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Final presidential debate confirms: no choice for working
people in Bush-Kerry contest
By Patrick Martin
14 October 2004
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The third and final Bush-Kerry debate confirmed that neither
candidate has any answer for the mounting social and economic
crisis confronting working people in the United States.
On the war in Iraq and foreign policy as a whole, Kerry had
already stressed, on the campaign trail and in the previous debates,
his commitment to continue the basic thrust of the Bush administrations
militarist and imperialist policies. Wednesday nights debate
in Tempe, Arizona, which focused on domestic issues, underscored
how narrow the substantive differences are in this arena as well.
The questions by moderator Bob Schieffer of CBS News concerned
a range of economic and social issues. As in the previous debates,
Bush seemed on the defensive throughout the evening.
The explanation for this does not lie primarily in the all-too-obvious
intellectual limitations of the president. Rather, it reflects
the deeply reactionary and anti-popular character of the Bush
administrations policies. No discussion of the administrations
record over the last four yearseven within the framework
of American bourgeois politics, where the raising of basic class
issues is taboocan conceal the glaring reality that the
vast majority of the American people are worse off.
Kerry invoked significant social issuespoverty, inequality,
unemployment, health care, retirement securityand decried
the policies of the Bush administration. But his own counterproposals
were hopelessly inadequate to meet these huge social needs. Even
the timid social measures he listed are incompatible with his
call for more troops, more Special Forces, more police and a pay-as-you-go
regimen of fiscal austerity.
The promise of social reforms for electoral purposes is not
a new phenomenon in American politics. But in the past, there
was at least an element of substance behind such campaign pledges,
and some prospect that they would be carried out. Those days,
however, are long gone.
There has not been a single significant social reformon
jobs, health care, housing, educationcarried out by either
party in the US for nearly 40 years. The Democratic Partys
irrevocable abandonment of liberal reform is the major legacy
of the Clinton administration, which abjectly shelved its health
care plan and went on to dismantle welfare and adopt the Republican
mantra of an end to big government.
In 2004, Kerrys campaign promises are nothing more than
empty demagogy, to be quickly scrapped, should he win the election,
in favor of fiscal responsibility and the requirements
of the war on terror and homeland security.
The record of the Bush administration
It is a testament to the right-wing character of the Kerry
campaign that Bush, who has such an abysmal record on economic
and social issues, could go into the final days of the election
campaign standing roughly even with his challenger in pre-election
polls.
As Kerry pointed out, Bush is the first president in 72 years
to preside over a net loss of jobs during his term in office,
and the new jobs being created pay far less than the jobs that
are being destroyed. Five million more Americans, as Kerry also
noted, are without health insurance than when Bush took office.
The Bush administrations policies have intensified the
social crisis. As Kerry reiterated, Bushs tax cut provided
the bulk of its benefits to the wealthy: $89 billion last year
for the top one percent of the population. Bushs Medicare
prescription drug plan amounts to a huge windfall for the drug
companies. The White House and the Republican-controlled Congress
have blocked a minimum wage increase for 15 million working poor.
Beyond specific policy choices is the obvious indifference
of the Bush administration to the deteriorating conditions of
life faced by the majority of working people. Bush himself is
the personification of this attitude, as he demonstrated during
the debate, repeatedly evading questions or responding with irrelevant
remarks.
He could barely disguise his boredom and irritation when questioned
on issues such as job cuts, the minimum wage and the effects of
racial discrimination, giving the same answera canned recitation
about the virtues of the No Child Left Behind education
billto each. This was combined with reactionary moralizing
on social issues like gay marriage, gun control and abortion,
and unconvincing sallies against Kerry, in which he portrayed
the Democratic senator, a Clinton-style right-wing New Democrat,
as a profligate liberal who stands on the left bank
of the political mainstream.
At one point Schieffer asked Bush directly what he would say
to a worker who lost his job to someone overseas who received
a fraction of the average US wage. Bush replied that workers displaced
by trade should get retraining at community colleges. The spectacle
of the semi-literate president instructing laid-off workers to
go get an education provided one of the most memorable
impressions of the evening.
Kerry: liberalism on its knees
The Democratic candidate sought to raise the issues of wealth
concentration and social polarization in America without pressing
them too far, lest he be criticized by the media for engaging
in class warfare.
The American middle-class family isnt making it
right now, he declared at one point, adding. The fact
is, the take-home pay of a typical American family as a share
of national income is lower than its been since 1929, and
the take-home pay of the richest 0.1 percent of Americans is the
highest its been since 1928. Under President Bush, the middle
class has seen their tax burden go up and the wealthiest tax burdens
gone down.
Such figures have devastating political implications, but Kerrythe
scion of an upper-class New England family who is married to the
widow of a billionaireis hardly in a position, personally
or politically, to pose as an advocate for the working classes.
He raises the issue of deepening social divisions, not to arouse
the masses against the ruling elite, but to warn his fellow multimillionaires
that under Bush they have gone too far. If they persist in grabbing
up all the wealth of America, they risk igniting a dangerous social
reaction.
Kerrys position on the social divisions in America mirrors
his approach to the war in Iraq: he argues that the Bush administration
is too reckless, and that a more cautious approach is required
to safeguard the interests of the American ruling elite.
This in no way implies a return to policies of liberal reformism.
Rather, Kerry and the Democrats seek to utilize the language of
reform and concern for the downtrodden to defend the interests
of the financial aristocracy. The actual content of the social
measures proposed by Kerry, with the exception of his health care
program, is extremely minimal. His jobs program is
actually a Bush-style tax cut for American corporations, on the
premise that reducing their taxes will encourage them to hire
more workers.
As for health carewidely cited in opinion polls as the
most urgent social needKerry is proposing to expand enrollment
in the existing Medicare and Medicaid programs and give tax breaks
to small businesses that provide private health insurance for
their workers. The Democratic campaign estimates that the plan
would reduce the number of uninsured from 45 million to 25 million,
with the $650 billion cost to be covered by rescinding Bushs
tax cuts for those with incomes above $200,000 a year.
Kerry makes this proposalwhich would still leave 25 million
people without health coveragewith the foreknowledge that
there is no prospect of its being enacted even by a Democratic-controlled
Congress, let alone by the current Republican majority. Ten years
ago the Clinton administration, backed by sizeable Democratic
majorities in the House and Senate, could not even get a vote
in Congress on its health care program. Facing enormous deficits,
the entrenched opposition of the drug, insurance and private medical
lobbies, and the increasingly right-wing politics of the Democratic
Party, a Kerry administration would be even less likely to deliver.
The Democratic campaign is incapable of offering any genuine
solutions to the social crisis for two main reasons. First of
all, Kerrys commitment to military victory in Iraq precludes
any significant increase in social spending at home. The war in
Iraq has already swallowed up nearly $200 billion, and Kerry has
made an open-ended pledge to win in Iraq regardless
of the cost.
Even in the heyday of the post-World War II boom, it proved
impossible for the Democratic administration of Lyndon Johnson
to combine guns and butter, and social reform policies
were sacrificed on the altar of Vietnam. Today, with American
capitalism in decay, dependent on an enormous influx of foreign
capital to sustain mammoth trade and budget deficits, continuing
the war in Iraq will inevitably require drastic cuts in what remains
of the social safety net.
Secondly, Kerry has declared that his top priority in domestic
policy is fiscal austerity. In Wednesdays debate he repeated
the pledge that in the event of a conflict between the goals of
providing health insurance to more Americans and cutting the budget
deficit in half over four years, he will choose cutting the budget
deficit. He made a similar observation about Social Security,
saying that if later on, after a period of time, we find
that Social Security is in trouble ... well make whatever
adjustment is necessary.
Kerry is incapable of proposing any serious solution to social
problems because he, like Bush, is a defender of the profit system.
When attacked on health careBush claimed, absurdly, that
Kerrys plan amounted to a federal takeover of the health
care systemKerry was at pains to declare that he was not
proposing a government-based health insurance system, and that
private medicine would still hold sway.
He did not dispute Bushs claimequally ludicrousthat
countries with government-based medical systems provide inferior
care, and that the American health care system is the envy
of the world. It would be more accurate to say that European
public opinion views the system of private, profit-based health
care as one of the worst features of the United States, and any
party which openly advocated its establishment in a European country
would be routed at the polls.
Perhaps Kerrys most significant position was one that
he expressed only by omission: his silence on the mounting attacks
on democratic rights in America. In three debates, there has been
no serious discussion of the Patriot Act, the mounting repression
against immigrants and political opponents of the war in Iraq,
and the increasingly open preparation for police-state measures
against the American population as a whole.
Even when such repressive measures directly touch on the electoral
interests of the Democratic Party, as in the theft of the 2000
election, Kerry has refused to raise the issue. It was remarkable
that during Wednesdays debate only Bush, the beneficiary
of the Supreme Court electoral coup, mentioned the post-election
crisis of November-December 2000. Kerry did not touch the question,
nor did he issue any warning against the far more widespread efforts
at voter suppression that have been revealed during the 2004 campaign.
Instead, in one of his frequent bouquets to Republican Senator
John McCain, Kerry hailed McCains campaign finance reform
legislation, and declared his own support for opening up the electoral
process to average people so America is really represented
by the people who make up America. This is lying on a Bush
scale, given the Democratic Partys efforts this year to
suppress the Ralph Nader campaign and prevent third-party candidates
like those of the Socialist Equality Party from obtaining ballot
access.
The 2004 presidential debates have demonstrated the lack of
any real choice for the working class between the two major-party
candidates. For the American ruling class, however, there is a
choice. Bush and Kerry offer certain differences in both foreign
and domestic policy, albeit of a tactical character, and lodged
entirely within the framework of the defense of the profit system
and American imperialism. The election remains bitterly contested
and its outcome still uncertain.
Whichever candidate prevails on November 2or whenever
the final result of the contest is determinedthe working
class faces the task of building an independent political movement
to defend its own social and political interests. The Socialist
Equality Party campaign in the 2004 elections seeks to pose this
central issue before the widest possible audience, and lay the
basis for the building of an independent mass political party
of working people, based on a socialist program that will enable
American workers to forge their unity with workers around the
world and fight for a revolutionary transformation of society
along genuinely democratic and egalitarian lines.
See Also:
The SEP 2004 Election Website
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections
[20 September 2004]
Kerry plugs his conservative credentials
in second presidential debate
[9 October 2004]
Democrat Edwards backs war, austerity
in vice presidential debate
[6 October 2004]
Contradictions of Bush-Kerry debate:
pro-war candidates confront debacle in Iraq and anti-war sentiment
at home
[5 October 2004]
Bush-Kerry debate: two candidates committed
to war
[1 October 2004]
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