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Elections
Republican candidate advances fascistic agenda
Buchanan announces presidential campaign for 2000
By Jerry White
6 March 1999
Patrick Buchanan, the right-wing media commentator and long-time
Republican Party political operative, announced March 2 that he
will be a contender for the Republican presidential nomination
in the year 2000. Speaking in Manchester, New Hampshire, the former
aide in the Nixon, Ford and Reagan administrations called for
a "new patriotism in America" to clean up the country's
"polluted and poisoned culture" and "heal the soul
of America."
Buchanan attempts to present himself as a spokesman for working
and middle class people, while advocating a reactionary platform
of economic nationalism, anti-immigrant chauvinism, militarism
and religious and racial bigotry. The day before he formally announced
his candidacy, Buchanan spoke before steelworkers in Weirton,
West Virginia, where he sought to channel growing anger over layoffs
along chauvinist channels, calling for across-the-board quotas
on steel imports.
Buchanan has always placed animus towards immigrants at the
center of his politics. He has spoken openly of the necessity
to maintain America as a "Christian, European nation."
In his announcement speech he called for a halt to all immigration
to the United States, declaring that America is not "some
polyglot boarding house for the world."
Like many on the right, Buchanan seeks to exploit the controversy
over affirmative action programs to encourage bigotry against
blacks and other minorities. This is nothing new for Buchanan,
who won the majority in the Louisiana Caucus in his 1992 bid for
the Republican nomination by obtaining the support of former KKK
leader David Duke.
In announcing his campaign Buchanan hit on other issues--opposition
to abortion, religious virtue, a billion-dollar tax cut, smaller
government, etc.--that are dear to the extreme right in the Republican
Party.
Of particular significance was Buchanan's pledge to "reshape"
the Republican Party so as to make it "the natural home of
working men and women, and the middle class." Buchanan is
quite consciously seeking to transform the Republican Party into
an instrument for the development of a mass fascist movement in
America.
He seeks to tap into the legitimate anger and frustration of
broad layers of the population, both middle class people and workers,
and divert their social discontent in a reactionary direction.
Appealing to everything that is backward in America, Buchanan
aims to exploit the political confusion and disorientation engendered
by a political system monopolized by two big business parties
which are indifferent to the problems confronting working people.
In his Weirton speech, Buchanan made a thinly veiled appeal
to anti-Semitism, singling out Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin
for attack. Buchanan said Rubin and Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright had sold out American sovereignty by encouraging Russia,
Brazil, Japan and other countries to export low-cost steel to
the US, in order to repay international loans to Western bankers.
Supporters in the audience carried signs stating "Rubin and
Judas--Two of a Kind."
Such an appeal is nothing new for Buchanan. During his days
in the Reagan administration he defended Reagan's visit to an
SS cemetery in Bitburg, Germany, denouncing "Jewish pressure"
to call it off.
Buchanan chose to speak in Weirton, an economically depressed
steel town 35 miles south of Pittsburgh, to establish his credentials
as a supposed partisan of hard-pressed working people. Addressing
himself to those who have been "left behind" by the
current economic boom, he said the recent spate of layoffs was
the result of the Clinton administration's "globalist free-trade
policies" that are "killing our industries." Standing
alongside supporters carrying signs reading, "Free Traders
are Traitors," Buchanan proclaimed that he was a protectionist,
claiming this meant protecting the American worker.
In presenting himself as a champion of working people, Buchanan
counts on the political naivete and uninformed state of his audiences.
He also counts on the complicity of the press. His fascistic politics
are well known within media circles, but he is nevertheless presented
as a legitimate politician and his campaigns are given enormous
publicity.
The notion that this lifelong defender of big business is a
friend of the working class is absurd. Buchanan was born into
a family, headed by a well-to-do Washington accountant, that revered
Francisco Franco, the fascist general who butchered tens of thousands
of Spanish workers in the 1936-39 civil war and set up a police
state that ruled for more than 35 years. Among Buchanan's earliest
heroes was Joseph McCarthy, the Republican Senator who led the
anticommunist witch-hunt after the Second World War that purged
socialist and radical workers from the unions and trampled on
civil liberties and constitutional rights.
Buchanan boasts that he has served "two of the most important
presidents" in US history: Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan.
For eight years he served as Nixon's key aide and speech writer,
assisting in the Watergate cover-up of Nixon's illegal actions
and unconstitutional persecution of anti-Vietnam War protesters
and other political opponents. He supported the attacks on workers'
living standards, such as Nixon's wage controls of the early 1970s.
Buchanan then served as a speechwriter and communications director
under the union-busting Reagan administration.
Far from being a "man of the people," Buchanan has
amassed a multi-million-dollar personal fortune as a political
insider, syndicated columnist and co-host of various television
shows, including CNN's "Crossfire" program.
During his bid for the Republican nomination in 1992 and again
in 1996, Buchanan was backed by staunchly antiunion corporations,
particularly those whose profits were most threatened by global
competition. Among his biggest financial backers is Roger Milliken,
the head of Milliken & Co., a South Carolina-based textile
company with a history of shutting down mills where workers vote
to unionize. Another of his backers is W. Grover Coors, a trustee
of the right-wing Heritage Foundation think tank and a member
of the notoriously anti-union Coors brewing family.
In his speeches and columns Buchanan regularly denounces the
"global economy" and "the financiers of the New
World Order," while carefully avoiding any attack on capitalism.
He seeks to line up American workers in what he calls a "Darwinian
war" against the rivals of US multinational corporations
on the world market.
The logic of Buchanan's program of economic nationalism is
military confrontation with corporate America's competitors for
markets, resources and profits. Buchanan insists that the US armed
forces be unleashed to carry out unilateral military action without
being constrained by the United Nations or NATO. "When US
vital interests are threatened ... we ask no nation's permission
to respond," he declared in his New Hampshire speech.
Notwithstanding his supposed concerns for the jobs and conditions
of American workers, Buchanan is a defender of the profit system
who demands that workers accept the dictates of the capitalist
market. In a recent column in the New York Post he wrote:
"In a national economy, when there is a problem of overproduction,
the market solves it. Weak companies go under, and stronger companies
downsize or merge to cut excess capacity, until demand catches
up."
See Also:
Right-wing in US mounts
new political provocation
The Wall Street Journal and Juanita Broaddrick
[27 February 1999]
Impeachment trial ends, but
the conspiracy continues
[13 February 1999]
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