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Elections
Clinton's speech to the Democratic convention: toasting success
on the eve of the deluge
By Barry Grey
17 August 2000
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In his speech Monday night to the Democratic National Convention
in Los Angeles, Bill Clinton displayed his most distinctive political
assethis talent for sounding left while advancing
right-wing policies. As reflected in the enthusiastic response
from the delegates on the convention floor, he was very much in
his element.
The central theme was summed up in his opening assertion that
eight years of Democratic rule had brought new heights of
prosperity, peace and progress. In this celebration of the
status quo there was an interplay of deception and self-deception,
illusion and self-delusion, in which speaker and audience participated
with equal relish.
Clinton's rosy portrayal of American life may not have coincided
with the social reality facing broad masses of working people,
but it echoed the sentiments of layers that have profited greatly
from the speculative boom of the past seven yearsabove all,
the financial aristocracy and well-off segments of the middle
class. Precisely these layers have become the core constituency
of the Democratic Party, while its rightward trajectory has alienated
masses of working people.
Clinton addressed an audience at the Staples Center far wealthier
than the general population, in a building plastered with the
logos of corporate sponsors who have doled out millions to insure
that their interests are looked after by the next administration.
An economic profile of the delegates revealed that 57 percent
had family incomes above $75,000, as compared to 18 percent in
the general population, and a full 25 percent had incomes between
$100,000 and $200,000, figures that nearly match the income levels
of delegates at last month's Republican convention.
This narrow constituency goes a long way in explaining the
distorted and blinkered view of American society reflected in
Clinton's speech. What social forces were represented in the convention
hall? Nearly a third were trade union officials or union members
close to the labor bureaucracywhat was once called the aristocracy
of labor. Another third consisted of blacks and Hispanics
who have grown wealthy by exploiting the politics of affirmative
action and government subsidies of various sorts. Hollywood was
well represented, both on the floor of the hall and in the exclusive
sky boxes, as well as trial lawyers and other well-heeled professionals.
If the ambience of the Republican Convention in Philadelphia
was one of barely suppressed social hatred, the atmosphere which
prevails at the Democratic gathering is one of stupefied complacency
and self-satisfaction, into which the reality of social conflict
and political crisis barely penetrates.
Toward the beginning of his speech, Clinton sought to highlight
the achievements of his administration by comparing the blissful
state of America today to that which existed after 12 years of
Republican rule. Back in 1992, he said, our society was
divided, our political system was paralyzed and income
inequality had been skyrocketing.
No one seemed to notice the gaping contradiction between Clinton's
words and the reality of America in 2000. It is a well-documented
fact that social inequality has grown at an accelerated pace during
the Clinton years. The US is more divided between a fabulously
rich upper crust and the vast majority of the people than at any
time in the past 50 years. While a few million people have been
propelled by the bull market into the ranks of millionaires, and
those already rich have seen their fortunes balloon, tens of millions
have been able to keep their heads above water only by working
longer and piling up debt. Social problems have festered, as reflected
in the 45 million Americans without health insurance, the decay
of the public schools and the growth of hunger and homelessness.
A recent study by the Conference Board reported that, in percentage
terms, far more full-time workers were living in poverty at the
end of the 1990s than in the 1970s, and their ranks had steadily
grown since 1994.
As for the health of the political system, widespread disgust
with the two-party system is reflected in record low levels of
voter participation. But the sharpest expression of the crisis
of the political system is the internecine warfare within the
Washington establishment that resulted in the shutting down of
the federal government in 1995-96 and the impeachment and Senate
trial of Clinton himself in 1998-99.
Nothing more clearly expresses the self-imposed blindness and
political cowardice of Clinton and the Democratic Party than the
absence of any reference in his speech to the right-wing Republican
conspiracy to drive him from office. It comes as no surprise that
Clinton should choose to avoid the subject, even though the Monica
Lewinsky scandal and impeachment drive continue to loom over his
administration, the elections and his personal life. Indeed, just
four days before his convention speech, Clinton was prostrating
himself before an audience of Christian fanatics in an effort
to conciliate the fascistic elements in and around the Republican
Party that conspired to bring down his administration.
Clinton and the Democrats will not speak about the tensions
that are tearing at the political system, and even delude themselves
into believing they are of little significance, but there are
sharp differences within the ruling elite and they are growing
more intense. They form the real backdrop to the public hype of
the election campaign.
On economic policy, there are divisions over how to utilize
the projected budget surpluses. In his speech Clinton stressed
the contrast between the Democratic plan, which is to use the
surpluses to pay down the national debt, and that of George W.
Bush and the Republicans, which is to give the surpluses away
in tax cuts that favor the wealthy. Neither plan addresses the
urgent social needs of working people, but the Democratic posture
of fiscal discipline corresponds to the consensus of finance capital,
represented by such figures as former Democratic Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin and Republican Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan
Greenspan.
This section of the ruling class considers the Republican policy
reckless and potentially disastrous. It is well aware of the danger
of the speculative boom turning into its opposite, and see in
the paying down of the federal debt a means of freeing up more
capital for private investment and thereby avoiding a stock market
crash and uncontrolled recession.
The Republican representatives of big business, on the other
hand, make a point of cultivating the element of avaricious entrepreneurs
and middle-sized businessmen who are driven less by long-term
considerations and more by unbridled greed.
On social policy as well the ruling circles are divided. The
Democratic Party, by virtue of its history, remains more cautious,
largely out of fear of the social consequences of an undisguised,
frontal assault on the working class. While it has abandoned in
substance its previous policies of social reform, it has a long
experience of mediating social conflicts.
In the end, however, even the most skillful political sleight
of hand cannot obscure the reality of growing inequality and social
decay. Clinton's invocation of prosperity and progress has far
less impact beyond the confines of the Staples Center.
At the height of the postwar boom, the exaggerated claims of
bourgeois politicians about social progress resonated with the
broad public, because large sections of the working class had
experienced a significant rise in their living standards. That,
however, is no longer the case.
Even then the contradictions of US capitalism overwhelmed the
limited efforts to establish an American version of the welfare
state. Toward the end of his speech Clinton made a curious allusion
to the social crisis that engulfed America in the mid and late
1960s, seeking to place the onus for the collapse of the last
extended period of economic growth on the election of Richard
Nixon in 1968.
In 1964, Clinton said, when we were enjoying the longest
economic expansion in history, we never dreamed that Vietnam would
so divide and wound America. He continued: And then,
before we knew it, there were riots in the streets, even here.
The leaders that I adored as a young man, Martin Luther King and
Robert Kennedy, were killed. Lyndon Johnson ... said he would
not run again because our nation was so divided.
Here was the president describing how the United States was
ripped apart by social conflict in a period that had seen real
and palpable improvements in the living standards of broad masses
of people. He, on the contrary, has presided over an economic
boom whose benefits have overwhelmingly gone to a thin layer at
the top of society. His administration has, moreover, gone further
than any of its predecessors in dismantling the social programs
that provided a measure of economic security for tens of millions
of people.
One would think that if the traumas of the 1960s held any lessons
for today, they would point to the inevitability of even greater
social upheavals once the present boom comes to an end, as it
must. And yet, almost in the next breath, Clinton boasted of how
he was leaving the country in a state of domestic tranquility,
with no great internal crisis and no great external threat.
Both the Democrats and Republicans, in somewhat different ways,
practice the politics of illusion. In this, one sees the type
of blindness that has characterized every ruling elite on the
eve of great shocks and transformations. An enormously explosive
charge of social contradictions has been building up in the course
of more than two decades of political reaction in the US, for
which neither the political establishment, nor the society as
a whole, is prepared.
See Also:
Clinton's act of contrition
[12 August 2000]
Democratic Party platform caters to Wall
Street
[15 August 2000]
Corporate sponsors, Hollywood millionaires
shower Democratic convention with money
[17 August 2000]
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