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With endorsement of Dean, Gore seeks to revive Democrats and
contain political crisis
By Barry Grey
11 December 2003
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In the media commentarymost of it hostileregarding
former Vice President Al Gores endorsement of Howard Dean
for the Democratic presidential nomination, various explanations
have been given: personal animosity between Gore and the Clintons,
Gores wounded psyche, a Machiavellian scheme to ensure defeat
in 2004 so Gore can emerge as the Democratic savior in 2008, etc.
A host of essentially subjective and secondary issues have
been brought forwardeverything but serious questions of
policy. This predictable response to Gores announcement
only underscores the superficial and unserious approach of the
media to all social and political questions.
Added to this is a pro-Bush bias. The media has been seeking
to maneuver the Democratic nominating process to the advantage
of those candidates least likely to raise any serious differences
with the foreign and domestic policies of Bush and the Republicans.
In the eyes of the media pundits, the rather conservative former
governor of Vermont, who opposed the unilateral invasion of Iraq,
is something of a wild card.
It is impossible to understand any significant political event
simply at the level of personal and subjective motives. These
come into play, but they are, in the end, entirely subordinate
to more profound political and social issues.
Gore is not just any individual. He is the son of a long-time
senator from Tennessee, the scion of a family of the Washington
political establishment, and the Democrats presidential
candidate in 2000. His decision to back the anti-establishment
candidate Dean reflects the thinking not simply of himself, but
of a definite section of the American ruling elite and a faction
within the Democratic Party hierarchy.
Gores endorsement of Dean is the outcome of a conflict
over policy and orientation that has been building within the
Democratic Party for years, and has reached a high point over
the past 15 months. The party is deeply divided over a series
of major issues, the first of which is the war in Iraq.
It is hardly a coincidence that Gores announcement came
only days after Hillary Clinton returned from a trip to Afghanistan
and Iraq not only defending the war and occupation of Iraq, but
calling for more US troops in both countries.
The divisions over the Iraq war, however, are part of a broader
conflict over the general posture of US foreign policy. The more
far-sighted elements within the Democratic Party, and the American
ruling elite as a whole, are alarmed over the implications of
the extreme unilateralism and recklessness that characterize the
foreign policy of the Bush administration.
They see Bush ripping apart the network of international relations
established after the Second World War that served US imperialism
very well, and involving the US in a series of dangerous and costly
wars. Bushs foreign policy, moreover, is accompanied by
an unprecedented assault on traditional bourgeois parliamentary
norms and democratic rights, and a brazen policy of enriching
the financial oligarchy that is bringing social tensions within
the US to the boiling point.
Throughout most of his career in the US Senate, Gore was known
as a hawk on foreign policyhe was one of a handful of Democratic
senators who voted to authorize the senior Bush to attack Iraq
in the first Persian Gulf war. Along with Bill Clinton, he helped
establish the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC), a right-wing
caucus formed in the 1980s to persuade the Democratic Party to
adapt itself to the agenda of Reagan and the Republicans.
In his 2000 presidential run, Gore attempted, in an inconsistent
and half-hearted manner, to distance himself from the Republican-light
policies of Clinton and the DLC. He sought to make a populist
appeal, adopting the slogan for the people, not the powerful,
while maintaining his ties to the right wing of the party, signified
by his choice of Joseph Lieberman as his running mate. By naming
the latter, Gore associated himself with the Republican impeachment
drive against Clinton, which Lieberman had aided with his denunciation
of Clinton over the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal. The divisions
within the Democratic camp emerged in the heat of the election
campaign, when Lieberman criticized Gore for going too far in
denouncing sections of big business.
Despite the timidity of Gores campaign, popular opposition
among broad sections of the working class to Bush and the Republicans
was such that the Democratic candidate won a 500,000 plurality
in the popular vote. When Bush and the Republicans hijacked the
election by suppressing votes in the disputed state of Floridaultimately
turning to the right-wing majority on the US Supreme Court to
consummate the electoral fraudGore and the entire Democratic
Party capitulated without a fight.
In the late summer and fall of 2002, Gore re-emerged in a highly
public campaign clearly designed to prepare the way for a run
for the White House in 2004. In September, he delivered a policy
speech in which he attacked Bushs doctrine of pre-emptive
war and the administrations drive to launch a unilateral
and illegal war against Iraq. He called for congressional Democrats
to vote against a resolution authorizing Bush to take military
action in the Gulf. He also denounced Bushs social policies
and attacks on civil liberties.
The speech met with a combination of ridicule and venom in
the media and stony silence from the Democratic Party establishment.
The following month, the Democratic leadership in both the House
of Representatives and Senate came out in support of Bushs
war resolution, which passed by comfortable margins in both chambers.
Among those Democratic senators who voted for the measure was
Hillary Clinton.
Gore responded to the hostile response from the corporate,
media and political establishment, including his own partys
apparatus, by abruptly announcing in December that he had decided
not to seek the Democratic nomination. He gave as his reason a
desire to avoid reopening the issue of the disputed 2000 election.
However, Gore re-emerged last summer, delivering an acerbic
speech in August denouncing Bushs use of lies to justify
the invasion of Iraq, his recourse to secrecy and cronyism, and
his attacks on democratic rights. He made a further speech in
November, in which he warned of a Big Brother government
and accused Bush of covering up the circumstances surrounding
the events of September 11, 2001.
Both of these speeches were sponsored by MoveOn.org, a liberal
activist group on the left flank of the Democratic Party that
has increasingly identified itself with the campaign for Dean.
Once again, Gores interventions were generally ignored by
both the media and the Democratic Party officialdom.
Gores latest move suggests that heand those with
whom he is workingconcluded that a more dramatic gesture
was needed to alter the trajectory of the Democratic Party. What
events are motivating these increasingly aggressive interventions?
First and foremost is the worsening quagmire in Iraq. But Gore
is also responding to a series of political debacles for the Democratic
Party that have occurred since his first policy speech in September
2002.
The Democrats suffered a disaster in the November 2002 congressional
elections, losing ground in the House of Representatives and ceding
control of the Senate. This was followed by the debacle in California,
when a Republican-led recall resulted in the ouster of Democratic
governor Gray Davisa right-wing politician who was promoted
by the DLC and its ilk as a model Democrat and electoral success
story.
Finally, there was last months Medicare fiasco, when
the congressional Democrats proved unable to mount a serious fight
against a bill aimed a destroying the last remaining cornerstone
of Lyndon Johnsons Great Society.
Gores decision to back Dean has the character of political
triage aimed a saving the Democratic Party from self-destruction
and reviving it as an instrument of bourgeois rule. He is among
those representatives of American capitalism who are highly conscious
of the danger of a mass movement against war and social reaction
developing outside of the control of the bourgeois establishment
and coming under the influence of anti-capitalist, revolutionary
forces.
The general political considerations behind Gores decision
were apparent at the joint appearance of Gore and Dean in the
Harlem section of New York City, where Gore made his announcement
Tuesday morning. The choice of venue was itself significant. It
was intended to portray Dean as an advocate for African-Americans
and other minorities, as well as poor people and working people
as a whole.
In a brief speech, Gore characterized the Dean campaign as
a grass-roots movement to remake the Democratic
Party and take back America on behalf
of the people of this country. He said Dean, of all the
Democratic candidates, had the best chance of defeating Bush in
2004, and singled him out as the only major candidate who
made the correct judgment about the Iraq war.
As always, Gore placed his opposition to the present war within
the framework of support for the war against terror,
asserting that this war has been weakened by the unprovoked assault
on Iraq.
In his remarks, Dean was even more explicit in making a populist
appeal to social and political discontent and disassociating himself
from the more right-wing sections of the Democratic Party. Saying
he was pleased to be in Harlem, he declared that the Democrats
had lost the 2002 congressional elections because they went
after the swing voters. He said his campaign would start
with African-Americans, Latinos, women and trade unionists
and promised he would not campaign on the basis that he had voted
with the president 85 percent of the time.
Notwithstanding such gestures, the very fact that a conservative
politician such as Dean is considered an anti-establishment
radical testifies to the magnitude of the rightward shift of the
Democratic Party and American politics as a whole. If and when
Dean wraps up the Democratic nomination, he will quickly tack
to the right, stressing his credentials as a loyal defender of
US imperialism at home and abroad.
Indeed, he is already moving in that direction. Only hours
after joint appearances with Gore in New York and Iowa, Dean participated
in a televised debate of the nine Democratic hopefuls in New Hampshire
in which he underlined the narrow limits of his foreign policy
differences with Bush and some of his Democratic rivals. He reiterated
his support for the US invasion of Afghanistan and made his most
explicit statement to date endorsing the continued US occupation
of Iraq. The tragedy of what we did in Iraq, which I have
opposed right from the beginning, is that now were stuck
there, he said.
Iraq was not a threat to US security before the war, he added,
but now there is a threat from an Iraq with Al Qaeda in
it or with a fundamentalist Shiite regime which is closely allied
with the Iranians. Pressed by Nightline host Ted
Koppel, Dean declared that US troops would have to remain in Iraq
over a period of a few years.
When challenged by Ohio congressman Dennis Kucinichwhose
slogan is US troops out of Iraq and UN troops into
square opposition to the invasion with support for the occupation
that is the outcome of the invasion, Dean ignored him.
The notion that any section of the Democratic Party can provide
a genuine alternative to the policies of Bush and the Republicans
is an illusion. The White House agenda of militarism and social
reaction is not some accident, nor is it merely the whim of certain
right-wing individuals. It is the response of American capitalism
to insoluble contradictions and the objective necessities of a
social system in crisis.
Any attempt to fashion such an alternative within the framework
of bourgeois politics immediately comes up against the reality
of a massive concentration of wealth and power in the hands of
a financial oligarchy. Only an independent political movement
based on the working class and armed with a socialist program
can break the grip of this elite and open the road to peace, democracy
and social equality.
See Also:
The Medicare fraud and the decay of American
democracy
[9 December 2003]
Gore issues warning over Big
Brother regime in US
[12 November 2003]
Al Gore attacks Bush on Iraq
War
[13 August 2003]
Al Gore and the politics
of oligarchy
[21 December 2002]
Behind the Democrats'
election debacle: growing alienation among US working class voters
[12 November 2002]
Why the Democratic
Party is backing Bush's war drive vs. Iraq
[11 October 2002]
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