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Statement of the Socialist Equality Party presidential candidate
Kerry-Edwards: Democrats finalize their pro-war, millionaires
ticket
By Bill Van Auken
7 July 2004
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The following statement was issued by the presidential candidate
of the SEP in response to John Kerrys announcement Tuesday
that his former rival for the Democratic presidential nomination,
North Carolina Senator John Edwards, will be his running mate.
With the selection of Senator John Edwards as its vice presidential
nominee, the Democratic Party has assembled a pro-war ticket composed
of two multi-millionaires.
The choice of Edwards as Kerrys running mate marks another
step in the political disenfranchisement of huge numbers of voters.
They include the many thousands who participated in the Democratic
primaries earlier this year, mistakenly seeing in the partys
nomination process a means to end the criminal war initiated by
the Bush administration against Iraq.
With polls showing substantial majorities opposing the war
and nearly half of the populationand a clear majority of
Democratic voterscalling for the immediate withdrawal of
all US troops from Iraq, the Democrats are fielding two candidates
who are every bit as committed as Bush to continuing Washingtons
colonial enterprise and the daily carnage suffered by the Iraqi
people as well as the US troops sent to occupy the country.
The media reaction to the Edwards choice was predictable: a
barrage of banalities about the wealthy trial lawyers supposed
fresh-faced charisma and southern appeal.
Whatever role such cosmetic calculations played in the decision
to tap Edwards, they were entirely secondary. The principal consideration
was that Edwards is a man whose political views are fully in sync
with the interests of Americas financial oligarchy.
With Edwards personal wealth estimated as high as $60
million and the Kerry family fortune reaching into the hundreds
of millions, the Democrats have managed to field a ticket that
leaves George Bush the poorest candidate from either major party
running in the national election. Nothing could more clearly expose
the tattered myth that the Democrats are the party of the
people. The Kerry-Edwards ticket demonstrates once again
the iron grip of big money over the entire US two-party system.
Edwards was a co-sponsor of the 2002 legislation granting the
Bush administration a blank check to launch the unprovoked war
against Iraq, a measure also supported by Kerry. He was among
the most vociferous in proclaiming the supposed imminent threat
posed by Saddam Husseins non-existent weapons of mass
destruction.
Six months before the war began, Edwards distinguished himself
by arguing against those who demanded that the Bush administration
obtain UN sanction for its military aggression. The US could not
tie our own hands by requiring Security Council action,
he wrote in September 2003, warning his Senate colleagues not
to try to micromanage a war from Capitol Hill. In
other words, Congress was obliged to cede to Bush unlimited powers
to launch a war based on lies that Edwards himself helped spread.
During the Democratic primaries, Edwards, like Kerry, claimed
that he had been deceived by the Bush administration and vaguely
adapted himself to antiwar sentiment in order to better derail
the campaign of Howard Dean, which had attracted a layer of supporters
seeking to make the war the central issue in the 2004 election.
They worked out a division of labor with Connecticut Senator Joseph
Lieberman, the candidate who most openly supported the warand
consequently the least popular in the Democratic field.
Significantly, all threeKerry, Edwards and Liebermanare
members of the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC), the right-wing
Democratic Party organization that has championed the Iraq war
as well as reactionary social policies that are virtually indistinguishable
from those advanced by the Republican Party.
Now, both Kerry and Edwards have publicly embraced the policies
on Iraqthoroughly rejected in the primariesof Lieberman,
who was at that time the DLC-endorsed candidate. More recently,
Kerry penned an opinion piece for the July 4 Washington Post
arguing for more troops to deal with the popular resistance to
the occupation.
Like the Bush administration, the DLC predicates its foreign
and military policy on the pretense that the US is engaged in
a global war on terrorism that will last for decades. Its principal
document on these issues declares, We reject the lefts
perennial complaint that America spends too much on the military.
This is no time to cut the Pentagons budget. This,
under conditions in which the Pentagons official budget
has ballooned to $455 billion and estimates of real US military
spending range higher than $700 billion.
Edwards, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has
distinguished himself in these circles by arguing that the Bush
administration has not taken stringent enough measures regarding
homeland security. Like Kerry, he voted for the USA
Patriot Act, the legislation that has been used to initiate sweeping
attacks on basic democratic rights. He goes even further, however,
arguing for the creation of the countrys first domestic
intelligence organization, commonly known in other countries
as the political police.
The Democrats propose to use Edwards to make a quasi-populist
appeal for votes. They invoke his humble originshis
father was a supervisor in a textile milland his folksy
rhetoric, cultivated during his years as a personal injury lawyer,
when it was employed to win multi-million-dollar judgments and
huge lawyers fees. In announcing his selection of Edwards,
Kerry evoked the North Carolina senators primary-season
rhetoric about the great divide in this countrythe
two Americas that exists between those who are
doing well and those who are struggling to make it from day to
day.
Aside from the fact that both Kerry and Edwards stand quite
firmly on the side of the divide that is doing more than well,
this populism is empty and cynical. It is impossible to oppose
the attacks on working people in the US while supporting the predatory
war being waged by the Bush administration in Iraq. These are
two sides of the same political agenda, one that is aimed at further
enriching the corporate and financial elite by plundering the
resources of both the US and the world.
The war in Iraq, and the so-called war on terror
of which it is supposedly a part, both of which Kerry and Edwards
support, provide a rationale for diverting hundreds of billions
of dollars from desperately needed domestic needs to military
spending and an unprecedented buildup of police and security forces.
The price is being paid by the working people, who are seeing
what remains of health care benefits, public education subsidies
and retirement programs gutted to finance the ever-expanding military
budget. At the same time, the eruption of US militarism abroad
is used to justify an unprecedented assertion of presidential
war-time powers and a frontal assault on democratic
rights.
Kerry and Edwards are incapable of advancing any policies that
address the crisis confronting hundreds of millions of Americans
as a result of rising unemployment, declining living standards
and the destruction of social benefits. Edwards made a point in
his primary campaign of attacking his rivalsincluding Kerryfor
promoting the idea of a right to health care. People need
to know the truth about what we can afford and what we cant
afford, he protested. The we in this case is
the ruling elite of multi-millionaires and billionaires whom he
represents politically and embodies personally.
In a statement posted on the DLC web site last January, entitled
The right kind of populism, the organization spelled
out precisely the limits of the populism practiced by Edwards.
It consists, the DLC says, of a unifying, forward-looking
policy agenda that places the national interest, as embodied in
the values and aspirations of the great American middle class,
above special interests, including those operating through government,
who seek to use public policies to feather their own nests.
This is the kind of populism that lumps together
war profiteering by Halliburton with extended benefits for the
unemployed or relief for the destitute as special interests
at odds with the national interest.
The article contrasts this fraudulentand therefore acceptablepopulist
rhetoric with what it terms a populism based on a reactionary
call for class warfare and a belief that capitalism
itself is fatally flawed.
One would suppose that class warfare is some foreign idea being
foisted upon the great American middle class. On the
contrary, a largely one-sided class war has been waged by the
financial oligarchy for more than two decades, resulting in the
steady transfer of wealth from the vast majority of working people
to a relative handful of super-rich. The Democratic Party, aided
by the sclerotic scoundrels within the trade union bureaucracy,
have worked to assure that no coherent struggle be waged by those
on the receiving end of this violent assault.
This effort has gone into high gear with the onset of the election
season. The Democrats are using all their political muscle to
deny voters the right to support anyone challenging them from
the left, maneuvering to prevent candidates of the Socialist Equality
Party as well as other third-party and independent candidates
from appearing on the 2004 ballot. The underlying assumption is
that if they are successful, those who oppose Bush will have no
choice but to cast a vote for the Democratic candidates, no matter
how similar their policies are to those of the Republicans.
The differences between the two big business parties are essentially
of a tactical character. If Kerry-Edwards are selected to replace
Bush-Cheney it will, in the final analysis, represent a change
of personnel at the top, carried out in order to more effectively
pursue class war at home and military aggression abroad. Former
Chrysler corporation chairman Lee Iacocca spelled out the thinking
within growing sections of the financial oligarchy by endorsing
Kerry and declaring, The bottom line is simple: we need
a new CEO and a new president.
Should such a change take place, millions who voted for the
Democrats under the false impression that the replacement of Bush
would signal an end to war and the amelioration of unemployment
and social deprivation be cruelly disappointed, and will quickly
find themselves in conflict with the new government.
The Socialist Equality Party is intervening in the 2004 election
to prepare for the inevitable social and political struggles that
lie ahead, no matter which of these two parties control the White
House in 2005. We insist that nothing will be gained by replacing
the criminals of the Republican administration with the scoundrels
of the Democratic Party.
The interests and desires of the vast majority of the American
people find no expression in either of these parties. The working
people are politically disenfranchised. Our campaignthat
of my vice presidential running mate Jim Lawrence and myself nationally,
and those being waged by Senate, congressional and local candidates
of the SEP in different parts of the countryoffers the only
way forward for the tens of millions of working people, students,
professionals and youth searching for a new political road in
the fight against imperialist war abroad and social reaction at
home.
Our campaign starts from the unpostponable necessity of building
an independent mass political movement, founded on a socialist
program that seeks to unite working people of every country in
a common struggle against global capitalism.
We urge all those seeking a means to fight back against the
criminal policies of the Bush administration and its Democratic
Party accomplices to join our campaign, participate in the struggle
to overcome the anti-democratic obstacles to placing our candidates
on the ballot, and make the decision to join and build the Socialist
Equality Party.
See Also:
Democrats, Republicans to spend $1 billion
in US presidential campaign
[6 July 2004]
The struggle against war and
the 2004 US elections
[27 April 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections: Bill Van Auken for president Jim
Lawrence for vice president
[28 April 2004]
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