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The US elections
Al Gore's campaign: the death rattle of American liberalism
By David North
6 November 2000
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In the course of this year's election campaign, the question
that has most perplexed the media pundits has been the apparent
inability of Al Gore to capitalize on what should have been an
overwhelming advantage. Proceeding from the assumption that the
United States is currently enjoying unprecedented prosperity,
the very real possibility of the Democratic candidate's defeat
seems to violate conventional wisdom, i.e., that the presidential
candidate of the incumbent party wins when times are good.
More often than not, the defeat of the incumbent party has been
directly attributable to an unfavorable economic conjuncture.
In 1920, 1932, 1960, 1976, 1980 and 1992, the incumbent party's
defeat was foreshadowed by an ongoing or only recently ended recession.
There have been some notable exceptions to the rule. Election
results do not always conform to the business cycle. The 1912
schism in the Republican Party enabled Wilson to capture the White
House despite an expanding economy. In 1952, dissatisfaction with
the course of the Korean War facilitated the victory of Eisenhower,
who had the added advantage of being a victorious general. Similarly,
the Vietnam War discredited the Johnson-Humphrey administration
and led to the election of Nixon in 1968.
However, despite the fact there is neither a war nor a particularly
credible opponent, the Gore campaign is obviously badly wounded
as it staggers toward the finish line. Why?
The analyses offered by the corporate media are generally shallow,
focusing on one or another personal characteristic that undermines
Gore's popular appeal. While there may be some degree of truth
in these observations, they contribute very little to a deeper
understanding of more profound political and social processes.
What are the more essential reasons for the parlous state of
the Gore campaign? First, let us consider the media's underlying
(and all but unquestioned) assumption: that this is an era of
unparalleled economic prosperity. This article of faith is less
a reflection of realitywhich is more complex and troublingthan
of the highly privileged financial status of media opinion makers.
While unemployment figures have fallen over the past decade,
that statistic expresses only one aspect of prevailing socioeconomic
conditions. For the overwhelming majority of Americans, the 1990s
has been a decade of economic uncertainty and stress. Job security
has all but disappeared as an operative social concept. Wage levels
have barely kept up with inflation. Tens of millions of working
class families are deeply in debt and anxious about their ability
to cope in the event of an emergency. A sudden layoff carries
with it the potential for catastrophe.
Basic social needsmedical care, decent education, economic
security in one's old ageare beyond the reach of the more
than 40 million Americans classified as poor. Indeed, they are
problematic for the majority of working people. A downturn in
the economyeven a so-called soft landingwould
quickly expose the extremely precarious position of the working
class.
When considered in the context of a more serious appraisal
of socioeconomic conditions in the United States, the real reasons
for the crisis of the Gore campaign begin to emerge. Notwithstanding
the occasional bursts of pseudo-populist demagogy, Gore is the
representative of a political party that has nothing of programmatic
substance to offer the working class.
Much has been written about Gore's wooden demeanoror,
in the words of a more thoughtful commentator, the vice
president's inability to give a direct, unequivocal answer to
almost any question put to him... But this trait stems less
from a personal failing than from the basic contradiction of the
Democratic Party. Its efforts to pose as the defender of working
Americans continuously clash with the overriding need to reassure
its corporate patrons. Circumstances beyond Gore's control compel
him to speak continuously out of both sides of his mouth. Ringing
promises to save Social Security or improve education
are offset with sober declarations in support of fiscal
responsibility.
This problem did not begin with Gore. In fact, what is manifested
in his campaign is the terminal stage of the protracted decay
of American liberalism.
As everyone who follows American politics knows, liberalism
has been transformed in the course of the last 20 years into the
political equivalent of an expletive deletedthe dreaded
L word. The fact that no Democratic candidate for
national office would dare identify himself or herself as a liberal
means that there exists, within the framework of bourgeois politics,
no viable basis for a program of social reform.
This is by no means a new development. Indeed, the crisis of
liberalism predates the victory of Ronald Reagan in 1980an
event that is often, and falsely, described as the major turning
point in American politics. A more careful review of history reveals
that the decay of American liberalism as a credible instrument
of social reform can be traced all the way back to the first decades
of the twentieth century. The Achilles heel of liberalism, as
a bourgeois political tendency, was its organic inability to advocate
solutions to social problems that overstepped the bounds of what
was acceptable to the capitalistic profit system.
In the mid-1930s, the great American philosopher John Dewey
acknowledged that liberalism, while proclaiming its fidelity to
the ideals of democracy, had, in practice, degenerated into an
increasingly shameless defense of the vested interests of the
capitalist class. It was Dewey's sincere hope that liberalism
could somehow free itself from its historical subservience to
capitalism and thereby revive itself as a credible trend of deep-going
social reform.
In a statement typical of his writings in the 1930s, Dewey
declared: The tragic breakdown of democracy is due to the
fact that the identification of liberty with the maximum of unrestrained
individualistic action in the economic sphere, under the institutions
of capitalistic finance, is as fatal to the realization of liberty
for all as it is fatal to the realization of equality. It is destructive
of liberty for the many because it is destructive of genuine equality
of opportunity.
Dewey's efforts to articulate a philosophical foundation for
a viable program of liberal social reformin opposition to
a class-based program of socialist revolutionwere unsuccessful.
With the entry of the United States into World War II and its
transformation into the major imperialist power, the evolution
of American liberalism assumed a starkly reactionary character.
The most graphic manifestation of liberalism's movement to
the right was its enthusiastic endorsement of the Cold War against
the Soviet Union, combined with anticommunist witch-hunting at
home. The outcome of the orgy of red-baiting, politically and
intellectually legitimized by the leaders of American liberalism,
was the persecution and suppression of all forms of socialist
and anti-capitalist dissent within the United States, especially
within the newly formed industrial unions.
As for the relationship between liberalism and the civil rights
movements of the 1950s and 1960s, it must be recalled that the
struggle against desegregation took place largely in opposition
to the Democratic Party. It was an ugly fact of American politics
that national Democratic Party campaigns, as late as 1960, depended
upon an unholy alliance of Northern liberals and Southern segregationists.
This alliance was shattered by the eruption of mass struggles
that the Kennedy administration was unable to control.
In the aftermath of Kennedy's assassination, Lyndon Johnson
unveiled his Great Society. The legislation introduced
by Johnson, however, represented not the renaissance of liberalism,
but rather its last gasp. Johnson's War on Poverty
fell victim to the War in Vietnam. None of the social goals proclaimed
by Johnson were realized. The last 30 years of American political
history have witnessed the systematic repudiation by both Republican
and Democratic administrations of not only the general social
aspirations proclaimed by the Johnson administration, but also
the specific programs it introduced.
The political trajectory of the Democratic Party has been determined
by objective socioeconomic tendenciesabove all, the concentration
of economic power and wealth in the hands of an ever more isolated
elite for whom any alteration in the social structure upon which
its privileges depend is anathema. The Democratic Party functions
as an instrument of that corporate and financial aristocracy.
The barrenness of its platform is a measure of the intolerance
of the ruling elite for any measures that might impact unfavorably
on its economic position and interests.
In the final analysis, Gore's woodenness is an
expression of the class discipline and constraints within which
he is obliged to operate.
See Also:
The
US elections
George W. Bush's drunk driving arrest:
revelation from the past spotlights political cynicism of the
present
[4 November 2000]
The
New York Times and the 2000 elections:
a contorted attempt to legitimize the two-party monopoly
[1 November 2000]
The
working class and the 2000 US elections
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party of the United States
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