

A graduate of Yale Law School, with a graduate degree in International Affairs from George Washington University, Borosage left the practice of law to found the Center for National Security Studies in 1974. The Center focused on the tension between civil rights and the national security powers and prerogatives of the executive branch. It played a leading role in the efforts to investigate the intelligence agencies in the 1970s, curb their abuses, and hold them accountable in the future. At the Center, he helped to write and edit two books, The CIA File and The Lawless State.

In 1979, Borosage became Director of the Institute for Policy Studies, a research institute that drew its inspiration and fellowship from the major democratic movements of our time -- anti-war, women's, environmental and civil rights movements. Borosage helped to found and guide Countdown 88, which succeeded in winning the congressional ban on covert action against Nicaragua. Under Borosage's direction, the Institute expanded its fellowship, launched a successful publications program, and developed a new Washington School for congressional aides and public interest advocates.

In 1988, Borosage left the Institute to serve as senior issues advisor to the presidential campaign of the Reverend Jesse Jackson. He traveled the country with Jackson, writing speeches, framing policy responses, and providing debate preparation and assistance. He went on to advise a range of progressive political campaigns, including those of Senator Carol Moseley-Braun, Barbara Boxer and Paul Wellstone. "

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(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Making Change: Progressives in the Obama Moment Are progressives still supporting Obama or are they pushing him? Surely the answer to that choice is "yes." Progressives are both supporting him and challenging the limits of the current debate.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Betting on Failure: The Right's Story Cheney and Gingrich are worth paying attention to - not as presidential contenders but as very sophisticated conservative political combatants. Both are brass knuckled politicians, steeped in the Lee Atwater school of anything goes wedge politics. And both are laying down clear markers for the debate to come
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, May 20, 2009
The Health Care Lobby: Watch What They Do The HCAN report shows that after 400 mergers involving health insurers over the last 13 years, concentration has gone up in local markets across the country. The single largest provider of small group coverage (for small businesses, for example) controlled a median market share of 47 percent in 2008.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, May 13, 2009
What's Good for General Motors Is... Never Mind Is the Obama administration saving General Motors or is it saving auto industry jobs in the U.S.? The two aren't necessarily the same. The administration and Congress need to be clear about the real objective.
SHARE More Sharing        Saturday, May 9, 2009
Wrong Way Steny Wrong Way Riegels became a football legend when Roy Riegels, captain of the California football team in the 1929 Rose Bowl picked up a fumble and rumbled the wrong way down the field. He was prevented from scoring a touchdown for the opposing team only when one of his own players tackled him. Now we have the political equivalent: Wrong Way Steny Hoyer could become a political legend for going the wrong way on Social Security
(4 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Friday, May 1, 2009
Obama's Grade at 100? What About Our Grade? Rather than just grading the president, I suggest we might profitably assess our own 100 days. Obama has stormed the national and world stages in his first weeks. But how have we done--particularly the progressives who have such a large stake in the success of this president--in relation to Obama? He has demonstrated remarkable mastery of the powers of the presidency to lead the country. Have we mastered the power of citizens?
SHARE More Sharing        Friday, April 24, 2009
Arm the COP on the Bank Beat Cynicism is easy. The Wall Street "financial services" sector has been by far the largest contributor in every U.S. election cycle for the last 20 years, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Individual and political action committee donations from Wall Street in 2007 and 2008 totaled $463.5 million, compared with $163.8 million from the health-care industry and $75.6 million from energy companies.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Friday, April 17, 2009
Taxing Matters Fox News is flogging Astroturf "tea parties" underwritten by corporate lobbyists. The Wall Street Journal editorializes about the evils of the estate tax. Ari Fleischer, Daddy Bush's old flack, complains that "redistribution of income" through the tax code "is getting out of hand." Really? Here's the grim reality.
SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, April 9, 2009
Chris Dodd: Scourge or Casualty of Wall Street? Democratic Senator Chris Dodd is in deep trouble. According to Stuart Rothenberg [1], Dodd is the most vulnerable Senator up for re-election in 2010. Dodd's reputation has been sullied in the financial collapse. Chair of the Senate Banking Committee, he received special treatment from lender Countrywide Financial. As Chair, Dodd also was thrown under the bus by Treasury officials in the AIG bonus brouhaha.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, March 19, 2009
Time To Dog The Dogs [Editor's note: Mr Borosage is also promoting an action page for those who wish to protest] The most treacherous opponents of the reforms vital to get us out of the deep hole we are in come from within the Democratic Party itself""so-called "Blue Dog" conservatives in the House and their cousins in the Senate who are working to block the changes that we need.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Will Everyone Grab a Bucket? This Thing is Sinking We need every major economy--particularly those like Germany, Japan and China in the best position to do so""to help boost the global economy with bold national, deficit-financed, recovery plans. We can't do this alone. Our own stimulus""about 2 percent of GDP in 2009""is too small even to lift this economy. Everyone has to grab a bucket and start bailing.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Here's How Progressives Can Ensure Obama's Success. Not since Lyndon Johnson's Great Society and Ronald Reagan's conservative rollback has a president proposed anything this ambitious. If passed, it will mark a new era of progressive governance. And yet, in sad testament to how deeply we have fallen, its greatest weakness is that it is not bold enough.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Obama's Next Gauntlet: Reviving the Middle Class The old economy is finishes. Middle and working class America is on the brink. Time to rally behind Obama and build a new economy.
SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Progressive Government: The New Center The man can give a speech. Confident, relaxed, bold, serious, President Obama made his case to the American people with boffo reviews from all who saw it no matter what their party allegiance.
SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, February 18, 2009
The Real Grand Bargain Will President Obama defend Social Security from the folks who want to plunder it? That's the question Bill Grieder poses in a critically important article in the Nation Magazine.
SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Can't Get there From Here Obama has made perhaps his first big mistake. It's time to bring the rest of the country up to speed.
SHARE More Sharing        Monday, January 26, 2009
The Country Needs Your Help Conservatives are doing everything they can to delay and dilute the legislation. Yet quick, bold action on the economy is critical. Without positive pressure from the progressive majority, Congress will be vulnerable to right-wing obstructionist tactics, rendering the bill ineffective. Our voices are needed, now.Call Congress NOW at 1-866-544-7573, and demand immediate passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, September 30, 2008
After the Revolt Against Wall Street The fix was in. The leadership of both parties in Congress, both major presidential candidates, media poobahs, financial statesmen from Warren Buffett to Bob Rubin, all weighing in to support giving the Treasury Secretary a $700 billion revolving fund to bail out Wall Street.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Country First? Never Mind When McCain is willing to sign away the principle derived from what is the defining moment of his life, then the question is: what core of character remains?
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, June 28, 2007
Matthews and Coulter: No Shame The disservice to the country is done by those who give Ann Coulter a public stage to parade her infamies. Need a ratings boost? Focus on Paris Hilton

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