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Californias Governor Davis denounces right-wing
power grab
By Bill Vann
25 August 2003
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In a speech delivered to supporters at the University of California
Los Angeles on August 19, Californias governor Gray Davis
denounced the attempt to overturn the results of last Novembers
election by means of a recall ballot as a right-wing power
grab.
This recall is bigger than California, Davis declared.
Whats happening here is part of an ongoing national
effort to steal elections Republicans cannot win.
The governor linked the recall effort, initiated and financed
by right-wing Republican politicians, to a chain of political
events beginning with the drive to impeach President Clinton in
1998-1999. It continued in Florida, where they stopped the
vote count, depriving thousands of Americans of the right to vote,
he said, referring to the theft of the 2000 election that placed
Bush in the White House.
This year, theyre trying to steal additional congressional
seats in Colorado and Texas, overturning legal redistricting plans,
Davis continued. Here in California, the Republicans lost
the governors race last November. Now theyre trying
to use this recall to seize control of California just before
the next presidential election.
In a speech that was otherwise characterized by banalities
and duplicitous justifications for his own administrations
reactionary policies, Davis dropped what amounted to a political
bombshell. His description of the sinister political process that
is at work in California and nationwide essentially portrayed
the party that now controls the White House and both houses of
the US Congress as an organized political conspiracy against the
democratic rights of the American people.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) has vigorously opposed the
recall drive, and is fighting to mobilize working people in California
to defeat it. It has condemned the recall as a bid by a wealthy,
neo-fascistic layer within the Republican Party to exploit the
anger of Californians over the breakdown in basic social services
and the growth of unemployment for completely reactionary purposes.
The aim of those who organized and financed the recall is to overturn
the results of last Novembers election in order to install
a new state government that will pursue economic and political
policies that are even more regressive than those of Davis and
the Democrats.
In carrying out this campaign, the SEP is giving no support
to Davis, Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante, who has made himself
a candidate in the recall, or the Democratic Party as a whole.
It has endorsed John Christopher Burton, a Los Angeles civil rights
attorney and SEP supporter who is on the ballot as a non-partisan
candidate. Burton is advancing a socialist program aimed at resolving
Californias crisis in the interests of working people.
In its statement issued earlier this month endorsing Burtons
candidacy, the SEP declared: The current drive to unseat
Davis is a continuation of the efforts of right-wing Republicans
to undermine democratic rightsincluding the right to voteand
subvert democratic political processes. This was the essential
content of the impeachment drive against Bill Clinton, which was
followed by electoral fraud in Florida and the theft of the 2000
presidential election. All of these conspiracies are directed,
in the final analysis, against the democratic rights of the working
class.
The SEP has a long record of fighting to expose this conspiracy
against democratic rights. For his part, Davis has none. He did
not speak out against either the impeachment of Clinton or the
theft of the 2000 election when they occurred. He and his advisors
have decided to raise these issues only because he has himself
fallen victim to these same political methods.
Media, Republicans and Greens blast Daviss
speech
The response from the media and his political opponents from
both sides of the official political spectrum to his raising these
questions was virtually unanimous condemnation.
The editorial pages of Californias dailies wrote in lock-step
that Daviss speech was a disappointment because of his failure
to apologize to the electorate for the budget and
energy crises that developed under his administration. They largely
dismissed his references to the national political context within
which the California recall campaign has emerged as irrelevant
and an attempt to evade responsibility.
The San Francisco Chronicle attacked the speech as an
all-too-predictable partisan call to arms, while the
state political correspondent for the Los Angeles Times
headlined his column, Davis falls flat.
One of Daviss right-wing Republican challengers, Bill
Simon, who has since dropped out of the race, commented: What
we heard is its somebody elses fault, it is a conspiracy,
it is President Bush, it is the national economy, it is everything
but Gray Davis himself. He rejected the Governors
charge about a right-wing power grab, declaring that
the recall represented a grass-roots movement to institute
accountability on a governor whos completely blind to the
will of the people.
Green candidate Peter Camejo, who ostensibly is opposing Davis
from the left, echoed Simons sentiments, declaring
Daviss claims of a Republican conspiracy just not
true. He too suggested that the recall represented some
legitimate expression of mass public opinion, declaring, The
Republicans did not fix the polls that showed he [Davis] was at
22 percent approval.
The attempt by the Republicans and Greens alike to cast the
California recall as a grassroots movement for change
is a patent fraud. Without some $3 million invested by right-wing
Republicansthe bulk of which came out of the pocket of multi-millionaire
Republican Congressman and car alarm mogul Darrell Issathe
attempt to put the recall on the ballot would have gone nowhere
in 2003, just as similar efforts failed against several previous
governors.
That the right has been able to exploit widespread hostility
to the policies of the Davis government does not make the attempt
to remove a sitting governor just nine months after his reelection
an expression of popular will. The popular hostility to Davis
is rooted in the reactionary policies pursued by the state government
to place the full burden of the fiscal crisis confronting the
state on the backs of Californias working people, and in
particular the most oppressed layers of the population, through
service cuts and regressive taxes. But the aim of those pushing
the recall is to intensify this assault.
Arianna Huffington, the media personality who has
agreed to campaign jointly with Camejo, issued a typically unserious
statement, simultaneously dismissing the notion that any political
conspiracy was involved in either the Republican campaign for
recall or the attempt to impeach Clinton. Describing Daviss
remarks as boilerplate, she stated, I liked
the speech better when Bill Clinton gave it in 1998.
What Davis described in his speech, a nationwide drive to overturn
elections and rig the political system, is a deadly serious matter.
At stake are the democratic rights of hundreds of millions as
well as control of political and economic policies that will directly
affect the employment, income and social welfare of the masses
of working people in the US.
It is certainly not just Huffington who treats these issues
as a joke. The mass media dealt with the Clinton impeachment largely
as a sex scandal and has played the events in Texaswhere
Democratic state lawmakers were forced to flee the state to avoid
being dragged by police into a session designed to gerrymander
congressional districts and US House majority leader Tom Delay
sought to enlist the Homeland Security Department to pursue themas
farce. The focus on California has been to ridicule the recall
as a circus because of the unusually large number
of candidates.
The hostility to Davis on the part of those who have organized
the recall has a radically different source than that of the average
California working person. The Republican right is determined
to remove every impediment to corporate profit and the personal
enrichment of those at top of the social pyramid.
While criticizing Davis for mishandling the energy crisis of
2000-2001, they back the very same energy corporations like Enron
that criminally defrauded the state in a drive to boost profits
and share values. While denouncing Davis for running up the states
budget deficit, they are politically aligned with the Bush administration,
which has off-loaded the national fiscal crisis on to all of the
state governments in order to finance massive tax giveaways to
the rich.
What Davis left unsaid
While Davis accused his opponents of trampling over basic democratic
procedures as part of a national drive to amass power in the hands
of the Republicans, he made no attempt to explain why this is
taking place or spell out the political motives behind this right-wing
power grab. He did not warn that those promoting recall
are bent on effecting a massive transfer of wealth from the working
majority to those in the top income bracket.
Moreover, the contrast between the burning importance of the
issues that Davis raised about the political conspiracy underlying
the recall and the tone in which he delivered his remarks was
painfully evident for anyone who sat through the speech. The media
has attributed this contradiction to Daviss wooden
style, his lack of charisma. But there was something else at work.
Behind the governors silly grins, he appeared almost embarrassed
by the incendiary content of his remarks, and in particular by
the impassioned reaction of his audience, much of it consisting
of workers brought to the speech by unions that support the Democratic
governor.
This is certainly not Daviss core constituency. The special
interests that he has cultivated most assiduously are the
same corporations and financial elite that are represented by
the Republicans who engineered the recall in order to unseat him.
He cannot conduct a frontal assault on the economic and political
agenda that would be pursued by Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tom McClintock
or Peter Ueberroth, because he knows that the difference between
the policies they would implement and those that he himself will
impose is only a matter of degree.
Demographically, the Republicans see California, and indeed
the country as a whole, slipping away from them. The anti-immigrant
demagogy that was the partys stock-in-trade in the 1980s
and early 1990swhen then-Governor Pete Wilson and current
candidate Schwarzenegger both backed Proposition 187 to deny all
essential services to undocumented workers and their childrenhas
backfired on them as the ranks of registered immigrant voters
have swelled.
The recall campaign, like the tactics used to steal the election
in Florida nearly three years ago and the attempts to redraw district
lines in Texas today, are a measure of the increasing desperation
of these forces and their determination to use undemocratic means
to keep control and beat back what they see as a rising danger
from a turn to the left by the masses of working people. In particular,
the Republicans have adopted the position that no election is
final. If the results go against them, they will utilize their
almost unlimited campaign funds and their control over levers
of power to overturn the popular vote.
They are able to employ such methods to great effect precisely
because they face a Democratic Party that is incapable of opposing
the right-wing Republican program and is largely indifferent to
the onslaught against democratic rights. It nearly allowed the
Republicans to unseat Clinton based on a groundless impeachment,
accepted the theft of the 2000 presidential vote, and in 2002
adopted a position of not opposing Bush on war or any other basic
questionthe strategy that led to its rout in the midterm
elections.
If Davis and the Democrats can defeat the recall initiative
and maintain control in Sacramento, it will not hold back the
reactionary attacks on social conditions and basic democratic
rights in California in any significant way. Under conditions
of unprecedented polarization between a narrow financial elite
on the one hand and the vast majority of the population on the
other, the Democrats, like the Republicans, will defend the interests
of the former at the expense of the latter.
The defense of democratic rights and the reversal of the reactionary
social policies that are being enacted in California and throughout
the country depend upon the independent political mobilization
of working people. That is the decisive objective of the SEPs
campaign in California.
See Also:
A letter from John Christopher Burton,
socialist candidate in California, to Tonight Show
host Jay Leno
[23 August 2003]
California recall exposes political myths
[18 August 2003]
Socialist candidate John Christopher
Burton placed on ballot in California recall election
[12 August 2003]
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