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Kerry, Edwards lead in first contest of Democratic presidential
campaign
By Patrick Martin
21 January 2004
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Monday nights caucuses in Iowa, the official beginning
of the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination, were
won by Massachusetts senator John Kerry, who received 38 percent
of the vote, with North Carolina senator John Edwards, the runner-up,
receiving 32 percent. Former Vermont governor Howard Dean, the
frontrunner in fundraising and national opinion polls, placed
a poor third, with 18 percent of the vote. Congressman Richard
Gephardt was a badly beaten fourth, at 11 percent, and pulled
out of the race the next day.
In analyzing an event such as the Iowa caucuses, it is always
necessary to keep in mind that the Democratic Party is one of
the two main political institutions of American capitalism. It
serves the interests of the financial oligarchy, and the ruling
elite is deeply concerned with the selection of the candidate
who may well, if circumstances warrant it, replace George Bush
in the White House.
For all the attempts by the Republican Party and the media
to present Bushs reelection as an inevitability, there are
serious divisions within the American ruling class, and fears
that the recklessness of the Bush administration, in both foreign
and domestic policy, has set the stage for disaster. A debacle
in Iraq or Afghanistan, or a major financial crisis at home, could
lead to a rapid collapse in political support for a government
that was installed, not through the popular vote, but through
the undemocratic intervention of the Supreme Court.
All the more reason for care in selecting the presidential
nominee of the Democratic Party. Before entrusting any individual
with the executive power of the American government for the next
four years, the ruling elite puts them through their paces. This
involves a process of political competition among the candidates
and manipulation of public opinion through the mass media, which
is not an exact science and has many uncertainties. But notwithstanding
such complexities, in the final analysis the ruling elite will
choose the presidential candidate of the Democratic Party. Iowa
was the first step in that decision.
It has been clear for several months that there are grave reservations
about Dean in ruling circles. His campaign peaked several weeks
before Iowa with the endorsements by former vice president Al
Gore and former senator Bill Bradley, the two major candidates
for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2000. But Dean has
been under relentless attack in the media since the New Year began,
and this certainly had its impact in Iowa.
The concerns over Dean relate not so much to his political
program, including his avowed opposition to the war, which is
well within the prescribed parameters of bourgeois politics. Dean
has made it clear that he opposes withdrawal of US forces from
Iraq and supports the Bush administrations broader campaign
of military intervention all over the world, the so-called war
on terror.
From the standpoint of the ruling elite, Deans campaign,
fueled by an upsurge of antiwar sentiment and the mobilization
of a section of college-age youth, represents something of an
unknown quantity. With the Democratic Party so lacking in any
genuine popular base, the impact of such a campaign is unpredictable.
So is Dean himselfthe long-time governor of a tiny state,
with a population smaller than that of a mid-sized city, who has
operated largely outside the scrutiny of the political and media
establishment.
The television networks, the big newsweeklies, and most important
daily newspapers all published scathing critiques of the Dean
campaign. In some cases, as in an editorial by the Washington
Post, the media openly branded Dean out of the mainstream
of US politics. For the most part, such sentiments were attributed
to Deans rivals within the Democratic Partyalthough
the White House and the Republican National Committee also made
their contribution.
This criticism focused not only on political remarks considered
beyond the pale, such as Deans commentstating an obvious
truththat the American people were no safer following the
capture of Saddam Hussein. It became increasingly personal and
vituperative, directed at his choleric temperament and even at
his relationship with his wife, an MD who is continuing her practice
while her husband campaigns.
The media barrage had its impact both on the Iowa campaign
and on the candidate himself. Dean adapted to the criticism by
shifting to the right. He virtually effaced the differences between
his position on the war and that of rivals such as Clark, Kerry
and Edwardsdifferences that were not all that great in the
first place, since Dean supports the US occupation of Iraq.
Deans personal appearances in Iowa became increasingly
problematic. He engaged in a televised shouting match with an
elderly Bush supporter who challenged him at a campaign event.
He appeared flummoxed when attacked during the final Iowa debate
by Al Sharpton about his record on hiring minorities for top state
offices in Vermont (which has virtually no black or Hispanic population).
Media coverage of the Iowa caucuses generally depicted the
affair as an example of democracy at its finest. In fact, the
122,000 who attended the caucuses for Kerry, Edwards, Dean and
Gephardt were fewer than the number attending in 1988, the last
multi-candidate Democratic contest, between Gephardt, Michael
Dukakis, Al Gore and Paul Simon.
Terry Neal, online political columnist for washingtonpost.com,
was one of the few commentators to puncture the pretense. He wrote
January 20, after a week in Iowa: For all the talk about
how engaged people here are in the political process, you almost
never meet a person outside of campaign events who professes much
enthusiasm or interest in the process. To put this thing in perspective,
no matter what the turnout is, itll be a pittance of the
half-million registered Democrats in a state of nearly three million
people. Given that, its a little astonishing how much media
attention the results will get.
As for the claims that the Iowa caucus-goers were carefully
weighing the political programs and capabilities of the candidates,
there is far more evidence that very few political distinctions
were drawn, and that many people voted on the basis of superficial
considerations: the tone of candidates ads,
how they looked when they criticized their opponents, even their
physical appearance.
There were some attempts in the media to suggest that the Iowa
vote signified a shift to the right among Democratic voters. One
AP dispatch said flatly, referring to Dean, His anti-war,
antiestablishment message didnt resonate. Des Moines
Register political columnist David Yepsen claimed that Kerry
and Edwards were moderate alternatives to the more liberal Gephardt
and Dean.
But there is no reason to believe such claims. There were few
clear distinctions among the candidates on either foreign or domestic
policy. Entrance polls showed that 75 percent of the caucus goers
opposed the war in Iraq and 50 percent strongly opposed the war.
The most widespread sentiment was hostility to the Bush administration
and Bush personally. Yet, more of those voting backed Kerrywho
supported Bushs war resolutionthan Dean and Dennis
Kucinich, who opposed it.
Similarly, on social and economic questions, both Kerry and
Edwards focused their last week of campaigning on populist appeals
to the concerns of working-class and middle-class families. Both
postured as militant opponents of the policies of the Bush administration
on education, health care, tax cuts for the wealthy and attacks
on environmental protection laws.
The outcome of the contest for the Democratic nomination remains
to be determined. Kerry, Edwards and Dean immediately flew to
New Hampshire, whose primary will take place next Tuesday, January
27. Dean is leading in the polls there, trailed by retired general
Wesley Clark, who skipped the Iowa campaign. New Hampshire is
followed by seven states holding caucuses and primaries on February
3, and the contest could continue until March 2, when primaries
in California, New York, Ohio and other states complete the choosing
of the bulk of the delegates.
Two weeks before the Iowa caucuses, the campaign was said to
have boiled down to two tiers: Dean and Gephardt battling for
first place; Kerry and Edwards vying for third place, with the
loser likely to be forced out. But Gephardts campaign essentially
collapsed, demonstrating the utter prostration of the trade union
bureaucracy.
Some 21 industrial unions backed Gephardts candidacy,
based largely on the promise of protectionist measures against
foreign imports. According to polls of those entering the Iowa
caucuses, Gephardt won only 22 percent of the union voteand
only 11 percent overallin a state that he had won in the
1988 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.
The media gushed over Gephardts appearances with Teamsters
president James Hoffa, who barnstormed through the state with
a coterie of well-stuffed union officials and their bodyguards,
but this did not cut much ice with rank-and-file workers in any
union.
There was one more sidelight to the Iowa caucuses. Several
hours before the caucuses began, a spokesman for Rep. Dennis Kucinich
of Ohio, who placed fifth in the contest with 2 percent of the
vote, announced he had struck a deal with Senator Edwards for
mutual support in those precincts where Edwards or Kucinich did
not reach the 15 percent required to win a delegate.
The Kucinich spokesman said that all the other candidates had
sought such an agreement. He did not explain why Kucinich, avowedly
the most fervent opponent of the war, would reach a vote-swapping
agreement with Edwards, who voted to authorize the war, except
to say that Edwards had a positive message and that
Kucinich likes him a lot.
See Also:
In the runup to the Iowa Democratic caucuses:
The Stop Dean campaign and the divisions in the American
political establishment
[14 January 2004]
Presidential hopeful Howard Dean speaks
in Detroit: reformism without reforms
[12 January 2004]
Kucinich, Sharpton
and the WSWS: letters and a reply
[13 October 2003]
Democratic candidates
back Bushs Iraq war spending bill
[29 September 2003]
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