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The final US presidential debate and beyond: Gore limps toward
the finish line
By Barry Grey
21 October 2000
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The final presidential debate, held October 17 in St. Louis,
highlighted the political cowardice and reactionary underpinnings
of Vice President Al Gore's campaigna combination that could
very well hand victory in November to his Republican opponent,
George W. Bush, virtually by default.
Facing an adversary who openly acknowledged that his tax proposals
would overwhelmingly benefit the rich, and declared, in a country
with 44 million uninsured people, that he was absolutely
opposed to a national [health] care plan, Gore was unable
to present an alternative that in any serious way addressed the
social needs of the broad mass of working people.
It is not here a matter of giving advice to the Democrats,
or political support to Gore as a lesser evil to Bush.
As the World Socialist Web Site has stressed, the 2000
election campaign demonstrates the political crisis and corruption
of both parties, which, whatever their differences, defend the
interests of the ruling elite in America.
It is, however, necessary, in contrast to the cynical blather
than passes for analysis in the media, to examine the social forces
and processes that underlie political events, and, in particular,
the impotence of the Gore camp.
As has been the case throughout his campaign, Gore's upper-most
concern in Tuesday's debate was to appease the arbiters of official
public opinion in the media and reassure the American ruling elite
that a Gore administration would not signify a revival of welfare-state
liberalism. In response to Bush's denunciation of a national health
program, Gore declared that he too was opposed to government-run
health care. His repeated assertions that he was for small
government and fiscal discipline rendered his pseudo-populist
appeals to middle-class working families all the more
stilted and unconvincing.
At several points in the debate Gore took pains either to associate
himself with reactionary policies advocated by Bush, or outflank
his adversary from the right. When a questioner from the audience
criticized Bush for his evident pride in presiding over a record
number of executions as governor of Texas, Gore responded by affirming
his own support for the death penalty and refrained from any criticism
of Bush's grisly record of state killings. When another questioner
expressed concern over immoral films, TV programs
and music, Gore restated his earlier threat to launch a government
crackdown on Hollywood. On the issue of military spending, Gore
boasted that his budget proposal allocated more than twice as
much for the Pentagon than Bush's.
Gore and his advisers were apparently pleased by the debate,
which the media pundits and opinion polls generally acknowledged
the Democratic candidate had won. Given the mettle
of Gore's opponent, however, this cannot provide much consolation
for a campaign that has been floundering for several weeks.
Bush was unable to answer Gore's charges that his tax policies
overwhelmingly benefited the wealthiest layers of the population
and that his proposal to partially privatize social security would
eventually require cuts in benefits, or bankrupt the system. But
there was no indication that Gore's brand of reformism without
serious reforms had inspired any real enthusiasm among broad layers
of the electorate.
Moreover, Bush was able to exploit the glaring contradictions
underlying Gore's pose as champion of the people against
the powerful. He repeatedly attacked his Democratic opponent
as a big spending liberal. Gore's response was to
plead innocent to the charge, citing his role in slashing 300,000
federal jobs and promising to reduce federal spending as a percentage
of the gross domestic product to the lowest level in 50 years.
The fact that the two candidates competed with one another
in renouncing government spending, while basing their budget proposals
on the assumption of record budget surpluses, underscored the
right-wing social policy of both parties.
The other major theme, invoked by Bush no less than 10 times
in the course of the 90-minute debate, was the claim that he was
a Washington outsider who would end the culture of
partisan bickering and finger-pointing in the nation's
capital. This remarkable assertion from the standard bearer of
a party that waged an unprecedented campaign of dirty tricks,
culminating in the partisan impeachment of President Bill Clinton,
was only possible because Bush could count on Gore's fear of raising
the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal and the Republican attempt at
a political coup.
As in the previous two debates, both candidates avoided any
mention of their respective parties, a tacit acknowledgment of
the widespread public disaffection with the two-party system.
In the case of Bush this reticence is more easily understandable,
given the public repudiation of the right-wing agenda of the Republican
Congress, and especially its effort to bring down the Clinton
White House, which found an unmistakable expression in the Republican
debacle in the 1998 congressional elections.
But Gore's effort to distance himself from the Democratic Party
and the Clinton administration might seem, at first glance, more
perplexing. Gore has been intent on disassociating himself from
Clinton, to the point of insisting that the 2000 election is not
a referendum on the supposedly unprecedented record of economic
success of the Clinton-Gore years. In none of the three debates
did Gore utter Clinton's name.
Nor has Gore sought to tap into public anger over the record
of the Republican Congress. He has remained silent not only on
the impeachment conspiracy, but on former Republican House Speaker
Newt Gingrich and his Contract with America, which
culminated in the Republican shutdown of the federal government
in 1995-96, an action that outraged tens of millions of Americans.
No less striking is Gore's refusal to campaign jointly with
Clinton, a stance that has provoked protests from leading Democrats,
including Clinton himself, who are well aware that Clinton remains
the most popular Democratic politician and believe that Gore's
only chance of getting crucial working class voters to the polls
is to link his campaign as closely as possible to the incumbent.
Gore's silence on the impeachment episode and the overall record
of the Republican Congress and his determination to keep Clinton
at arm's length are of a piece. They are part and parcel of his
effort to conciliate right-wing public opinion, as articulated
by the media. A review of his campaign shows that it has been
dominated by such considerations.
Gore's selection in August of Senator Joseph Lieberman as his
running mate was an obvious concession to all those forces that
supported the Republican impeachment drive. Lieberman made his
mark by becoming the first prominent Democrat to publicly denounce
Clinton for his relationship with Lewinsky. Lieberman's cloying
speech in the well of the Senate at the height of the investigation
by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr helped legitimize what was
essentially a sting operation organized by Republican leaders,
Christian fundamentalists and a section of the federal judiciary,
and financed by reactionary businessmen.
When Gore continued to lag in the opinion polls, the Democratic
candidate attempted to jump-start his campaign by making a populist-style
speech at the Democratic convention later in the month. His appeal
to popular grievances against the growth of economic inequality
and the domination of corporate interests evoked a certain response,
propelling his poll ratings above those of his rival.
But after the first televised debate he was roundly attacked
in the media, and Gore responded by largely abandoning his populist
demagogy and striking a pose of contrition and conciliation in
the second contest with Bush. This failed to stem the tide of
media criticism and led to a further decline in his poll numbers.
In the final debate, Gore sought to revive his populist pose while
simultaneously declaring himself an opponent of big government.
Since the October 17 outing Gore has taken pains to reiterate
his commitment to fiscal discipline, pledging in an October 19
speech at Columbia University in New York to underspend
the budget surplus, pay off the national debt and reduce the size
of the federal government. After being introduced by Robert Rubin,
former treasury secretary and current chairman of the investment
firm Goldman Sachs, Gore declared, You better believe that
the era of big government is over.
The same day he appeared on the Rosie O'Donnell television
show and denounced Clinton's liaison with Monica Lewinsky, saying,
I condemned his personal mistake. I do so again.
Gore's conviction that the Lewinksy scandal and impeachment
episode are huge liabilities flies in the face of the actual sentiment
of the majority of the electorate. But this perception, which
is shared by the Democratic Party as a whole, including Clinton
himself, conforms to the outlook of the media establishment, which
was itself deeply implicated in the political conspiracy. The
disconnect between official opinion and mass sentiment on this
issue exposes in the sharpest form the chasm that separates the
entire political establishment and the general population.
That chasm is reflected as well in the widespread apathy of
the public toward the election. The viewing audience for the third
debate was a mere 37.7 million, nearly nine million less than
the first debate. The dramatic erosion of popular support for
the two-party system can be gauged by comparing these figures
with the viewing audience for the October 1980 debate between
Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, which was 80.6 million. The intervening
20 years have seen an unrelenting offensive against the working
class, a vast redistribution of wealth from the majority to the
top 5 or 10 percent of the population, and an ongoing shift of
both parties to the right. There can be little wonder that tens
of millions of workers, especially the young and the most oppressed
social layers, view both parties and their candidates with a combination
of distrust and hostility.
The inability of Gore and the Democrats to gauge public sentiment
dovetails with a deliberate effort to cover up the vast implications
of the impeachment campaign. The Democrats, no less than the Republicans,
are fearful that any honest appraisal of the concerted effort
to remove an elected president by pseudo-legal means will expose
the deep decay of democratic institutions in the US.
The decay of the political system is nevertheless evident in
the 2000 election, a contest between a party politically dominated
by extreme right-wing forces that seeks to mask its reactionary
social agenda behind political banalities delivered by a political
cipher, George W. Bush, and a party that seeks to conceal its
defense of social inequality and the interests of a privileged
elite behind threadbare phrases and empty promises, delivered
by a political operative named Al Gore.
See Also:
The
second US presidential debate: Gore throws himself on the mercy
of the media
[14 October 2000]
The
Bush-Gore debate: snapshot of a political system in decay
[6 October 2000]
The
working class and the 2000 US elections
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party of the United States
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