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Democrats debate in Detroit: No alternative to Bushs
program of war and reaction
By Patrick Martin
29 October 2003
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The latest debate among nine candidates for the Democratic
presidential nomination, held October 26 in Detroit, provided
another demonstration that the Democratic Party is incapable of
waging a serious struggle against the ultra-right policies of
the Bush administration.
The debate was the fifth to be held since Labor Day, in a series
of media events whose purpose is not to elaborate policies or
examine political issues, but rather to posture before a dwindling
television audience. As always in such events, the aspirants speak
to several audiences at once, sending signals to the media and
ruling class opinion-makers even as they make their appeal to
sections of the electorate. For politicians of the two big business
parties, electoral success depends on gaining the support of financiers
and media moguls whose dollars and favorable coverage can determine
the fate of a campaign long before the primary season begins.
Indicative of the overriding role of big money in US elections,
Senator Bob Graham of Florida withdrew from the contest for the
Democratic presidential nomination in September, four months before
the first primary or caucus. It was not Grahams lack of
support among ordinary voters that forced his exitno votes
will be cast until mid-January. Rather, he was losing the more
important primary, falling to seventh place among the candidates
in terms of fundraising. His war chest of $3 million was deemed
hopelessly inadequate, and he was forced to pull out abruptly.
The very format of the Detroit debate indicated the political
and intellectual superficiality of the event. Questions were determined
by the narrow agenda of the media personalities who made up the
panel. The candidates were limited to one-minute responses and
encouraged to interrupt and attack each othermainly with
one-liners scripted beforehand. Under these conditions, any serious
examination of issues was virtually excluded.
War and occupation in Iraq
On the Iraq war, the candidates reprised largely familiar positions.
Former Vermont governor Howard Dean postured as the only antiwar
candidate, ignoring Congressman Dennis Kucinich, Reverend Al Sharpton
and former senator Carol Moseley Braun, whose positions differ
little from his. Senator Joe Lieberman staked out the most adamant
pro-war position, with retired general Wesley Clark, Senator John
Kerry, Senator John Edwards and Congressman Richard Gephardt taking
intermediate positions.
All of the Democrats criticized Bush for failing to win international
support for the conquest of Iraq, with the result that US troops
are bearing nearly the entire burden of the military occupation.
All endorsed the deployment of peacekeeping forces
under United Nations auspices, with Kerry making perhaps the crassest
statement of the logic of this position. You have to take
the target off of American troops, he said, meaning that
the bulls-eye should be transferred from US soldiers to
Turkish, Pakistani or other third-country soldiers wearing UN
blue helmets.
Kerry and Edwards engaged in contortions to explain why it
was correct for them to vote one year ago for the congressional
resolution giving Bush authority to wage war on Iraq, while voting
last week against the administrations $87 billion request
to fund the occupation resulting from the war. Edwards declared
that he voted against the funding bill because it would give Bush
a blank check. But a year ago he voted to give Bush a blank check
to sacrifice the lives of American soldiers and tens of thousands
of Iraqis.
Gephardt defended his vote for the $87 billion to fund the
occupation of Iraq, despite his claim that the Bush administrations
policy was a failure. In the end, youre presented
in the Congress with a vote, up or down, on the $87 billion,
he said. And I cant find it within myself to not vote
for the money to support the troops, our young men and women who
are over there protecting us, dodging bullets in a very tough
and difficult situation.
This is an overt capitulation to the Bush administrations
propaganda, which condemns all opposition to US military aggression
as unpatriotic and tantamount to support for terrorism.
Gephardts statement is absurd on its face, since American
soldiers in Iraq are not protecting usi.e.,
the American people, who face no threat from that country. The
only Americans at risk are the soldiers themselves, who are dodging
bullets only because Bush sent them to conquer Iraq in the
first place.
Kucinich reiterated his call to get the UN in and the
US out, declaring that the United Nations should handle
Iraqs oil revenues, award reconstruction contracts and direct
the establishment of a new government. Thus, even the most antiwar
Democrat supports imperialist control of Iraq, as long as it is
exercised in partnership with powers such as France, Germany and
Russia, rather than unilaterally by the United States.
The second half of the Detroit debate, focusing on domestic
policy, provided a few exchanges or statements worth noting. The
overall tenor of the discussion was demagogic, with promises of
millions of jobs, universal health insurance, and more funding
for education, the cities and social programs generally. But several
remarks shed a more authentic light on the conformist and conservative
character of the candidates policies.
The most significant comment came from Dean, who in the initial
stages of his campaign seized on the phraseinitially identified
with the late liberal senator Paul Wellstonethat he was
running to represent the Democratic wing of the Democratic
Party. This was supposed to mean that he advocated a return
to the policies of liberal reform with which the Democratic Party
was once associated, and rejected the New Democrat
posture identified with Bill Clinton.
In Sundays debate, Dean revived the slogan but deliberately
emptied it of any hint of a return to social reformism. He said,
I started out this campaign saying I was from the Democratic
wing of the Democratic Party, which Paul Wellstone said. And I
didnt mean that I was a big liberal, I was a big conservative,
I was a big moderate. What I meant was, just like Paul Wellstone,
I say what I think, and I dont care if 70 percent of the
people in this country disagree with me, as long as I believe
its the right thing to do.
Most viewers would have had difficulty disentangling the syntax
of this comment, let alone grasping its political meaning. But
for the powers that be in the Democratic Party, the message was
clear. Dean is disavowing any identification with the left-liberal
pretenses of a Wellstone, in favor of a more centrist
position: balancing the federal budget, reining in spending on
entitlement programs, and channeling public opposition to the
war in Iraq into support for a UN fig leaf for the US occupation.
Dean extended another olive branch to the party establishment,
declaring in his closing statement, The people on this stage
with me have over three-quarters of a century of experience in
Washington. And if one of them wins the nomination, believe me,
Im going to do everything I can to make sure they become
the next president of the United States. This declaration
of party loyalty exposed the unprincipled character of Deans
opposition to the war in Iraq, since both Lieberman and Gephardt
have consistently supported the Bush administrations war
drive. Deans statement was not reciprocated by Lieberman,
who might very well sit out the election or support Bush outright
should an antiwar candidate win the Democratic nomination.
Kucinich, the most left-talking of the Democratic candidates,
called for immediate US withdrawal from Iraq, a vast public works
program to create jobs, universal health insurance, universal
pre-kindergarten and free universal college education.
But his essential role as an American nationalist and defender
of the profit system showed through in one comment, in which he
called for the repeal of NAFTA and other agreements opening US
markets to foreign trade. Kucinich concluded, My economic
program will address things like this: the sale of United States
steel assets to foreign countries which are undermining our ability
to defend our economy and to defend our national security.
Kucinich, the former mayor of Cleveland, might oppose a war
for oil, but he is quite capable of taking a different position
on a war for steel. His economic protectionism reflects, in the
final analysis, not the interests of steelworkers in Cleveland,
but the profit drive of the steel bosses and their servants in
the United Steelworkers union bureaucracy.
John Edwards made a revealing comment in reply to a question
about the USA Patriot Act. He was asked how he could blame Attorney
General John Ashcroft for repressive measures carried out under
the new law when he had voted for the legislation and helped draft
it in Congress. Edwards answered, The attorney general of
the United States came before us and told us that he would not
abuse his discretion. He has abused his discretion. He has consistently
abused his discretion. We all know that now. These provisions
need to be changed.
This posture of the congressional Democrats as a band of innocents,
cruelly deceived by John Ashcroft, is more than a little ludicrous.
Edwards is an experienced courtroom interrogator, a multimillionaire
trial lawyer who made his fortune in legal combat with some of
the largest and most ruthless corporations in America. In early
2001 he voted against confirming Ashcroft as attorney general,
citing concerns over Ashcrofts far-right record on civil
liberties. Yet now Edwards suggests that no one could have known,
in October 2001, that it was dangerous to give so much power to
Ashcrofts Justice Department!
The congressional Democrats have sought to justify every capitulation
to the Bush administration on such specious groundstheir
support for the Bush tax cuts, their endorsement of No Child
Left Behind Law, now ravaging public education, their vote
for the Iraq war resolution, their support for the bill funding
the Iraq occupation. In truth, the Democratic Party has no stomach
for a serious conflict with the Bush administration and the Republicans.
When push comes to shove, both parties defend the wealth and power
of the US ruling elite.
The Bush administration
Several of the presidential candidates referred to aspects
of the Bush White House that point to its conspiratorial and antidemocratic
character. Yet none of them drew the conclusion that Bush &
Co. should be removed from office for trampling on democratic
rights at home and international law abroad.
General Wesley Clark, for instance, declared, Right after
9/11, this administration determined to do bait and switch on
the American public. President Bush said he was going to get Osama
bin Laden, dead or alive. Instead, he went after Saddam Hussein.
He doesnt have either one of them today.
Clark reiterated his support for the invasion and conquest
of Afghanistan, saying, The failure of this administration
was not to put the troops in to finish the job against Osama bin
Laden. He continued: And you know why they didnt
do it? They didnt do it because, all along, their plan was
to save those troops to go after Saddam Hussein.
Dean said, The president tried to make us think that
Al Qaeda had somethingthat Saddam Hussein had something
to do with 9/11. Three weeks ago he admitted there was no evidence
for that.
If one takes such comments seriously, then Bush should be impeached,
removed from office and indicted as a war criminal for causing
hundreds of deaths of American soldiers and thousands of deaths
in Iraq by lying to the American people and the world about the
necessity of going to war.
A reporter for the World Socialist Web Site questioned
a number of the Democratic candidates after the debate on this
subject, asking them whether the lies used to engineer the war
could serve as the grounds for the impeachment of Bush. (None
of the nine had mentioned the subject in the course of the debate,
although former candidate Bob Graham raised the issue during the
summer.)
Gephardt replied by reiterating his agreement with the claims
that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, even though none
have been found in the seven months since the US invasion began.
I dont listen to George Bush, Gephardt said.
I went directly to the CIA and they told me that they had
concerns about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and components
for weapons of mass destruction. If this information was
wrong, he said, it showed the need to beef up US intelligence
services to correct the problem.
Carol Moseley Braun called impeachment a good question,
but gave no direct answer. We should look at the results
of the investigations going on and give it serious attention,
she said.
Kucinich flatly rejected impeachment, not on the grounds that
it was impractical, but because Impeachment would mean Congress
choosing the president. My focus is on the election, nothing else.
In other words, none of the Democrats, despite their Bush-bashing
rhetoric for popular consumption, has any intention of waging
a serious struggle against the Bush administration. That task
requires the development of a mass political movement of the working
class, independent of and opposed to both the Democratic and Republican
parties.
See Also:
Democratic candidates back
Bushs Iraq war spending bill
[29 September 2003]
US Congress passes $368 billion
for Pentagon war machine
[26 September 2003]
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