Who
can blame the American electorate if it can’t distinguish
between the two parties?
For
a long time, it has been said by some of the more
astute observers of the political scene that there
is not much difference between the Democrats and the
Republicans. It was third-party candidate, Ralph Nader,
who said there wasn’t “a dime’s worth of difference”
between the two, and that drove the liberals crazy.
Our “leaders” seem to be
afraid of coming out from under the protective wing
of Corporate America.
Even
though that observation did not garner Nader too many
votes, it did win him the enmity of many voters who
clung desperately to the Democratic Party and who
blamed him for losing two presidential elections (even
though Al Gore won the popular vote in 2000 and John
Kerry likely took the deciding Ohio vote in 2004).
Those outraged at Nader firmly believed that the Democrats
would drag the country back from the economic and
political chasm it seemed to be falling into. As for
the Republicans, in recent memory, their only reason
for existence seems to be bringing to a halt any possibility
that Congress will take any action to benefit the
people. Their plan seems to be working.
No
one who reads a newspaper or spends time on political
websites is unfamiliar with the brouhaha over President
Obama’s commercial on the GOP presidential nominee
Mitt Romney’s way of doing business through his founding
and directing of Bain Capital, a company that made
hundreds of millions of dollars buying companies,
stripping them down to their essentials, firing workers,
then selling the firm or, at least, bankrupting them.
Thousands of workers and their families were shunted
to the unemployment lines as a result of Bain Capital’s
species of capitalism.
One
can quarrel with most campaign ads, but this one seems
pretty straightforward and it stung the Romney campaign,
which cried foul and said that the former Massachusetts governor did nothing wrong and his spokespersons explained
carefully that Bain Capital’s way of doing business
is nothing short of The American Way. In that,
they can’t be faulted. It is the way Corporate America
does business.
If
there ever was a perfect example of the way America
does business, it is Bain Capital, for the firm is
in business to make a profit, not to make a product
or provide for the common welfare. And, Romney and
his cohort at Bain made no apologies about it: they
were in it to make money. According to Bain’s website,
it handles some $60 billion of other people’s money,
keeping some of it for themselves, of course. The
companies and workers falling by the wayside were
just so much collateral damage.
So,
there were the usual charges of unfairness from the
Romney and GOP operatives, since no laws were broken
and it is, after all, the way business is done
in America. That was all to be
expected and, in the meantime, the GOP and its tricksters
were dreaming up attack ads that will show Obama to
be a foreigner operating out of a suitcase in a room
next to the airport.
They stand firm in their effort
to fill the coffers of Corporate America, slashing
government, and letting working men and women fend
for themselves.
The
surprise came within the past week, or so, when Newark,
N.J., mayor, Cory Booker, who is scheduled to act
as a surrogate for Obama in campaign stops between
now and November, said that the president’s attack
ad against Bain was “nauseating” and, covering all
bases, said that such ads should be eliminated by
both sides. Booker, quickly continuing to cover tracks,
reassured Democrats and others that he was fully behind
the president’s reelection, gave Obama high praise,
and promised to campaign for him.
A
quick follow-up to Booker’s attack on the attack ad
was fired off by Bill Clinton, former president and
husband of Obama’s secretary of state. Clinton took issue with the ad’s main thrust and said that Romney had
had a “good business career” and that his work had
been “sterling,” in operating Bain, which brought
him some of his net worth, said to be about $250 million.
The former president made his comments on the Piers
Morgan Tonight television show, in which he predicted
that Obama would win reelection by at least five points.
He has not seemed inclined to make any apology or
further explanation of his comment. Booker did apologize…sort
of.
It
could not have been a coincidence that two very high
profile Democrats (who are expected to be heavily
involved in Obama’s campaign) would so openly and
vehemently criticize Obama’s reelection plan. Clinton
even went out of his way on the same show to praise
Romney, saying that his operation of Bain Capital
was “good work.” They would not so openly criticize
the president’s campaign, would they?
Rarely
do we get to see the agony of the 1 percent displayed
so clearly. Both Clinton, who has become very rich
since he left the White House, and Booker, who can
be expected to do very well in politics and, through
that, become very wealthy, have been the beneficiaries
of association with the folks who own the political
and economic system. They want their guy, Obama, to
win in November, but they are loathe to turn their
backs on those who have been very, very good to them,
so their conflict is out there for all to see. Booker,
it has been reported, received heavy campaign contributions
from the likes of Bain Capital, and Clinton has been
rubbing shoulders with the Bush family (which contains
two living ex-presidents), as well as people like
Bill Gates and world movers and shakers in politics
and world trade.
Once
they have run in what they consider to be “elite circles,”
it’s hard for politicians to endanger that heady position
in any way. They are left with a delicate kind of
fence sitting and it’s not a pretty sight. And, it
makes them less effective as politicians. That could
explain recent polls, which show that American voters
who consider themselves independents outnumber those
who register in a political party.
Rarely do we get to see the
agony of the 1 percent displayed so clearly.
President
Obama finally has been taking his campaign on the
offense, to a small degree, claiming that the GOP
in both the House and Senate are obstructing development
of programs that will jump-start the economy and create
jobs. He still appears, though, to be hesitant to
mount a full-scale assault on the refusal of the GOP
leadership to participate in governing the country.
He wants their participation or approval, or both.
He
wants a small increase in the top marginal tax rate,
from 35 percent, to 39.6 percent and the Republicans,
stonewalling to the end, refuse to consider. They
prefer to continue to cut social programs and cut
taxes on corporations and the rich, while whittling
government down to providing nothing more than defense
and some infrastructure maintenance.
GOP
resistance to the small tax increase he is suggesting
ignores history: Under (Junior) Bush, it was 35 percent;
under Ronald Reagan, it was 50 percent; under Richard
Nixon, it was 70 percent, and under Dwight D. Eisenhower,
it was 91 percent. They stand firm in their effort
to fill the coffers of Corporate America, slashing
government, and letting working men and women fend
for themselves. And, they
blame Obama.
Most
Americans never wanted it to come to this pass, in
which the people are divided against one another,
groups are against one another, divided by class,
region, race, religion, and myriad other factors.
Politics was the (usually) bloodless way of settling
differences and living in peace with one another,
but that avenue seems to have been cut off as a solution.
In the end, we are, indeed, divided among the wealthy
and the rest of us. It’s the 99 percent versus the
1 percent. You can fiddle with the numbers, but, in
the end, it is the overwhelming majority of the people
ruled by a very small elite.
The companies and workers
falling by the wayside were just so much collateral
damage.
Over
the past generation or two, the two major political
parties in our two-party system have inexorably moved
toward the same policies, domestic and foreign, and
the globalized economy, supported by continuous wars,
is the way we do the business of America. Unfortunately,
one thing has not changed: When the politicians of
both parties decide that the nation will go to war,
it is the sons and daughters of the working class
and the middle class and the poor who do the sacrificing
and dying.
And,
when they get home, if they are not too injured or
psychologically damaged to work, they find that there
are no jobs and little prospect of job creation, because
the politicians of the “two-party” system have their
well-paying jobs, nepotism takes care of their families,
and the rest can fend for themselves.
Criticism
of Obama by members of his own inner circle is merely
a symptom of the political problems of the nation.
Neither party seems to be willing to solidly stand
and say that government is for the people, freedom
is for the people, and the people’s welfare comes
first. Our “leaders” seem to be afraid of coming out
from under the protective wing of Corporate America
and its rulers. Until that changes, we’re in for a
rough ride.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
John
Funiciello, is a
labor organizer and former union organizer. His union
work started when he became a local president of The
Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s. He was a reporter
for 14 years for newspapers in
New York
State. In
addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous
pressure from factory food producers and land developers.
Click here
to contact
Mr. Funiciello.
|