Obama, the Most Progressive President Since LBJ, Gets Whacked by His Own Left Wing

Sometimes it’s easy to miss the forest for the trees, or in this case the schadenfreude. The disagreement between progressive Democrats and the White House flamed into open political war this week, as Barack Obama’s usual allies resorted to a filibuster to block one of the President’s key goals on free trade.

Republicans, including Orrin Hatch took to the Senate floor to blast Democrats for abandoning agreements to move the bill giving Obama plenary trade power to the floor. But the real fight is the civil war among Democrats and their establishment and progressive wings.

Related: The Abe-Obama Trans-Pacific Trade Deal Is in Trouble

This internecine fight may have caught many Americans by surprise. Until very recently, the media has focused more on the narrow divisions between Republican presidential hopefuls. The fight over free trade, an issue which traditionally splits Democrats while uniting Republicans, has percolated for months – or perhaps decades, ever since Bill Clinton signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as part of his attempt to push the Democratic Party to the center on economic issues. Ever since, progressives within the Democratic Party have bitterly complained about the loss of jobs and wage supports that they claim resulted from NAFTA.

The fight broke out into the open over Obama’s attempts to sign a free trade agreement with the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). He wanted the Senate to agree to give the bill an up-or-down vote rather than attempt to amend the agreement ex post facto. That proposal, called “fast track” or trade promotion authority (TPA), mirrored earlier authority granted presidents on other trade negotiations. In response to concerns from progressives, Obama pledged to include protections for workers and the environment, but refused to make the deal public before the vote, worrying that it would kill the deal.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has led the progressive charge against the trade deal, demanding that Obama make the terms public in exchange for Democratic votes in support of TPA. The squabble broke out into the open when Obama went on MSNBC’s Hardball with Chris Matthews on April 21st to bluntly tell Warren that she didn’t know what she was talking about. “I love Elizabeth. We’re allies on a whole host of issues. But she’s wrong on this,” Obama told Matthews. “When you hear folks make a lot of suggestions about how bad this trade deal is, when you dig into the facts they are wrong.”

Related: Obama’s Deals with Cuba, Iran, TPP Split Congress

Warren blasted back immediately, in essence arguing that the American public can’t trust Obama to be honest about the agreement. “People like you can’t see the actual deal,” Warren wrote on her website, implying that multinational corporations had driven the agreement without any oversight. “If … there’s a provision hidden in the fine print that could help multinational corporations ship American jobs overseas or allow for watering down of environmental or labor rules, fast track would mean that Congress couldn’t write an amendment to fix it. It’s all or nothing.”