|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Bush sinks in opinion polls, but Democrats offer no alternative
By Patrick Martin
7 November 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A series of opinion polls published this week demonstrate that
the American people decisively oppose the Bush administration
and its policies. A Washington Post-ABC News poll found
only 39 percent approval for the Bush presidency, with 60 percent
opposed. A separate Associated Press-Ipsos poll found Bushs
support even lower, at 37 percent, with 59 percent disapproving.
The disapproval rate was the highest for an incumbent president
since Bushs father was defeated for reelection in 1992.
Nine out of 10 self-identified Democratic voters disapproved of
Bush, as well as 7 out of 10 independents and even 2 out of 10
Republicans.
The Post-ABC poll found a majority or plurality disapproval
of Bushs policy or performance on every major issue, including,
for the first time, the war on terror. Some 68 percent
said the US was headed in the wrong direction, 65 percent said
the economy was in poor or bad shape, 67 percent gave the administration
a negative rating on ethics and 59 percent said that top Bush
political aide Karl Rove should resign because of his involvement
in the CIA leak scandal.
The most important issue in undermining Bushs political
standing is the war in Iraq. Among those polled, 55 percent said
that the administration had misled the American people in its
case for launching the war in Iraq, while 60 percent said the
war was not worth fighting and 73 percent said US casualties in
Iraq had reached an unacceptable level. Of those who
said the United States was headed in the wrong direction, nearly
one third cited the Iraq war as their principal concern.
The negative factors cited in the two polls, in addition to
the war in Iraq, include Bushs attack on Social Security,
the failures in rescue and recovery in Hurricane Katrina, the
debacle of the nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court,
and the indictment of top White House aide I. Lewis Libby for
perjury and obstruction of justice.
One striking finding of both polls was the growing intensity
of the opposition to Bush: according to the Post-ABC poll, 47
percent strongly disapproved of the Bush presidency, up from 35
percent in January; 20 percent strongly approved, down from 33
percent in January. The AP-Ipsos poll found a similar result:
42 percent said they strongly disapproved of Bush and his policies,
while only 20 percent strongly approved.
The Republican-controlled Congress posted an even lower poll
rating, with only 35 percent approval, down from 44 percent last
February. Asked whom they would prefer in the 2006 congressional
elections, when one third of the Senate and all 435 seats in the
House of Representatives are at stake, those polled gave preference
to the Democrats by 52 percent to 37 percent, the biggest poll
margin for the Democrats in more than 20 years.
Among registered voters, Democrats led by 49 percent to 38
percent, a net shift of more than 20 points from the last mid-term
congressional vote, in 2002, when the Republican Party was favored
by a margin of 51 percent to 39 percent in pre-election polls.
Democrats were preferred over the Republicans by double-digit
margins on a series of issues: the economy, Social Security, education,
health care, taxes, the federal budget, gasoline prices and the
war in Iraq.
The biggest shift in opinion against Bush in the year since
his narrow reelection victory came among those identifying themselves
as independents and moderate Republicans. Two thirds of independents
expressed disapproval of the administrations performance,
and more than one third of moderate Republicans. Bushs political
support remains at extremely high levels only among those who
identify themselves as conservative Republicans.
The poll suggested that the alignment of Bush and the congressional
Republicans with the Christian fundamentalist right, in such issues
as the Terry Schiavo case and the attack on the teaching of evolution
in public schools, was deeply unpopular. The Democratic Party
enjoyed its biggest lead over the Republicans in the Post-ABC
poll, 60 percent to 24 percent, on the question of which party
was more open to ideas of political moderates.
Mass sentiment vs. official politics
There is an enormous disjuncture between the mass anti-Bush
and antiwar sentimentwhich if anything the opinion polls
understateand the operation of the US political system,
where the Bush administration is virtually unchallenged and the
Republican Party maintains its grip on Congress and on the federal
judiciary, especially the Supreme Court. The visceral hostility
to the right-wing policies and corrupt and vicious political methods
of the Bush administration finds almost no expression in the existing
political structure.
The Democratic Party and the corporate-controlled media play
a vital role in propping up a discredited government and sustaining
the illusion of Bushs political strength. Through Bushs
nearly five years in the White House, both the nominal political
opposition and the so-called Fourth Estate, supposedly an independent
and critical force, have sought to cover up the criminal character
of the Republican administration.
This goes back to the very beginning, when the Democratic Party
capitulated to the theft of the 2000 presidential election and
the media legitimized a president who received fewer votes than
his main opponent. After the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks,
congressional Democratic leaders rallied round the Republican
president, ignoring the evidence suggesting that the Bush administration
had ample warning of the attacks and allowed them to go forward
in order to obtain a pretext for military action in Central Asia
and the Middle East.
The Democrats endorsed the invasion of Afghanistan, the creation
of a US concentration camp at Guantanamo Bay, and a series of
domestic repressive measures such as the USA Patriot Act. Most
importantly, they sanctioned the Bush administrations bait-and-switch
policy, declaring war on terror and then targeting Iraq, which
had nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks.
In October 2002, on the eve of the last congressional mid-term
elections, the Democratic-controlled Senate joined the Republican-controlled
House in authorizing military action against Iraq. Democratic
leaders as Tom Daschle, Harry Reid, John Kerry, Hillary Clinton
and John Edwards all voted to give Bush the authority to invade
and conquer Iraq. They are just as responsible as Bush, Cheney,
Rumsfeld & Co. for this act of aggression, the most blatant
violation of international law by a major world power since Hitler
invaded Poland and started World War II.
The Republican control of Congress and Bushs own reelectionregularly
cited by the Democrats as proof of Bushs popular supportare
directly attributable to the collaboration of the Democratic Party
with the war in Iraq. The Republican victories in the 2002 congressional
elections, in which they regained control of the Senate, followed
the congressional vote to authorize the invasion of Iraq.
The 2004 presidential election was reduced to a meaningless
contest when the Democratic Party establishment engineered the
nomination of a pro-war candidate, John Kerry, despite the fact
that an overwhelming majority of Democratic voters opposed the
war. The Democratic National Convention became a celebration of
Kerrys military service, not his role as a prominent opponent
of the Vietnam War. In August 2004, Kerry declared that even knowing
there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and no connections
to Al Qaeda or 9/11, he did not regret his vote for war.
While Kerry reversed himself last month, in a little-noticed
speech in which he belatedly asserted that his October 2002 pro-war
vote was based on Bush administration lies, the Democratic Party
leadership as a whole remains firmly in the war camp. Despite
the predominance of antiwar sentiment among rank-and-file Democratic
voters, all of those prominently mentioned as candidates for the
partys presidential nomination in 2008Hillary Clinton,
Joseph Biden, John Edwards, and Kerry himselfoppose a US
withdrawal from Iraq and call for intensified efforts to win a
military victory.
The war is the most polarizing political issue in the United
States, except in the upper circles of the political, media and
business elite. Nearly two thirds of the American people, according
to recent polls, oppose the war and support withdrawal of US troops.
A sizable minority, about one third, still endorse sacrificing
the lives of American soldiers in Iraq. But in official Washington,
there is a near-unanimous conviction that a US withdrawal from
Iraq or a military defeat there are unthinkable. The antiwar majority
has virtually no representation in these circles.
One more figure from the latest opinion polls is perhaps the
most instructive: while public support for the Bush administration
has collapsed, there has not been a proportional rise in support
for the Democratic Party. Only 41 percent of those responding
to the Post-ABC poll gave a positive rating to the congressional
Democrats (compared to 35 percent for the Republicans). On the
question of political ethics and honesty, while barely 12 percent
gave an advantage to the Republicans, only 16 percent favored
the Democrats; 71 percent said there was no difference.
The polarization of American society
The Democrats and Republicans are in full agreement on the
necessity to maintain US control of Iraq, which gives American
imperialism a dominant position in the oil-rich Middle East. Both
parties are representatives of the American ruling elite, those
who control the giant corporations and the lions share of
the national wealth.
What underlies the political crisis and the growing divorce
between public opinion and the two officially recognized political
parties is the growth of social inequality. Not since the days
of the robber barons in the nineteenth century has American society
been so polarized between the relative handful of wealthy families
at the top and the working people who make up the vast majority.
Over the past quarter century, the top 1 percent of American
society have more than doubled their share of the national wealth.
In 1979, they controlled less than 20 percent of the wealth. Today,
that figure stands at more than 40 percent. It is this staggering
social fact that finds expression in the drastic shift to the
right by both of the major bourgeois political parties.
The social structure of the United States is simply incompatible
with the maintenance of democratic forms of rule. Hence the intensifying
attacks on democratic rights, particularly in the last four years,
when the war on terror has become the all-purpose
pretext for what is in fact a war on the American people.
American society has reached an impasse. All social needs have
been subordinated to an increasingly insane drive to accelerate
the private accumulation of wealth through tax cuts for the rich,
deregulation of business and the destruction of working class
living standards. As the Katrina disaster showed, it has become
impossible for the most advanced industrialized society on the
planet to carry out such elementary social responsibilities as
preventing floods and rescuing disaster victims.
While the representatives of the ruling elite declare in chorus
that society can no longer afford decent-paying jobs, pension
and health benefits, the reality is that working people can no
longer afford the depredations and plundering of the wealthy parasites
at the top.
See Also:
Bushs visit sparks upheavals in
Argentina
[5 November 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |