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Gore's newfound populism: an ossified establishment confronts
the class chasm in America
By Barry Grey
22 August 2000
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In his speech last Thursday to the Democratic National Convention,
Vice President Al Gore, the party's presidential candidate, struck
a populist tone, presenting himself as a champion of working people
and battler against powerful forces and powerful interests.
While reassuring the banking elite that he would maintain the
Clinton administration's course of fiscal conservatismdenouncing
Republican candidate George W. Bush's proposal for a $1.3 trillion
tax cut and promising to use projected budget surpluses to pay
down the national debtGore focused his appeal on what he
called working families.
There was an unmistakable shift in emphasis from the speech
delivered three nights previously by President Clinton. That address
was a defense of Clinton's record. It painted a picture of a contented
country enjoying unprecedented prosperity.
Gore, on the other hand, briefly read off the Democrats' official
litany of successrecord budget surpluses, low
inflation, 22 million new jobsand took pains to praise the
private sector, the engine that drives our economic growth,
but spent the rest of his speech identifying himself with the
struggle of working families, and portraying himself
as an agent of change, a fighter against an old
guard of wealth and privilege.
The immediate response of the Bush campaign was to denounce
Gore for inciting class warfare. But on his first
day on the campaign stump following the convention, Gore escalated
his populist rhetoric, denouncing wealthy and powerful special
interests, and telling crowds in Wisconsin that the purpose
of his campaign was to say the people of the United States
of America have had enough. We want these changes, and we're going
to the ballot box to get these changes.
While some commentators predicted Gore's populist gamble would
flop, arguing that prosperity and social contentment had rendered
appeals to social struggle obsolete, the initial poll results,
showing Gore pulling ahead of Bush or in a dead heat, indicated
that Gore's talk of a struggle against power and privilege had
struck a chord.
In his convention address, Gore denounced Bush and the Republicans
for giving in to the big drug companies, and said,
They're for the powerful. We're for the people. He
targeted specific sections of big business: Big tobacco,
big oil, the big polluters, the pharmaceutical companies, the
HMOs, sometimes you have to be willing to stand up and say no,
so families can have a better life. Toward the conclusion
of the speech, Gore invoked John Kennedy's New Frontier
address at the 1960 Democratic convention and appealed to young
people to make a new life of our world.
Gore denounced such Republican planks as school vouchers, partial
privatization of Social Security, opposition to campaign finance
reform and gun control, and hostility to abortion rights. He spoke
of crumbling schools, the plight of senior citizens
forced to choose between food and prescription drugs, and the
refusal of HMOs to sanction needed medical procedures.
He advanced a series of modest reforms, to be financed by a
portion of the projected budget surpluses: middle-class tax cuts,
a prescription drug benefit for retirees, more federal aid to
the public schools, a patients' bill of rights to
limit the power of the HMOs, universal health coverage for children,
universal pre-school for children, expanded child care, expanded
family leave and medical leave, and a rise in the minimum wage.
Family values, faith, law and order
Interwoven with these social reform measures were invocations
of family values and faith, reflecting
the Democrats' embrace of the political nostrums of the Republican
right, and proposals to increase the police powers of the state.
Gore pledged to add 50,000 new police and repeated his call for
a constitutional amendment on so-called victims' rights.
He seconded the efforts of the Republicans and his own running
mate, Senator Lieberman, to undermine First Amendment rights to
speech and artistic expression in the name of opposing sex and
violence in the entertainment industry.
While opposing the Republican plan to eliminate the estate
tax outright, he called for reform of the measure, i.e., a tax
windfall for the wealthiest US households.
For all his talk about the evil influence of powerful
forces, Gore never mentioned the role of the Christian right,
sections of the federal judiciary and the Republican congressional
leadership in the impeachment conspiracy that nearly toppled the
Clinton White House. Consistent with his selection of Lieberman
for vice president, he demonstratively distanced himself from
Clinton in order to appease those who promoted the Paula Jones
suit and Monica Lewinsky scandal in an attempt to carry through
a political coup.
As for Gore's reform proposals, while they would, if implemented,
benefit at least a fraction of working class families, they are
a far cry from a war on poverty, or any comprehensive
attempt to address the crisis in education, health care and housing,
reverse the protracted decay of the cities, or tackle chronic
poverty, homelessness and malnutrition.
The contradiction between Gore's rhetoric and the puny scale
of his reform proposals is underscored by the substantial size
of the projected budget surplus (leaving aside for the moment
the reliability of the official estimates)$4.6 trillion
over the next 10 years. Gore would allocate more than half of
this sum to paying down the national debt, and eliminating it
altogether by the year 2012. None of his proposals involve an
increase in taxes for the rich, or any other form of wealth redistribution
from the top to the lower rungs of the economic ladder. For all
his populist phrase-mongering, Gore would not challenge the grossly
unequal distribution of the benefits of economic growth, the vast
bulk of which has gone to the top 10 percent of the population.
Both Gore and the delegates on the convention floor ignored
the incongruity of the vice president, a product of the Washington
establishment with close family ties to Occidental Petroleum,
speaking as the tribune of the working man, in a hall emblazoned
with the logos of corporate sponsors who paid millions to insure
that their interests would be protected by a Gore administration.
After the speech convention delegates joined corporate lobbyists,
Hollywood moguls and the upper crust of Los Angeles society at
a fundraising concert at the Shrine Auditorium that raised $5.2
million, the largest hard money event in Democratic
Party history.
A significant shift in strategy
But despite its hypocrisy, Gore's populist turn represents
a politically significant shift in campaign strategy, the consequences
of which could extend far beyond his short-term electoral calculations.
Throughout the period of the primary elections, Gore vacillated
between issuing occasional populist slogans and appealing to the
better-off social layers that have profited from the fiscal conservatism
and budget-cutting of the Clinton years. For the most part he
attacked his primary opponent, former New Jersey Senator Bill
Bradley, from the right, denouncing Bradley's proposal for sweeping
health care reform as fiscally irresponsible.
However, trailing in the polls and facing a Republican campaign
that carefully packaged its right-wing agenda in the more moderate
garb of compassionate conservatism, Gore and his advisers
concluded that their only chance for winning in November was to
appeal to broad layers of the working population, and tap into
their pent-up frustration and discontent.
This, however, is a dangerous tactic with potentially explosive
implications for the bourgeois political establishment, which
has spent the past 20 years and more ignoring the growing social
distress of working people and openly subordinating its policies
to the interests of big business and the most privileged economic
strata. The Democratic Party, in particular, has demonstratively
abandoned the social reformism with which it had been associated
since Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.
Within the corporate ruling elite and both of its political
parties there is a palpable fear that any appeal to the social
grievances of the working class risks bringing forward a movement
of protest and struggle that they will be unable to control. The
negative reaction to Gore's speech was not limited to the Republicans.
His populist turn has fueled tensions within the Democratic Party,
as indicated by the remarks of a political strategist close
to Clinton, who, according to the Los Angeles Times,
despaired over the contrast between Gore's populist tone
and the more inclusive note that Clinton struck in his address
to the convention.
The unnamed Clinton aide praised Clinton's speech for reaching
across all income lines, all parties, certainly all classes.
Gore, on the other hand, gambled on the old Democratic rhetoric
and coalition, as opposed to making a straight-out appeal to the
new prosperity voters that Clinton and Gore have been more responsible
than anyone else for creating.
The Democratic candidate's appeal to the grievances of working
class voters can only sharpen the divisions within the ruling
elite, which have not abated with the conclusion of the impeachment
episode. This was brought home by the news, leaked to the press
on the day of Gore's speech, that Kenneth Starr's replacement
as independent counsel had impaneled a new grand jury to investigate
Clinton, a step toward indicting the president after he leaves
office.
Among the differences being fought out at the highest levels
is a dispute over economic policy, centering on the projected
budget surpluses. Leading representatives of finance capital,
including the Republican chairman of the Federal Reserve Board,
Alan Greenspan, have publicly opposed Bush's plan to spend $1.3
trillion, nearly 60 percent of the estimated 10-year, non-Social
Security surplus, in across-the-board cuts in income tax rates.
Instead, they favor Gore's pledge to use more than half of the
projected surplus to pay down the national debt.
Greenspan and company consider Bush's proposal reckless and
short-sighted. They are well aware that the budget projections
are largely unreal, since they are based on the far-fetched assumption
that the business boom will continue without any significant contraction.
Moreover, they see the reduction of the national debt as a requirement
for freeing up capital for private investment and keeping interest
rates low, something essential to their hopes of maintaining the
flow of capital into the stock exchange and keeping the bull market
going.
Other sections of big business see no reason to forgo a massive
windfall, which will have the added benefit of further crippling
the ability of the federal government to fund social programs,
and support Bush's tax cut plan.
What underlies Gore's populist turn?
Beyond immediate electoral calculations, Gore's populist turn
is an expression of more basic considerations. The Democratic
Party, by virtue of its reformist past and its long history of
containing class conflict, is more sensitive than the Republicans
to the danger of social unrest. Gore's decision to make a broad
appeal to working people represents an attempt by a section of
the political establishment to adapt itself to the growth of social
anger over stagnating living standards and economic inequality,
in order to channel and contain class tensions.
By raising popular expectations, however, the Democrats are
playing a risky game. Once the deeply felt indignation and sense
of oppression of the masses are articulated, even in the cynical
manner of Gore, a process is set in motion that has its own logic
and its own dynamic. Similarly, an appeal to the idealism of the
youth can contribute to a process of political radicalization
that rebounds against the political establishment as a whole.
These dangers for the ruling elite are all the greater in a society
that is far more polarized along class lines than at the time
of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
The Clinton administration itself came to power by appealing
to popular hostility to the Republicans after 12 years of social
reaction under Reagan and Bush. Clinton raised the expectations
of working people, above all with his pledge to enact universal
health coverage. When the Democrats abandoned health care reform
in the face of corporate resistance and Republican opposition,
even though they controlled the White House and both houses of
Congress, the public repudiation took the form of a collapse of
voter turnout in many working class areas and a Republican landslide
in the 1994 congressional elections. Clinton's capitulation on
health care and his subsequent embrace of Republican social policies
played an enormous role in fueling the alienation of broad sections
of the population from the two-party system.
Should Gore get elected on the basis of a populist appeal,
his inevitable failure to satisfy the expectations raised in the
course of the campaign would create the conditions for a wave
of social unrest and a rapid political radicalization within wide
sections of the working class. Indeed, for all the talk of endless
prosperity, the storm clouds of crisis are looming over the 2000
elections, in part in the form of staggering trade deficits and
the resulting threat of a dollar crisis. The inevitable bursting
of the speculative bubble on Wall Street and turn to recession
will suddenly reveal the objective deterioration of the social
position of the working class, which has to some extent been obscured
by the boom.
Historically, the most dangerous periods for entrenched ruling
elites occur when circumstances demand they change and adapt themselves
to new social conditions. Neither of the two parties of American
capitalism is well positioned to make such an adjustment at the
beginning of the twenty-first century.
The Democratic Party, in particular, is a very different organization
from the party of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, or even
Kennedy and Johnson. More than two decades of adaptation to the
increasingly right-wing economic and social policies of big business
have eroded the mass base it once had in the working class and
middle class. It has become the party of sections of finance capital
and other parts of the business elite, as well as privileged upper-middle-class
layersHollywood, the trade union bureaucracy and civil rights
establishment, and the most privileged layers of blacks and other
minorities.
Such an organization is far less able to contain the class
struggle by convincing the masses that it represents their interests
than the Democratic Party of old. It is already clear from the
initial reactions to Gore's speech that any attempt to carry out
serious policies of social reform would intensify the divisions
within the party to the point of a split.
It is impossible to predict whether Gore will retain his newfound
populism, or jettison the pose in the face of pressure from both
inside and outside the Democratic Party. Such a turn of events
would be nothing new for a man who has made a career by trimming
his political sails in accordance with expediency and pressure
from the powers that be. Nor is it possible to predict the outcome
of the November election.
However, the very fact that Gore has felt compelled to make
an appeal to the social anger of working people indicates that
vast changes long in the making are leading to a new period of
social struggle and political radicalization, which will create
the objective conditions for the development of a mass, independent
political party of the working class.
See Also:
Right-wing conspiracy continues: new
grand jury to investigate Clinton
[19 August 2000]
Among the delegates to the Democratic
National Convention:
Complacency, conservatism and a few sparks of discontent
[18 August 2000]
Clinton's speech to the Democratic convention:
toasting success on the eve of the deluge
[17 August 2000]
Los Angeles police attack protesters at
Democratic convention
[17 August 2000]
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