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Kerry plugs his conservative credentials in second presidential
debate
By Barry Grey
9 October 2004
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The second televised presidential debate, held Friday in St.
Louis, took on an almost farcical character, as President Bush
employed outlandish lies and non sequiturs to defend the war in
Iraq, while Kerry spent much of his time disavowing the dreaded
liberal label and listing his fiscally conservative
and militarist credentials.
Amidst the sound-bites and catchphrasesBushs grotesque
homilies on freedom and barbs about Kerrys confusing
signals; Kerrys I have a plan mantra and
mind-numbing He rushed to war without a plan for peace
refraintwo things emerged clearly.
First, the deeply felt opposition of broad masses of people
to the war finds no expression in the campaigns of either of the
candidates and, second, the substantive differences between the
Republican and Democratic parties on the crucial issues of war
and peace, democratic rights, jobs and living standards are extremely
narrow.
The debate was held under conditions of a worsening quagmire
for US imperialism in Iraq, growing signs of economic crisis and
social distress, and a series of revelations that have exposed
all of the pretexts for invading and occupying the Persian Gulf
country. The election, now less than a month away, has raised
before the American ruling elite the prospect of its entire political
system and both of its traditional parties losing all credibility
in the eyes of the people.
The response of Bushs handlers was to prime their man
to defend, at all costs and in the teeth of the plain facts, the
administrations claims of success in Iraq and economic prosperity
at home. He had been coached, after his stumbling and defensive
performance in the first debate, to more forcefully exploit the
contradictions between Kerrys present criticisms of the
war and his past record of support for military action to topple
Saddam Hussein.
Kerry, on the other hand, noticeably muted his rhetoric on
Bushs decision to invade Iraq and soft-pedaled his previous
charges that the president had misled the nation.
This was not simply a matter of either miscalculation or personal
cowardice. In the aftermath of the first presidential debate,
held eight days ago, Kerrys poll numbers have risen and
the race has been declared a dead heat. With a Democratic victory
now a serious possibility, the Kerry campaign is seeking to adjust
its tactics to the political tasks that will confront a Kerry
White House.
The Democratic Party is, no less than its Republican counterpart,
a political instrument of American imperialism, which considers
the crushing of the Iraqi insurgency and the consolidation of
US control over the countrys oil resources a vital interest.
A Kerry presidency will be entrusted with the execution of this
bloody task.
Kerry must therefore tread a fine line between disparaging
Bushs conduct of the war and exposing the war for the criminal
enterprise it really is. He is no doubt being warned that going
too far with antiwar rhetoric risks discrediting the entire political
establishment.
At the same time, he must contend with a powerful faction within
his own partyrepresented by the likes of Senator Joseph
Lieberman and the Clintonswhich has consistently and adamantly
supported the war.
The last thing the Democratic Party wants is a decisive victory
on November 2 based on a popular mandate to end the war and reverse
the flagrantly pro-corporate economic policies of the Bush administration.
Thus, even as he continues to make certain populist gestures,
Kerry is at pains not to unduly raise expectations.
The contradictions of the Kerry campaignmost acutely
between his need to mobilize the overwhelmingly anti-war sentiment
among Democratic voters and the even more critical task of reassuring
the ruling elite of his commitment to continue the occupation
and pacify Iraqfound particularly bizarre expression in
Fridays debate. Kerry barely referred to the report issued
Wednesday by the CIAs chief weapons inspector Charles Duelfer,
which affirmed that Saddam Hussein had dismantled his unconventional
weapons programs shortly after the first Gulf war of 1991.
Bush, on the other hand, turned reality on its head by citing
the report several times as a vindication of his decision to invade
Iraq. He [Kerry] keeps talking about, Let the inspectors
for their job, Bush declared. Thats what
the Duelfer report showed. He was deceiving the inspectors.
In reality, Saddam Husseins deception, according to Duelfer,
was to bluff the Americans and, even more importantly for the
Iraqi regime, the Iranians, into thinking he possessed weapons
that were nonexistent!
At another point Bush made the absurd statement: Saddam
Hussein was a threat because he could have given weapons of mass
destruction to terrorist enemies. Sanctions were not working.
The Duelfer report confirmed precisely the opposite: that Saddam
Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, and the sanctions
were, indeed, working.
Kerry replied briefly to this howler, but he did not press
the point. Why? One reason is that the Duelfer report established
that the Democratic administration of Clinton and its supporters,
such as Kerry, were just as guilty of lying about alleged Iraqi
WMD and using it as a pretext for brutal sanctions and military
attacks as the Bush administration.
To a large extent, the debate consisted of Bush charging Kerry
with being a liberal, and Kerry protesting that labels dont
mean anything while he presented himself as a fiscal conservative.
To this end, he repeated twice that he had broken ranks with Democrats
in Congress to support the Gramm-Rudman budget-cutting bill under
Reagan, stressed that he advocated a pay-as-you-go
policy of fiscal austerity, and virtually pledged in advance to
abandon his own campaign promises on health care and education
if they conflicted with his promise to slash the budget deficit:
Ive even scaled back some of my favorite programs
already, like the child-care program I wanted to fund and the
national service program, because the presidents budget
deficit keeps growing and Ive said as a pledge, Im
going to cut the deficit in half in four years.
He added that he supported the Patriot Act and Bushs
education bill, and further detailed his right-wing credentials:
I supported welfare reform. I led the fight to put 100,000
cops on the streets of America. Ive been for faith-based
initiatives to intervene in the lives of young children for years.
The same pattern prevailed on foreign policy. Bush suggested
that Kerry was soft on terrorism and a quasi-pacifist,
to which Kerry responded that he would never give a veto
over American security to any other entity, and that he
would go out and kill and find the terrorists. He
added, If we have to get tough with Iran, believe me, we
will get tough.
He supplemented his call for 40,000 more active duty troops
with a laundry list of retired generals and admirals who are supporting
his campaign.
The eventostensibly a town hall meeting between
the candidates and uncommitted voterswas stage-managed and
vetted to exclude any real expression of the disgust felt by millions
of Americans toward the war and those who authored it, as well
as the social anger over ever-greater disparities of wealth and
the ongoing destruction of decent-paying jobs.
The audience was hand-picked by the Gallup polling organizationwhich
is run by an evangelical Christianand all questions were
written out and submitted in advance to the moderator, ABC News
Charles Gibson, who decided which questions would be asked.
Even in this Potemkin village setting, most of the questions
askedon the war, on the Patriot Act, on jobs, on medical
care, on the draftevinced distrust or outright hostility
toward Bush.
Kerry had no serious alternative to present on any of these
questions. The Democratic candidate himself provided an insight
into the reason for this when he spoke of his proposal to roll
back the Bush tax cut for the 1 percent of the population earning
more than $200,000 a year:
Now, for the people earning more than $200,000 a year,
youre going to see a rollback to the level we were at with
Bill Clinton, when people made a lot of money. And looking around
here, at this group here, I suspect there are only three people
here who are going to be affected: the president, me, and, Charlie,
Im sorry, you too.
This lighthearted allusion to the fact that the presidential
and vice-presidential candidates of both parties are multi-millionaires,
as are the media principals who dispense the news,
marked the only point at which the real class divisions in American
society, and the social interests represented by both parties,
emerged.
That a Democratic presidential candidate should openly present
himself, in a nationally televised debate, as a representative
of great wealth provides a measure of how far to the right the
Democratic Party has moved, how completely it has repudiated any
association with social reform policies, and how utterly removed
it is from the working people it claims to represent.
With this quip, Kerry all but boasted that the choice
before the voters was between two representatives of the American
financial oligarchy.
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