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Democrats force antiwar candidate out of Ohio Senate race
By Patrick Martin
20 February 2006
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Iraq war veteran and antiwar activist Paul Hackett withdrew
from the US Senate race in Ohio February 14, after his campaign
for the Democratic Party nomination was sabotaged by the top national
Democratic leaders, including Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid
and Senator Charles Schumer of New York, chairman of the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee.
The incident makes clear the determination of the Democratic
Party congressional leadership to prevent the 2006 elections from
becoming a referendum on the war in Iraq. The Ohio candidate preferred
by Reid and Schumer, Congressman Sherrod Brown of Akron, is liberal
on social policy but not identified with the widespread public
opposition to the Iraq war.
Ohio, which gave Bush his margin in the Electoral College in
the 2004 presidential campaign, has several key races this fall.
Senator Michael DeWine is widely viewed as one of the most vulnerable
Republican incumbents, and Democrats are favored to take back
the governorship in the wake of corruption scandals in the administration
of Republican Governor Robert Taft.
Hackett, a Cincinnati attorney who served in Iraq in the Marine
Corps reserves, came to prominence last summer when he nearly
won a by-election in a heavily Republican congressional district,
running a vociferously antiwar and anti-Bush campaign. After his
narrow 52-48 percent loss, he jumped into the race for the Senate
nomination with the same message.
In his withdrawal announcement, Hackett bitterly denounced
Reid, Schumer and other leading Democrats who initially welcomed
his entry into the Senate campaign last year, then shifted to
Brown when DeWine began to appear vulnerable in the polls. Hackett
said the Senate leaders had made calls to potential donors discouraging
them from contributing to his campaign, with the result that Brown
had a huge financial advantage in the primary campaign.
I made this decision reluctantly, only after repeated
requests from party leaders, as well as behind-the-scenes machinations,
that were intended to hurt my campaign, Hackett said in
a statement. My donor base and host base on both coasts
was contacted by elected officials and asked to stop giving. The
original promise to me from Schumer was that I would have no financial
concerns. It went from that to Senator Schumer actually working
against my ability to raise money.
Hackett added, For me, this is a second betrayal. First,
my government misused and mismanaged the military in Iraq, and
now my own party is afraid to support candidates like me.
The first Iraq war veteran to seek national office, Hackett said
he was ending his political career, but not leaving the Democratic
Party. He indicated he would support Brown if he were the Democratic
nominee.
Congressional Democratic leaders tried to buy Hacketts
withdrawal from the Senate by offering their backing if he ran
again for the House seat that he lost narrowly in an August special
election. But Hackett said he had already assured three other
prospective Democratic candidates for the seat that he would not
seek it. The party keeps saying for me not to worry about
those promises because in politics they are broken all the time,
he said. I dont work that way. My word is my bond.
Besides his bitter attacks on Bush for going to war in Iraq
based on lies and squandering the lives of American soldiers and
Iraqis, Hackett also offended Democratic Party leaders with a
public attack on the right-wing Christian fundamentalists whom
Reid, Hillary Clinton and other Democrats are seeking to woo.
Hackett said the Republican Party had been hijacked by religious
extremists who arent a whole lot different than Osama
bin Laden.
The closing down of Hacketts campaign demonstrates a
fundamental truth of American politics: the Democratic Party,
while cowardly and indecisive when it comes to the Bush administration
and the Republicans, is ruthless and implacable in any struggle
against threats from its left.
In 2004, while Kerry was essentially throwing the presidential
election by dithering about his position on the war in Iraq, the
Democratic National Committee waged war against the rights of
third-party candidates even to appear on the ballot, devoting
millions to attacks on Ralph Nader, the Green Party, the Socialist
Equality Party and other left-wing opponents.
In the current election campaign, the Democrats can be counted
on to play the same role, attempting to use election law technicalities,
arbitrary deadlines, sympathetic judges and outright fraud against
antiwar and socialist candidates. In these efforts, the Democrats
act as political policemen for big business, seeking to prevent
the working class from having access to an anti-capitalist program
and perspective.
The suppression of the Hackett campaign demonstrates that the
Democratic Party leadership prefers to lose the 2006 election
rather than win control of the House and Senate on the basis of
an appeal to antiwar sentiment and the mass popular hatred of
the Bush administration and its policies. Such a campaign would
arouse popular expectations that the Democratic leadership regards
as dangerous, because they fully intend to continue Bushs
policies, above all the war in Iraq, with only cosmetic changes.
The Democratic Partys lack of appetite for a serious
struggle against its Republican rivals is so obvious that even
the national press has been compelled to take note. A lengthy
analysis last week (February 8) in the New York Times cited
the growing concern among leading Democrats that they are
letting pass an opportunity to exploit what they see as widespread
Republican vulnerabilities.... Democrats described a growing sense
that they had failed to take full advantage of the troubles that
have plagued Mr. Bush and his party since the middle of last year,
driving down the presidents approval ratings, opening divisions
among Republicans in Congress over policy and potentially putting
control of the House and Senate into play in November.
The Timess analysis highlighted the assessment
of a more right-wing faction of Democratic senators, such as Evan
Bayh of Indiana and Barack Obama of Illinois, criticizing figures
like Edward Kennedy, John Kerry and Al Gore as flawed messengers
because they were identified as traditional liberals. It also
prominently quoted Governor Phil Bredesen of Tennessee, who has
become notorious for cutting tens of thousands of poor families
off the state Medicaid program TennCare. He suggested that the
Democratic Party was too critical of Bush, and that youve
got to stand for a lot more than just blasting the other side.
In other words, while acknowledging the disarray and demoralization
in leading Democratic circles, the Times account suggested
that the proper course was to move the Democratic Party even farther
to the right, and above all to disavow any public identification
with outright opposition to the Iraq war.
Recent polls have confirmed the deep unpopularity of the Bush
administration and the congressional Republicans. A Pew Research
study released February 9 found that 31 percent saw their vote
for Congress in November as a vote against Bush, compared with
18 percent who saw it as a vote for Bush. The comparable figures
before the last midterm election in 2002 were the reverse, with
9 percent planning an anti-Bush vote and 34 percent a pro-Bush
vote (in both polls, nearly half said the president would not
be a factor in their vote). The survey conducted February 1-5
found that prospective voters favored a Democratic-controlled
House by 50 percent to 41 percent.
Congressional Republicans are extremely nervous about their
prospects in the upcoming election, particularly in the House.
This concern was reflected in the decision by the House Republicans
to dump acting majority leader Roy Blunt and replace him with
Ohio congressman John Boehner. The 122-109 vote was fueled largely
by concerns that Blunt was too close to the former majority leader,
Tom DeLay, and had too many ties to the lobbying interests linked
to DeLay and the corrupt Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
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