So, what do
we make of the controversy surrounding the actions taken at
the office of
Congressman Conyers when protesters demonstrated against his
alleged failure to move impeachment proceedings against President
Bush? Did it make sense strategically? Was Conyers the right
target? Where did race come into this, if anywhere?
The actions
taken by Cindy Sheehan and the Rev. Lennox Yearwood aimed to
bring attention
to the matter of accountability. In that sense, they were
morally correct. They protested the failure of the Democratic
leadership to hold this lawless administration accountable,
with the threat of impeachment being the preferred method of
addressing accountability. There is little question but that
most of the world views the Bush administration as composed
of criminals, and it is equally clear that as a result, both
the US government and the people of the USA are viewed with
a jaundiced eye by much of the globe, because the people of
the USA permitted the re-election of the Bush group.
That being said,
does impeachment make sense strategically? This is where I have differences
with my friend, the Rev. Yearwood and others. Yes, emotionally,
I would love to see the Bush/Cheney team ousted through impeachment
proceedings, but I continue to feel that more immediately,
we must focus our attention on strengthening the movement against
the Iraq war/occupation, as well as building mass and activist
sentiment in favor of major structural reforms, such as single-payer
healthcare. To that extent I think the impeachment movement
is a well-intentioned diversion.
Let us be clear
that the votes are not there to remove the Bush/’Cheney team from office. While
there is a strong argument that impeachment hearings would
help to bring the criminality of the current administration
to light, that would not necessarily - or likely - result in
its removal from office. As much as the public may say, and
mean, that they wish the Bush/Cheney team out, they would still
probably look at impeachment as a useless exercise.
Second point: we need to
concentrate on ending the war/occupation of Iraq. This means
that there must be escalating pressure on the Administration,
particularly in the face of threats of repression, as represented
by the peculiar and ominous executive order, signed in July,
that claims to be designed to take actions against those who
obstruct the ability of the Iraqi provisional/puppet government
from operating. This executive order must be studied. In
that light, the momentum building toward the September
21st Iraqi Moratorium is critical and must be supported. The
question for the pro-impeachment forces is whether the impeachment
movement helps or hinders our concrete efforts to end the war.
Separate and
apart from this is the question of Congressman Conyers. Some pro-impeachment
forces (not including Rev. Yearwood) have engaged in vitriolic
assaults on the Congressman because of his reluctance to move
the impeachment issue. The first question that must be asked
is whether Congressman Conyers should be generally considered
an ally. The answer, in my humble opinion, is of course
he is an ally. Whether it is on the question of reparations
or national healthcare, Congressman Conyers stands where few
politicians have the courage to crawl. Does this mean that
he should have unconditional support? No, but it does mean
that he should be treated as an ally rather than as an enemy.
It is this question
of handling differences with allies that has become a flashpoint
in the
impeachment controversy. I am not convinced that a sit-in
in the offices of the Congressman made sense even from the
standpoint of the pro-impeachment forces. The reality is that
other congressional representatives actually need to be won
to this strategic direction.
More importantly,
is Congressman Conyers’ refusal to move forward on impeachment some sort of
betrayal? It is here that we must stop for a minute and consider
this word “betrayal” very carefully. One can disagree with
an ally, but betrayal and personal attacks convey something
very different. They suggest that someone has gone over to
the ‘dark side of the force,’ rather than that a serious disagreement
has emerged among otherwise allies. As someone who has differed
with some long-time allies on the question of Zimbabwe, for
instance, I would suggest that it is important to step back
from ad hominem attacks when there is much larger agreement. Sometimes
such attacks can result in divisions that can NEVER be healed.
Additionally, many white liberals
and progressives do not have a sufficient sense of how attacks
on Black elected leaders are taken when those attacks come
from outside of Black America (a point that Rev. Yearwood clearly
addresses in his recent commentary published in the Black
Commentator, August 9, 2007). Black America often goes
overboard in supporting leaders who should never be supported
in part because of our continuous experience that we, as a
people, are under siege and our leaders are regularly under
attack. Thus, attacks on individuals such as Congressman Conyers,
who have a proven track record of generally being on the correct
side of struggle raises the hair on the back of our necks and
is, at best, counterproductive.
For these and
other reasons, I believe that a strategic and tactical error
was committed
in the recent actions against Congressman Conyers. First,
the impeachment issue, as morally justified as it is, does
not make strategic sense at this moment. Second, IF one is
going to engage in the impeachment struggle, then one must
be careful to distinguish friends from enemies and in this
sense, the attacks on Congressman Conyers sent out the wrong
signals.
I am re-reading a great book
about an outstanding Shawnee leader from the early 19th century
named Tecumseh. Central to Tecumseh’s mission in life was
the unification of the various Indian nations against the encroachment
by the USA. At each moment, however, internal squabbles among
the tribes got in the way of a common front, and anger, that
in many cases spanned generations, came between strategic unity
against a common threat and the increasingly evident possibility
of extinction.
We must be careful. We
may not get a second chance to reverse the course of this country,
and that means being very careful in distinguishing strategic
allies; allies of the moment; and enemies.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board
member, Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a labor and international writer
and activist, and the immediate past president of TransAfrica
Forum. Click
here to contact Mr. Fletcher.