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Ralph Nader's political olive branch to Bush
By Barry Grey
30 March 2001
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Earlier this month former Green Party presidential candidate
Ralph Nader co-authored a column that appeared on the op-ed pages
of the Wall Street Journal. Entitled Ending Corporate
Welfare as We Know It, the article by Nader and Robert Weissman
(editor of the Nader-backed Multinational Monitor magazine)
presented a generally positive picture of the newly installed
administration of Republican President George W. Bush.
Nader and Weissman sought to couch their enthusiasm for aspects
of the Bush administrationabove all its extreme nationalist
and unilateralist predilectionsin measured terms. The article,
published March 7, began:
If it took Richard Nixon to go to China, could George
W. Bush be the president who ends corporate welfare as we know
it?
That doesn't appear likely. But in a budget outline that
offers little reason to smile to those concerned about the concentration
of corporate power, the Bush administration has offered a glimmer
of hope on the corporate-welfare front.
Nader and Weissman went on to praise Bush's budget outline,
published the preceding week, for proposing a reduction in funding
for three federal programs that provide government subsidies to
corporations: the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, the
Export-Import Bank and the Advanced Technology Program.
These are positive steps, wrote Nader. He then
proceeded to applaud Bush's Treasury Secretary, Paul O'Neill,
who has voiced skepticism about the Wall Street bailouts
regularly engineered by the International Monetary Fund in coordination
with his Department.
The thrust of the article was that the proposed scale-back
in the above named programs and O'Neill's public criticisms of
IMF bailouts were promising moves, but only partial steps. But
while all these initial moves are in the right direction, there
is much, much more to do to rein in corporate welfare, wrote
Nader.
In conclusion, the authors of the article respectfully reminded
Bush of his commitment to (quoting Bush) reduce
subsidies that primarily benefit corporations rather than individuals
and wondered whether the new president would show the political
courage to offend the very corporate fat cats who funded his campaign.
In assessing this altogether remarkable article, one is obliged
to assume that Nader's professed hope in Bush's ability to oppose
the influence of corporate fat cats is merely a journalistic
device aimed at currying favor with the new administration. That
would be consistent with the generally groveling tone of his commentary.
The alternative, that Nader really believes the new president
to be something other than a tool of corporate interests, would
brand the former Green candidate and long-time lobbyist a political
idiot.
Nader's conceptions may not be terribly profound, but he is
not as credulous as he makes out. He is not unaware, for example,
of the significance of the timing of his article, and, even more
to the point, where it appeared. That Nader rushed into print
in the first weeks of the new administration, indeed, within days
of Bush's nationally televised budget address, and published his
flattering missive on the op-ed pages of the Wall Street Journal,
was itself a political statement.
The Journal was no doubt delighted to feature a laudatory
piece from the supposedly left Nader. Its op-ed pages
are notorious as the repository for the most unabashed attacks
on democratic rights and the most brazen defenses of wealth and
privilege. The Journal serves as the semi-official house
organ of the Republican right and spearheaded two political coups
in recent years: the ultimately unsuccessful attempt to topple
the Clinton administration in the sex-scandal-driven impeachment
campaign, and the successful effort to install Bush through the
suppression of votes in Florida.
To anyone who has seriously followed Nader's political trajectory,
the Wall Street Journal olive branch to the Bush administration
could not have come as a complete surprise. While Nader was anxious
to make a public statement greeting the new president, he was
remarkably taciturn during the Republican impeachment campaignsubsequently,
during his presidential campaign, he said he would have voted
to convict Clinton in the Senate and remove him from officeand
he maintained a studied silence throughout the five-week electoral
crisis in Florida that followed the disputed presidential election
last November.
In his Journal piece, Nader maintained his public record
of indifference toward the assault on democratic rights led by
the Republican right. He made no mention of the fact that the
administration he was praising had come to power on the basis
of a direct attack on the right to vote, summed up in the Supreme
Court ruling that scuttled a court-ordered recount of votes in
Florida and attacked the constitutional principle of popular sovereignty.
Nor had Bush, from his inaugural to the date of Nader's column,
provided the slightest reason for anyone to doubt his intention
of implementing the right-wing social agenda advocated by the
most ruthless sections of the capitalist elite. He had appointed
a cabinet dominated by multimillionaire corporate executives and
extreme-right ideologues. His first official act, carried out
two days after his inauguration, was an executive order banning
US aid to international family planning organizations that provide
abortion counseling.
Bush's budget address, which Nader found so hopeful,
was a thoroughly dishonest defense of his proposal for a tax cut
overwhelmingly benefiting the richa measure aimed at effecting
the most sweeping redistribution of wealth from the working population
to the economic elite in US history.
On the very day that Nader's column appeared, Congress passed
a bill, backed by big business and the Bush White House, overturning
new workplace safety regulations designed to prevent repetitive
strain injuries, an affliction that affects more than one million
workers every year. Two days later Bush intervened to outlaw a
strike by Northwest Airlines mechanics and announced he would
block any strike action by workers locked in contract negotiations
with the major airlines.
Even if Nader were able to overlook such anti-democratic and
anti-working-class measures, one might think his enthusiasm for
the new administration would be dulled by its pro-business offensive
against the environment. Nader was, after all, the presidential
candidate of the Green Party.
Since assuming office Bush has made abundantly clear his intention
to roll back environmental restrictions on industry. Besides opening
up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil and gas exploration,
the Bush administration is considering the following measures,
according to a recent article in the New York Times: easing
clean-air rules for coal-fired power plants, loosening federal
standards on river flows to protect fish, giving refiners relief
from diverse anti-pollution standards in various states, and allowing
states to control drilling rights on some federal lands.
He has already reversed a campaign pledge to require power
plants to control emissions of carbon dioxide, reversed a Clinton
administration executive order that tightened arsenic standards
for drinking water, and rescinded another Clinton administration
proposal to increase public access to information about the potential
consequences of chemical plant accidents. This week Bush officially
proclaimed US opposition to the Kyoto protocol on global warming
and declared the international treaty to be dead.
Bush has, in addition, nominated as his administration's regulations
czar Harvard Professor John D. Graham, the founder and director
of a Harvard center that receives most of its money from corporations
and regularly issues reports arguing for the abolition of environmental
and other industry regulations.
How is Nader's willful blindness to the Bush administration's
pervasive corporate welfare to be explained? To begin
with, his political adaptation to right-wing forces in American
politics is not a new development. In his acceptance speech at
the Green Party nominating convention last June, Nader counseled
Green members to curry favor with conservative voters by saying
his campaign championed traditional, not extreme values.
He made a calculated decision to appeal to supporters of Senator
John McCain and backers of even more right-wing political figures.
Nader made common cause with Reform Party presidential candidate
Patrick Buchanan, joining the ultra-right demagogue in protectionist
campaigns against trade agreements with Mexico and China and agitation
against such bodies as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
the World Trade Organization (WTO), which he attacked for subverting
American sovereignty.
American nationalism and defense of the nation state constitute
the political and ideological lynch pin of Nader's perspective.
His opposition to globalization, however radical or left
it might appear at any given moment, is rooted in this profoundly
reactionary standpoint. Far from expressing the social interests
of the working classwhich, in any event, Nader dismisses
as an independent, let alone revolutionary, forcehis criticism
of capitalist organizations such as the WTO and the IMF reflects
the opposition of certain layers of the middle class and sections
of capital least able to compete on the world market. It has nothing
in common with a socialist and internationalist opposition to
global capitalism.
Of particular significance in Nader's Wall Street Journal
article is his praise for Treasury Secretary O'Neill. Nader
lauds the former Alcoa CEO's critical remarks in regard to IMF
bailouts. There is, however, nothing progressive in O'Neill's
perspective. He speaks for sections of American capital that are,
if anything, more nationalistic in their orientation than the
spokesmen for finance capital represented by his Democratic predecessor
Robert Rubin.
O'Neill's statements articulate the tendency strongly expressed
within the Bush administration toward a more unilateralist US
foreign policy, in economic, diplomatic and military affairs.
No section of working people, either in the US or around the world,
will benefit from the implementation of such an aggressively nationalistic
orientation. On the contrary, it portends an even more explosive
and belligerent use of US economic and military power.
Nader, however, is attracted to O'Neill's politics precisely
because of his no nonsense assertion of American
sovereignty. Here one sees the reactionary logic of all
forms of protest based on American nationalism. Nader's evolution
to the right, his capitulation to the extreme right-wing forces
that dominate the Republican Party, is ultimately a function of
his political program and the social forces represented by that
program.
Nader and the Greens do not base themselves on the working
class. On the contrary, they deny that the fundamental division
within society is that between the main social classes, the working
class and the bourgeoisie. They attempt to cobble together a perspective
for social reform and the defense of the environment without challenging
the capitalist system itself. As a result they have no real independence
from the ruling class, and must adapt themselves to one or another
of its factions. As Nader's evolution so clearly demonstrates,
on such a basis neither social reform, nor the defense of the
environment, nor the defense of democratic rights is possible.
See Also:
The US election
crisis: why is Ralph Nader silent?
[24 November 2000]
Green Party presidential
candidate at the University of Michigan
For what social forces does Ralph Nader speak?
[2 November 2000]
Once again, on the
New York Times and the Nader campaign
[11 October 2000]
Extolling the politics
of expediency: an interview with US Green Party leaders
[2 September 2000]
US Green Party candidate
Ralph Nader courts Buchanan supporters
[27 June 2000]
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