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After the 2004 elections: the political and social crisis
will intensify
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site editorial
board
3 November 2004
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The reelection of George W. Bush, achieved largely through
the mobilization of the evangelical Christian vote on the basis
of overtly religious appeals, will have far-reaching and disastrous
consequences for American democracy.
Notwithstanding the platitudes and bromides dispensed by Senator
John Kerry in his stereotypical concession speech, the results
of the 2004 election will not give rise to a rebirth of national
unity. The 2004 election represents a further stage in the decay
and crisis of the American political system. It is the culmination
of a strategy, developed by the Republicans over the past three
decades, of cultivating religious fundamentalists to create a
mass base for social reaction and militarism. The corporate and
financial oligarchy has fashioned its own Frankenstein monstera
force whose political and social agenda is incompatible with the
secular constitutional foundations of the United States and the
maintenance of traditional democratic norms.
Bush and the Republicans ran a deeply reactionary campaign,
employing lies and political smears and playing on the fears,
insecurities and confusion of key sections of the electorate.
But even with the advantage of incumbency, a friendly media, and
the relentless exploitation of the 9/11 tragedy, Bush was barely
able to eke out a 51 percent majority of the popular vote.
Whatever the media pundits may say, the election is anything
but a popular endorsement of the Bush administration and its policies.
Historically, presidents who have won reelection have been able
to utilize the benefits of incumbency to obtain decisive victories.
This was the case with Roosevelt in the 1930s, Johnson in the
1960s, Reagan in the 1980s, and even Clinton in 1996. Yet Bush
gained little more than an absolute majority.
Looking at the electoral map, it is immediately clear that
the Republicans, four years after the disputed election of 2000,
were not able to shift any sizable population centers to their
side. With a few exceptions, those states that went for Gore in
2000including the most industrialized and urbanized states
on the East and West coasts and in the Midwestwent for Kerry
in 2004. In other words, the Republicans, despite pulling out
all stops in the use of fear-mongering, lies, and other tricks
from their grab bag of political reaction, have reached a limit
on their ability to extend their base socially and geographically.
The electoral map shows another aspect of the crisis of American
democracythe balkanization of US politics. Neither of the
two major parties can be truly said to be national parties.
The election once again revealed a starkly polarized country,
and a broad and deeply felt opposition to Bush and the Iraq war.
The sharply increased voter turnout, and especially the spike
in voting by young people, most of whom cast ballots against Bush
and the war, reflected the immense social opposition that exists
to the Republican right.
Yet the result of the vote will be to further concentrate political
power in the hands of the extreme right, which will control all
three branches of governmentthe executive, the legislative
and the judiciarywith the Republicans increasing their majority
in the Senate. The stage is set for a series of Supreme Court
appointments that will further shift the axis of the Court to
the right, and lead to the overturn of Roe v. Wade on abortion
rights and other anti-democratic rulings of a far-reaching character.
The election was less a victory for Bush than a colossal, historic
defeat for the Democratic Party. In the midst of an unpopular
war, massive job losses, declining living standards, growing poverty,
a series of corporate corruption scandals alongside huge tax breaks
for the rich, the Democrats have proven themselves unable to oust
an administration that was installed by undemocratic means and
viewed by half the population as illegitimate, and has since been
caught in monstrous lies. Kerry and his party were unable, despite
the mass opposition to Bush, to expand their social base of support
and make serious inroads in the working class electorate.
Running on the basis of a hypocritical and two-faced campaignappealing
to antiwar sentiment, while supporting the war, appealing to the
economic concerns of working people, while promising fiscal austerity,
criticizing the Patriot Act, while demanding stronger police-state
powers in the war on terrorKerry and his party
were incapable of effectively countering the Republicans
strategy of exploiting fears, prejudices and political disorientation.
The Republicans have a coherent electoral strategy. They seek
to create a popular base for social reaction and militarism by
sponsoring Christian fundamentalism and utilizing so-called wedge
issues such as gay marriage, abortion and school prayer.
They were able to effectively exploit the contradictions that
riddle the Democratic Party. Kerry, for example, was never able
to answer Bushs basic point that his opponent was now criticizing
as the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time
a war for which both Kerry and his running mate, John Edwards,
had voted. Indeed, Kerrys response was to repeat endlessly
that he would prosecute the war in Iraqand future warsmore
effectively than the incumbent commander in chief.
The so-called flip-flopping of Kerry flows from
the contradictions of a party that claims to speak for working
people, while defending the American ruling elite and its interests
both at home and abroad.
Kerry barely won a majority in such highly industrialized and
urbanized Midwest states as Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.
He hardly bothered to make an appeal to the millions of white
workers and urban and rural poor in the South, in border states
such as Tennessee and Missouri, and in former Democratic bastions
like coal-rich West Virginia.
In the absence of any consistent and credible appeal to the
class interests of working people, the Republican strategy of
capitalizing on religious backwardness and confusion proved highly
effective. The Democratic Party will not, and cannot, make a serious
and direct appeal to the real social and economic needs of the
working class, because it is a party of American capitalism and
is beholden to the US financial oligarchy. The trade unions, which
provide the Democrats with some manpower, phone banks, etc., are
utterly useless when it comes to mobilizing the working class.
As a result, tens of millions of working peoplemost starkly
in the so-called red states of the South, the central plains and
the Southwestvoted for a president whose economic policies
have had devastating consequences for their own living standards.
But this anomaly did not arise out of the blue. The Republicans
have made inroads among large sections of the working class that
have been abandoned by both the Democrats and their right-wing
allies in the trade union bureaucracy.
Bushs red states include West Virginia and Kentucky,
former Democratic bastions whose mining communities have been
devastated by closures and wage cuts made possible by the betrayal
of scores of struggles against union-busting and wage-cutting
in the 1980s and 1990s. There are similar stories to be told in
Ohio, Missouri, Arizona, Alabama and many more of the states that
have ended up in the Republican column. In every case, the Democratic
Party worked in tandem with the AFL-CIO union bureaucracy to isolate
the workers and smash their resistance. As always, such defeats
leave a legacy of economic devastation, despair and a loss of
perspectivefertile soil for the propagation of reactionary
politics packaged as religious faith.
There is no doubt that a considerable section of the Republican
constituency is motivated by racism and other reactionary sentiments.
But a substantial segment votes Republican because no major party
speaks to its class interests.
Just as the shift to the right by the Republican Party has
been a protracted process, the collapse of the Democrats is the
product of a long evolution. For more than a generation, the Democratic
Party has disassociated itself with any policies considered suspect
in corporate circles. Its rightward movement has been marked by
an almost comical effort to repudiate the liberal
labelsomething Kerry continued in his election campaign.
As a result, the party has forfeited any ability to appeal to
the genuine economic interests of the working class.
In any event, the working class has already been burned by
Democratic politicians who promise reforms on health care and
other social needs. Within one year of his inauguration, Bill
Clinton abandoned his health care plan, while essentially continuing
the economic policies of Reagan and Bush senior.
The response of the Democrats to their latest political debacle
will be to move even further to the right. They will desperately
seek to conciliate with Bush and the Republicans, try to don religious
trappings, and present themselves as a more moderate
version of their bourgeois rivals.
We warn against and reject in advance the demoralized and uncritical
response to the election that will emerge from the Democratic
Party and those left liberals and radicals who orient
to the Democrats: the notion that the blame for Bushs reelection
rests with the American people, and that nothing can be done to
oppose the Republican rights policies of war and reaction.
The outcome of the 2004 election guarantees an intensification
of the social and political crisis in America, and the emergence
of great shifts and struggles. There is a grotesque political
imbalance that is untenableone that mirrors the enormous
economic polarization of American society.
All political power is concentrated in the hands of extreme-right
forces. The official opposition, in the form of the Democratic
Party, has proven itself bankrupt. Meanwhile, in the country at
large, there is massive and intense opposition to the Bush administration,
the Iraq war, and the policies of the Republican right. Adding
to the unstable and explosive mix is the fact that millions of
people who voted for Bush did so out of fear and confusionexploited
by the Republicansand thereby ensured a continuation of
policies that will further undermine their own living standards.
Objective conditions will supply ample fuel for social and
political struggle. The quagmire in Iraq and the future military
adventures that will follow, the deepening economic crisis of
American capitalismmarked by soaring deficits and a weakening
dollarwill compel the second Bush administration to launch
new attacks on the working class, including millions of workers
who voted to return Bush to power.
These attacks can be countered only through the political mobilization
of the working class on the basis of a socialist program. This
entails systematic opposition to the policies of the Republicans
and the American ruling elite, including a merciless exposure
of the hypocrisy and cynicism of their religious appeals.
The leadership for this fight cannot be developed within the
framework of the existing two-party system. Such a struggle requires
a clear and irrevocable break with the Democratic Party. In the
months ahead, as it draws out the lessons of this election, the
Socialist Equality Party will be fighting for the development
of this new mass socialist movement.
See Also:
On eve of 2004 election: US faces unprecedented
social conflict
[1 November 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections
[20 September 2004]
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