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Hypocrisy from Bush, Clinton at funeral of Coretta Scott King
By Jerry Isaacs
8 February 2006
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A funeral service was held Tuesday in Atlanta for Coretta Scott
King, the widow of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King
Jr. Over the last several days more than 157,000 mourners came
to pay respects to Mrs. King who died of ovarian cancer on January
30 at the age of 78.
The death of Coretta Scott King evoked an outpouring of popular
sympathy from those who identify her and her husband with the
struggle for social equality and justice that animated the mass
movement against Jim Crow segregation. Her death also evoked a
torrent of hypocrisy and posturing from leading figures from both
political parties, including President Bush and three former US
presidents who gave tributes at the funeral service.
One could not listen to their remarks without being struck
by the fact that Martin Luther King Jr. was opposed to just about
everything these people stand for. From Carter, to former president
Bush, to Clinton, to the current occupant in the White House,
they have all presided over an enormous rollback in civil liberties,
the growth of poverty and inequality, and an explosion of US militarism
around the world. It should be recalled in regard to this last
point that King was murdered in 1968 as he was coming into sharp
opposition to the Democratic Party over the Vietnam War.
George W. Bushs presence at the ceremony was particularly
grotesque. The presidents career is closely associated with
those who opposed the civil rights movement, including his own
father. In his unsuccessful election campaign for the Senate in
1964, George Herbert Walker Bush opposed the Civil Rights Act
enacted that year, denouncing Texas Democratic Senator Ralph
Yarborough as an extremist and left-wing demagogue
for supporting the federal legislation that outlawed racial segregation.
The modern-day Republican Party is the product of a conscious
appeal to win segregationist votes in the 1960s, after the national
leadership of the Democratic Partywhich had long been the
party of Jim Crow in the Southmoved to support civil rights
legislation. Prominent figures in the Republican Party today,
such as former Georgia Congressman Bob Barr and former Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott of Mississippi, have had close and
public ties to white supremacist
organizations such as the Council of Conservative Citizens.
Bush, whose utter indifference towards the conditions of life
confronted by the working class and poor African Americans in
particular was demonstrated to the whole world during Hurricane
Katrina, is systematically dismantling whatever social safety
net remains in the US, including Medicare, Medicaid, public education
and housing. Moreover, while he referred to the vicious
words, bombings and other threats that Coretta
Scott King and her family endured, he has launched a campaign
of illegal spying on American citizens that mirrors the FBI surveillance
against King and others in the civil rights movement 40 years
ago.
As of late last week, Bush reportedly had no intention of attending
the funeral and had planned to send his wife and father, the former
president, while he gave a speech on his budget-cutting plan in
New Hampshire. The presidents handlers apparently convinced
him it would be a good move politically to attend, particularly
since his minimal support among black voters had plummeted since
Hurricane Katrina. The fact that a black minister with close ties
to the White House was officiating at the ceremony also helped.
The remarks by Bush and his father were perfunctory with all
present aware of the hollowness of their efforts to identify with
Kings legacy.
The enormous chasm between the lifestyles of the privileged
representatives at the funeral and the broad masses of blacks
and working class people was impossible to conceal. Despite all
of the hypocritical tributes to the struggle for civil rights
waged four decades ago, the ceremony provided a palpable sense
that developments in American since 1968 have betrayed the ideals
for which King had fought.
Southern Christian Leadership Council co-founder Reverend Joseph
Lowery and others noted that Coretta Scott King had publicly opposed
the war in Iraq, which he suggested had been launched on the basis
of lies. In a clear reference to Bushs attack on civil liberties
former president Jimmy Carter noted that the Kings had been the
target of secret government wiretapping and that the
color on the faces of the victims of Hurricane Katrina
had shown that the struggle for civil rights had not been completed.
The underlying political tensions within the ruling elite were
highlighted when Carter deliberately refused to shake the Republican
presidents hand.
The efforts of the Democrats to wrap themselves in the mantle
of the civil rights movement, however, were no more sincere that
Bushs. The Democrats capitulation to the Bush administration
on a host of questions, from the war in Iraq, to government spying,
to the appointment of right-wing Supreme Court justices, is an
expression of the fact that, in the end, this party defends the
interests of the same economic elite as the Republicans.
Former President Clinton noted that just four days after her
husbands assassination Coretta Scott King traveled to Memphis
to support the struggle of the striking sanitation workers that
her husband had been championing when he was killed. At the time,
she insisted that the right to a job and an income
was the only way to pursue life, liberty and happiness
in America.
But the Democrats today, no less than the Republicans, are
thoroughly hostile to the struggle of the working class to attain
such basic rights. Just two months ago, the entire political establishment
was denouncing transit workers in New York City as selfish
thugs because they dared to go out on strike to defend their
right to health care and pension benefits. Hillary Clinton, the
US Senator from New York, who joined her husband in addressing
the funeral, called the strike illegal and upheld the states
strike-breaking Taylor Law that imposed thousands of dollars in
fines on the workers.
President Clinton whose, welfare reform had a devastating
impact by eliminating the guarantee of a minimal income for millions
of poor people, including African Americans, epitomized the rightward
shift of the Democratic Party over the last several decades and
its repudiation past social reforms.
The past 40 years has seen an enormous social polarization
in the US that has affected the entire political establishment,
which is unified in its efforts to further enrich the wealthiest
layers of American society.
This process also had a severe impact upon the civil rights
movement King built. That movementwhich never challenged
the underlying economic causes of inequality, i.e., the capitalist
system itselfin the end elevated a privileged layer of African
Americans through such programs as affirmative action, while failing
to significantly change the economic conditions of the great mass
of black workers and youth.
The struggle against racial discrimination is directly connected
to the great social question in America: the division of society
into two classes whose interests are irreconcilably opposed. The
guarantee of genuine equality and democratic rights can only be
achieved through a fundamental reorganization of economic life
to meet the needs of the masses of working people, not the wealthy
few.
See Also:
Laura Bush takes umbrage:
racism and the Republican Party
[10 September 2005]
Rosa Parks and the
lessons of the civil rights movement
[8 November 2005]
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