Let’s be clear about
the choices available to American voters in November. History – most
notably the historical weakness of the U.S. Left – has dealt the
cards. Yet a fraction of those who claim to be progressives – misreading
history and oblivious to the evidence of their senses – pretend that
there is no overarching reason to do everything humanly possible
to defeat George Bush in 2004. They claim there is “no difference” between
the contenders: it’s Tweedledum Bush or Tweedledee Kerry, and “nothing
will change” whether one wins or the other.
Corporate media labor mightily
to obscure the Bush Pirates’ historic departure from past methods
of Rich Men’s Rule. It is their job to make what is singularly horrific,
palatable to the public, as if nothing radically different has been
happening in the nation and the world these past three years. Republicans
also profit from the voices of those who willfully fail to recognize
the uniquely rabid nature of the Bush regime. By proclaiming that
there is no difference between the ineffectual, dishonest John Kerry
and the Republicans, they are in practice preaching the futility
of resistance
to Bush.
The Bush men and Kerry’s
crew are profoundly different.
The Bush-Cheney regime is
a criminal enterprise following a blueprint for world conquest and
bent on liquidating what remains of the public sector and the domestic
social contract in the United States. Its core electoral support
is derived from the most racist and fascist-minded elements of society.
The Democratic Leadership
Council, which now writes John Kerry’s scripts, is the corporate-financed
faction of the Democratic Party, conceived as a mechanism to diminish
Black and labor influence and to slow the defection of southern whites
to the GOP. The DLC blunts the party’s ability to act as a counterweight
to corporate power, domestically, and cultivates a mass base for “American” business
objectives abroad. Through its role as dispenser of corporate (and
corporate media) favor, the DLC wields decisive
influence far
beyond its membership.
After three years of Republican
rule, it is madness to say that John Kerry’s DLC rump of the Democratic
Party is even remotely equivalent to the rampaging Bush regime. The
Bush men have a plan to “change
the world”; the DLC have none.
The Bush men are driven by a triumphalist ideology; the DLC have
their hands out. The DLC attempts to obstruct and co-opt progressive
ideas and movements within the Democratic Party; the Bush men are
determined to snuff out all who oppose the absolute rule of capital
on the Planet Earth, the U.S. included.
The Bush administration
is a unique danger to human survival. There can be no more compelling
call to action than that. They have also shown themselves to be fully
prepared, if not eager, to abort the process that has passed for
electoral democracy in the United States – thereby definitively mooting
the Tweedledum versus Tweedledee conversation.
The more vocal elements
of the “no difference” crowd objectively aid the Republicans. They
assist the GOP’s voter suppression strategy, channeling white
voters to Ralph Nader, a man with no party, and encouraging African
Americans not to vote at all. (This is the real aim of GOP media
campaigns targeting Blacks, which focus on white Democrats’ failures
and “betrayals” rather than Republican policies.)
Just as destructively, the
false analysis (or non-analysis) that equates the DLC with the Bush
cabal – as if they are the same people, operating on the same imperatives – discourages
discussion of what Blacks and progressives face if Kerry succeeds
in capturing the White House. Our job is both to defeat Bush and
to prevent Kerry from taking us where he wants to go – back to the
Clinton era. There must be an opposition in place in January of next
year, and no honeymoon. We must anticipate the political lay of the
land under a Kerry administration, and quickly move towards a strategy
for dismantling as much as possible of both the George Bush and Bill
Clinton legacies.
That’s a mountain of work – too
much for the “no difference” crowd to contemplate.
Clinton’s limits
Although President Jimmy
Carter’s betrayals of Blacks and the cities opened the door to Ronald
Reagan, and Bill Clinton’s corporate feast laid much of the groundwork
for George Bush, Carter was not Reagan and Clinton was not Bush.
Under both Carter and Clinton, African Americans and their allies
allowed themselves to be first seduced, then neutered. Therefore,
when we anticipate a Kerry administration, we must remember the Clinton
years. Here’s how we described Clinton’s terms in our September
25, 2003 issue:
Bill
Clinton humiliated, abused, bamboozled and, finally, eviscerated
the base of the Democratic Party in the Nineties. His biggest
victories were NAFTA and welfare reform, both achieved with overwhelming
Republican support. Clinton’s tenure marked the triumph of the
Democratic Leadership Council, the southern-born, white male-pandering,
union-bashing, corporate wing of the Party. Republicans did a great
service to Clinton and his Vice President, Al Gore, by labeling
them “liberals” – perversely confirming that the DLC had succeeded
in moving the national Democratic Party rightward. Clinton unleashed
the dogs of Wall Street to inflate the speculative bubble that
obligingly waited for him to leave office before bursting – a legacy
of corporate mayhem, a marauding World Trade Organization, massive
de-industrialization, merger madness, and obscene growth in CEO
compensation that George Bush eagerly builds upon.
Yet
we can be reasonably sure that Bill Clinton would not have invaded
Iraq because, unlike George Bush, he had no plans to do so. The
Bush Pirates had been plotting to begin their global conquest with
the takeover of Iraq since before Bush Sr.’s defeat. There is a
difference.
The
Clinton administration was content to shackle Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s
government in Haiti, but would not have toppled it in favor of
a menagerie of criminals. That would have reflected badly on Clinton’s
previous decision to bring Aristide out of exile in 1994. The Bush
crew included the same people who overthrew Aristide in 1991. They
simply reinstated their plan, which fit nicely with global conquest.
There is a difference.
We
can also assume that Clinton would not have transformed a huge
federal surplus into an astronomical deficit. This is a safe bet,
not only because Clinton amassed the surplus, but because the far-right
wing of the Republican Party has for decades maintained that the
only way to permanently prevent the growth of the people-serving
public sector was to cripple the government’s ability to pay for
it. The resulting tax bonanza for the rich was gravy. They had
a long-standing plan. There is a difference.
Clinton
weakened the political underpinnings of affirmative action with
his equivocating “mend, not end” it position. However, it is inconceivable
that he would have opposed the University of Michigan Law School
program before the U.S. Supreme Court, because that would have
shattered his base. Bush took the action because his base is “derived
from the most racist and fascist-minded elements of society.” There
is a difference.
Rightward, Ho!
Until he was assassinated by
the corporate media, Howard Dean seemed poised to destroy the
DLC’s corporate stranglehold on the national Democratic Party.
Progressives (including )
focused their attentions on Connecticut Senator Joseph
Lieberman, the DLC’s most ideologically outspoken candidate.
Kerry and North Carolina Senator John Edwards kept the DLC at
a distance – in
Edward’s case, almost in the closet. Now Kerry is flaming, as
the Boston
Globe reported, April 17:
''Fear
not, I am not somebody who wants to go back and make the mistakes
of the Democratic party of 20, 25 years ago," Kerry declared
on Thursday, adding that he is not a ''redistributive Democrat," even
though his $30 billion National Service plan had been regularly
invoked in the Democratic primaries to trump a similar but
less-generous tuition plan offered by Senator John Edwards
of North Carolina.
Kerry's
decision to place deficit reduction at the heart of his campaign
seems to settle the debate over whether the Democratic Party
would ''change" for this election, reaffirming its progressive
roots and moving away from Clinton's centrism. During the primaries,
former Vermont Governor Howard Dean attacked the Democratic
Leadership Council as ''GOP lite."
Yesterday,
DLC president Bruce Reed declared, ''I think that Kerry has always
been a reform Democrat and he's running a solid New Democrat campaign.
The country's in desperate need for a return to fiscal discipline."
As Freedom
Rider columnist Margaret Kimberley wrote on April
15, Kerry “declared in
a speech on economic policy that he would eliminate portions of
his own domestic agenda in order to have a balanced budget.” Thus,
seven months before the election, Kerry falls into the GOP’s well-laid
budget deficit trap. But he did not methodically set the trap;
it was not part of any master plan, because he has none. A President
Kerry might be pressured to change course, if progressives organize
effectively. A second Bush term would advance the Hard Right agenda
still further – if the world survives it. There is a difference.
A Kerry presidency poses
particular challenges to the integrity and cohesion of Black politics.
At a hastily arranged talk to Howard University students Kerry
dismissed reparations for slavery (“I personally do not believe
that America is going to advance if we go backwards and look to
reparations in the way that some people are defining them…")
and shamelessly abandoned his initial opposition to the coup against
the democratically elected President of Haiti. "I
think Aristide went astray. He was no picnic, but what we should
have done was held him accountable. ... I will fight for democracy,
but not a particular leader," Kerry said, unaware of the glaring
contradiction.
Kerry apparently believes
he is insulated from Black Democratic wrath by his best “friends” in
the Congressional Black Caucus: Gregory Meeks (NY), James Clyburn
(SC) and Harold Ford Jr. (TN). Kerry dropped their names in an
April 7 session with members of the Black
press. All three
are members of the DLC, as is Black Los Angeles Congresswoman Juanita
Millender-McDonald, who also endorsed Kerry during the campaign.
(The only other Caucus member to support Kerry was Georgia Rep.
John Lewis.)
Under a Kerry presidency,
this faction would become the Black “go-to” guys on Capitol Hill – a
daunting challenge to the future solidarity and effectiveness of
the Caucus as a progressive force and, ironically, a boon to corporate
influence in Black electoral politics that could not be duplicated
under Republican George Bush. However, a Bush second term would
allow the Pirates to complete their transformation of the federal
government into the paymaster of a new class of bribed Black preachers,
through subsidized Faith-Based
Initiatives – just one item
among the myriad Republican assaults against the Black body politic.
There is a difference.
The biggest threat from
the DLC at present is that its hold on Kerry may cause a second
term to be delivered to George Bush, without the necessity of theft.
Readers may be surprised
to learn that we are not overly concerned about Kerry’s vague
promise to send even more troops to Iraq. Kerry is no more capable
than
Bush of sustaining the doomed U.S.
occupation. The Iraqi people will shape their own future, independent
of the American electorate,
who have no right to a say in the matter. However, Americans do
have it in their power to disconnect the Pirates from the reins
of power in Washington. That would make a world of difference.
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