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Among the delegates to the Democratic National Convention:
Complacency, conservatism and a few sparks of discontent
By Jerry White, at the DNC in Los Angeles
18 August 2000
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this version to print
They
say it's there, but I'm not aware of it. That was the response
to a question on the growth of social inequality posed by this
reporter to a delegate who was wildly applauding after Bill Clinton's
speech to the Democratic National Convention. Her remark, though
particularly stark in its expression of complacency, was not untypical
of the comments this reporter got while interviewing delegates
on the floor of the convention.
Nearly 5,000 delegates and alternates attended the national
gathering in Los Angeles this week, which brought together many
of the most active supporters of the Democratic Party, along with
15,000 elected officials, paid party functionaries and guests.
As the World Socialist Web Site has pointed out in previous
articles, most of the delegates were drawn from more privileged
layers of society that have benefited from the stock market boom
fueled by the policies of the Clinton-Gore administration. The
WSWS spoke with union officials, mid-level managers, a
construction contractor, a lawyer, a computer programmer, a social
services administrator and an elected official. This reporter
also spoke with a retired teacher and a retired oil worker.
Rosa Holliday is an education and training coordinator for
General Motors and political science professor in Bay City, Michigan.
Though the area, which includes nearby Saginaw and Flint, has
been devastated by downsizing in the auto industry and the disappearance
of steady, better-paying jobs, Ms. Holliday said, We have
never had such a long stretch of prosperity in America.
She acknowledged
that lower incomes are a problem but this, she suggested,
was because low-paid workers were not sufficiently educated to
compete for better-paying hi-tech jobs. That is why Gore
is pushing skills training. That's the key to preparing people
for work, she said.
When it came to the issue of social inequality, Ms. Holliday
denied that it had anything to do with the class structure of
American society. Inequality, she said, was fundamentally the
product of racial discrimination, an obstacle that Clinton had
taken great strides to remove. It has been a problem in
American society that not everybody has shared in prosperity.
But Clinton has opened things up and made it inclusive, through
affirmative action and other things. No other administration has
ever pushed this so hard.
For the most part, the much touted inclusiveness
of the Clinton-Gore administration consists in the cultivation
of a layer of minority entrepreneurs and officials through government
contracts and other benefits, an achievement repeatedly hailed
from the convention podium as well as by delegates.
One black delegate from Mississippi, who is also a Teamsters
shop steward at United Parcel Service, said, The civil rights
era was able to effectuate some changes. We now have the maturity
to have these dialogues for all, and blacks have become part of
the process. The political system is a great instrument to bring
about social change.
As for why the masses of working people, black and white, did
not share that view, but instead looked at the elections with
a combination of disinterest and disdain, he could only speculate
that the reason was general contentment. In the 1960s we
had a rough time, he said. There were civil rights
issues, the Vietnam War and serious social concerns. With the
advent of accelerated communications and the availability of learning
about political issues, maybe the people have been lulled into
a state of apathy. And maybe voter apathy isn't a bad thing. Maybe
the people are grateful and appreciative that things are going
in a positive direction. The US is well known for responding to
the needs of Americans.
Nearly one in three delegates or alternates at the convention
were trade union officials or workers close to the union bureaucracy.
Their comments reflected the very conservatism and contentment
that were often ascribed to the general public, revealing the
chasm that separates these elements from the broad masses of working
people.
Garland Rosauro,
an official from the Operating Engineers union in Alameda, California,
said, We are the largest construction union local in the
world. Our guys build highways and buildings. They are always
working and are doing well. There's work out there for everybody
who wants it. It might not be at the wages they want, but it's
better than it was eight years ago. Naturally, it might not be
what everybody wants, but Clinton and Gore have given us great
opportunities.
Mr. Rosauro acknowledged, I do very well and know a lot
of guys who have done well in the stock market, playing the dot.coms.
He continued: For those not doing welllike people
working at McDonald's or making $7 an hourhow can they blame
the government for that?
I asked Mr. Rosauro about the Democrats' abandonment of their
past liberal polices, particularly the expansion of social spending
associated with the Kennedy-Johnson years. What did he think about
Gore's insistence on fiscal responsibility when the
government was running huge surpluses, the economy was supposedly
booming, yet tens of millions of working people were facing economic
insecurity and lacked basic needs like health care?
I agree with fiscal responsibility, Mr. Rosauro
said. We need to fund programs, but not put the government
back in debt. Sure, it takes a lot of money, but we can't go back
to tax and spend. It used to be that way, but it's a political
thingwe have to keep the party in power. The party had to
change to survive.
These views
were amplified by Texas delegate Howard Berger, a lawyer for real
estate companies and local governments. Mr. Berger became active
in Democratic Party politics in the 1970s, supporting Jesse Jackson's
People United to Save Humanity and Operation Push. This was the
third Democratic National Convention that he had attended.
He acknowledged that social inequality was worse than when
Clinton took over the White House in 1993, but said that while
it would be beneficial to greatly expand social spending and attack
problems like health care and education, it was not politically
feasible.
First Berger blamed Republican resistance. But then he suggested
more broadly that the American people were at fault because they
had shifted to the right over the last 30 years. If the Democrats
pushed for significantly more social spending, it could provoke
a popular backlash that would prevent the passage of even the
most modest reforms.
The Democrats, Berger said, are afraid that
America does not have the political will for sweeping change.
Johnson's Great Society programs got us Richard Nixon. The war
on poverty generated support for Ronald Reagan. That is why we
have to slowly expand existing programs like Medicaid and Medicare.
I support a single payer plan to provide health care
insurance to everybody, but America is not ready for that. You
have to get there any way you can, by increasing the services
to the people and decreasing the profits to the insurance companies.
Mr. Berger went on to explain that Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon
Johnson had believed that every twenty years there would be two
years in which the possibility existed to enact significant social
reforms. Perhaps, he said, Clinton thought that
he was doing that with his health care plan. We missed that and
now we are going to have to have another twenty years of incremental
changes.
When I suggested that it was unlikely that working people could
bear another two decades of worsening social inequality, particularly
under conditions of the economic shocks that were sure to come,
Berger acknowledged that this was a serious problem and that social
upheavals could result. He added that in the long run, it was
Roosevelt's New Deal programs that saved capitalism from revolution.
The Democrats' shift to the right did disturb a number of the
delegates I spoke to. Some complained about Gore's selection of
Lieberman as his running mate, because of the latter's support
for school vouchers and his role during the Clinton impeachment.
I had a conversation
with a retired oil worker from Galvaston, Texas, a member of the
Paper, Allied-Industrial, Chemical and Energy Workers (PACE) union,
who was attending his first Democratic convention. Allen Alexander
had been a shop steward at Amoco for 25 years when he was forced
to retire, under the threat of losing his pension, when the oil
giant merged with British Petroleum. He denounced the conditions
facing the working class and spoke angrily of the AFL-CIO trade
union bureaucracy's collaboration with big business. His support
for the Democrats seemed tenuous and reluctant, the product of
the AFL-CIO's long efforts to block the building of a political
party of the working class.
For ten years I thought about the building of a labor
party, said Alexander. But I didn't want a party that
would be run by the same bureaucrats as in my union.
Alexander blamed the AFL-CIO leaders for opening the way to
corporate downsizing and union-busting when they refused to defend
the PATCO air traffic controllers fired by President Reagan in
1981. The unions did nothing. That's because the leaders
were bought off and working with the corporations and politicians.
The union bureaucrats were doing that for their own benefit, not
the workers'. Before the 1980s it only took one paycheck to raise
a family. It will never go back to that. At the same time, the
CEO at BP Amoco got $12 million dollars when he retired, plus
God knows how many more millions in stock options.
When I suggested that it was high time for the working class
to build a political party of its own that would challenge the
present political and economic setup, he agreed, saying, Why
can't there be a party for the people, that serves the interests
of the people?
See Also:
Clinton's
speech to the Democratic convention: toasting success on the eve
of the deluge
[17 August 2000]
Corporate
sponsors, Hollywood millionaires shower Democratic convention
with money
[17 August 2000]
Los
Angeles police attack protesters at Democratic convention
[17 August 2000]
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