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SEP candidate for US Senate addresses Buffalo meeting
Our campaign offers the only alternative to the profit
system
By Bill Van Auken
30 October 2006
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The following is a speech delivered by Bill Van Auken, the
Socialist Equality Party candidate for US Senate from New York,
to a public meeting in Buffalo, New York on October 19.
I am running as the Socialist Equality Partys candidate
for US Senator from New York, challenging the incumbent Democrat
Hillary Clinton.
The midterm elections are being held under conditions of extraordinary
crisis for the US ruling elite and its government, both at home
and abroad.
Certainly two issues overshadow the upcoming vote more than
any others. The first is the ongoing military and political debacle
for US imperialism in Iraq, and the second is the wholesale and
historic attack on democratic rights within the US itself.
This week we had the publication of the scientific survey conducted
by the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health estimating that 655,000
Iraqis have lost their lives as a result of the US invasion and
occupation. This estimate, carried out with the most rigorous
scientific methodology of population surveys and public health
studies, actually found that the number of deaths could be anywhere
between 393,000 and 943,000.
George Bush, who has shown no inclination to strain his mental
capacities to grasp such statistical methods as the use of sample
clusters and their extrapolation to general populations, dismissed
the report as not credible. He described the work carried out
by Iraqi physicians who worked at great personal risk to gauge
the carnage taking place in their country as a guess.
This is no guess, but a scientific appraisal of
the dimensions of the catastrophe that the Iraqi people are suffering
every single day as a result of the policy of preventive
war carried out by the Bush administration. With the collaboration
of the Democratic Party, this administration dragged the American
people into this war based upon lies about weapons of mass destruction
and terrorist ties.
Its real aim was to exploit the political conditions created
by the 9/11 terrorist attacks to implement long-prepared plans
to utilize American military might for the purpose of seizing
control of the strategic oil reserves of Central Asia and the
Persian Gulf. The administration saw Afghanistan and Iraq as relatively
defenseless countries that the US could easily conquer and, in
doing so, secure a decisive strategic advantage over its main
economic rivals in Europe and Asia.
This criminal project was not merely the brainchild of the
cabal of right-wingers in the Bush White House and the civilian
leadership of the Pentagon. The policy of global militarism enjoyed
the backing of decisive sections of the ruling elite.
One can now say without fear of contradiction that this grand
strategy of the American oligarchy has failed, producing a debacle
of historic proportions.
The scale of the killing disclosed in the report published
in the British medical journal the Lancet makes it abundantly
clear that this administration and its key personnel are guilty
of war crimes and should be brought before a tribunal for criminal
prosecution. It also demonstrates that the US strategy of securing
super profits off of conquered Iraqi oil has failed miserably.
Washingtons dreams of reaping a bonanza from the countrys
oil wealth have literally gone up in smoke.
Meanwhile, with the media largely looking the other way, the
death toll among US troops in Iraq is edging ever closer to the
3,000 mark, with an average of four soldiers being killed every
day this month, the highest toll since the invasion itself. Easily
10 times that number are being wounded, in many cases suffering
life-altering head wounds and amputations.
Meanwhile, the US government is spending $2 billion a week
to pay for this fiasco, money that is badly needed to provide
jobs, education and healthcare at home.
In New York, the Socialist Equality Party was placed on the
ballot thanks to the support of 25,000 New Yorkers who signed
to nominate me for the US Senate. Many of them were veterans,
active duty military and families of young men and women who are
either in Iraq, recently returned or about to go back on yet another
tour of duty. One mother from Queens signed because her son had
been killed in Fallujah, and she said that no one elses
children should have to die in a war based on lies.
They and tens of millions of other Americansindeed the
majority of the populationhave drawn their own conclusions
that the war in Iraq must end, despite the fact that no significant
section of the ruling establishment, its politicians or the corporate
media are promoting such a policy.
The 2006 Military Commissions Act
The other issue overshadowing this election is the sweeping
attack on democratic rights embodied in the Military Commissions
Act of 2006, approved by Congress just before it took its pre-election
recess.
It should be recalled that it was in the same period preceding
the last midterm election in 2002 that Congress voted its blank
check for Bush to launch a war of aggression against Iraq. Leading
Democrats, including New Yorks junior Senator Hillary Clinton,
voted in favor of that resolution. The partys strategists
at the time put forward the conception that the vote would take
Iraq off the table and allow the party to run on a domestic agenda.
Of course, the Democrats had no significant proposals to make
regarding the economy, healthcare, education or jobs, and the
strategy proved a fiasco, with the party suffering one of its
worst-ever defeats.
Similarly, this time around, the Democratic leadership took
the decision not to block the passage of the Military Commissions
Act with the idea that it would undercut any attempt by the Republicans
to cast them as soft on terrorism. They could have
easily sustained a filibuster against the legislation, something
that Senate Democrats have done over far lesser issues, such as
judicial appointments.
As a result, Congress enacted legislation that legitimizes
torture and abrogated fundamental rights that have been in effect
since the founding of the American republic. It has placed in
the hands of the Bush administration extraordinary powers traditionally
identified with police states and military dictatorships. These
powers can be utilized not merely against a relative handful of
so-called enemy combatants now imprisoned in Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba, but against political opponents of the government within
the US itself.
For those who claim, in the words of Sinclair Lewiss
famous political novel, It cant happen here,
the answer is, It can and it has.
It should be recalled as we prepare the final stage of our
campaign in the 2006 election that the most successful American
socialist candidate, Eugene V. Debs, won nearly 1 million votes
in 1920, despite the not inconsiderable impediment of running
for office from a jail cell.
Debs, along with at least 2,000 others, were prosecuted by
the federal government under the Alien and Sedition Acts for the
sole crime of speaking out against Americas involvement
in World War I. Some were sentenced to prison terms of up to 20
years.
This was followed by the post-Russian Revolution Red Scare
and the Palmer Raids of 1919-1920, in which some 10,000 foreign
workers were rounded up, many of them subjected to harsh imprisonment,
beatings and even torturenot for carrying out any crime,
but for their suspected connections to socialist, communist or
anarchist organizations. The authorities of that time pioneered
the ugly and legally baseless thesis, dusted off by the Bush administration
in its policies towards enemy combatants, that non-citizens
enjoy no protection under the US Constitution and may be denied
rights to due process.
And, of course, the Second Red Scare that followed the World
War II targeted US citizens themselves through the enactment of
hundreds of federal, state and local laws dedicated to the persecution
of so-called communist subversives. Guilt by association, blacklists
and loyalty oaths became common features of American political
life. Many thousands lost their jobs and were stripped of basic
rights while hundreds were jailed under the Smith Act for contempt
and on other charges.
Yet the new legislation goes considerably further than the
repressive measures implemented in those earlier dark periods
of American history. It includes a sweeping denial of the right
of prisoners to seek a writ of habeas corpusthat is, to
have the charges against them established in a court of law. It
empowers the president to lock people up without any formal charges,
much less evidence, on his sole say-so that they are enemy
combatants.
Habeas corpus is not some recent innovation. It dates back
to the English Magna Carta enacted nearly 800 years ago, and even
before, and it is incorporated into Article 1 of the US Constitution.
The legislation takes the odious practices of the Bush administration
that emerged through the exposures at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo,
as well as reports leaking out of other secret CIA prisons and
torture chambers, and turns them into the law of the land.
Moreover, it expands the concept of enemy combatants
explicitly to include US citizens as well as legal residents who
are deemed to have purposefully and materially supported
hostilities against the United States or its cobelligerents.
This definition is so broad that individuals who speak out
against the governmentor indeed against the government of
Britain and Israel, which could be classified as cobelligerentscan
be brought before a military tribunal and thrown into a dungeon
without any recourse to the civilian courts.
The New York Times recently quoted the reassuring words
of a senior administration official that the new provisions
of the law were nothing to worry about because, and I quote, The
only people who will be tried will be people who have committed
a crime. In other words, anyone charged is already guilty,
and the military kangaroo court that they will be dragged in front
of will duly confirm that fact. This is the very definition of
a police state.
Social inequality and the attacks on democratic
rights
The lurch by the American ruling establishment toward militarism
and police-state methods of rule can only be understood in the
context of what is undoubtedly the most salient feature of social
life in the United States today: the unprecedented concentration
of wealth and with it the unrestrained growth of inequality.
It is this ever widening gap between a financial oligarchy
at the top and the masses of working people that also explains
the stark disconnect between Americas political establishment
and the sentiments of its people. It explains why, under conditions
in which polls show up to two-thirds of the US population want
US troops out of Iraq now, not a single leading political figure
in either major party will call for their immediate withdrawal.
The two-party political monopoly represents not the people, but
the top 1 percent.
The gulf separating this oligarchy from the ordinary working
people has never been wider. A few recent statistics bear this
out.
According to census data, between 1980 and 2004 real wages
in manufacturing fell 1 percent, while the real income of the
richest 1 percentpeople making over $277,000 in 2004rose
135 percent.
A recent report from the US Commerce Department indicates that
for the first quarter of 2006, wages and salaries accounted for
only 45 percent of the gross domestic product, down from 53.6
percent at the beginning of the 1970s. With each percentage point
representing about $132 billion, this means over $1 trillion more
a year going into the profits of the corporations and the portfolios
of their wealthiest investors and out of the pockets of average
working people.
The thrust of the policies pursued by successive administrations,
Democratic and Republican alike, over the last three decades has
been to achieve precisely this vast upward redistribution of social
wealth.
There are growing signs as we approach the elections that the
results of the voting on November 7 may well prove a stunning
defeat for the Republican Party, with the potential for one or
even both houses of Congress falling back under Democratic leadership.
The Washington Post reported yesterday that the Republican National
Committee is pulling funds from a number of races which it has
concluded are lost in order to concentrate on those where it still
has a chance, as part of a desperate bid to maintain a razor-thin
majority in the House.
Of course, we do not have a crystal ball, and no doubt things
can happen between now and Election Day. According to some press
accounts, the threat of the Bush administration staging an October
surprise is seen as a serious concern within the leading
bodies of the Democratic Party. The threat that the administration
would engineer or allow a terrorist incident on US soil or launch
another act of military aggression in a desperate attempt to stun
the American people into supporting it is undoubtedly a danger.
Of course, as the attempt of the Spanish government in 2004 to
spin a terrorist bombing for its political purposes indicated,
such maneuvers can backfire badly against their perpetrators.
Should the Democrats score such a resounding victory, the political
implications are far-reaching. Certainly, such a turn against
the Republican administration at the polls would reflect the determination
by wide layers of the population to bring about fundamental change.
And we can say confidently that they will not get it through
a Democratic victory. Even if the Democratic Party regains Congress
next month and wins the presidential election in 2008, it will
not fundamentally alter American imperialisms policy of
criminal military aggression. A Democratic victory will not bring
about an end to the US occupation and the mass killing in Iraq,
and it will not decrease the threat of new and even more terrible
wars in the coming months and years.
The right-wing campaign of the Democrats
Nothing makes this fact of American political life clearer
than the right-wing character of the Democrats election
campaign. I have already mentioned their attempt to get the issue
of terrorism off the table by sitting on their hands as the Military
Commissions Act sailed through Congress.
We have made the point on the WSWS that at the end of September,
two revelations surfaced that spelled political trouble for the
Bush White House and the Republican Party. The first was the publication
of the book by Bob Woodward, State of Denial, establishing that
the head of the CIA George Tenet specifically warned the administration
two months before the September 11 attacks that a major terrorist
attack on a US target by Al Qaeda was imminent, and received what
was described as a brush-off.
The implications of this revelationcoming from an author
who has functioned until now as a semi-official court chronicler
for the Bush White Houseis devastating. After all, this
is a government that has justified all of its policies by invoking
the specter of 9/11.
The tragic events of that day have yet to be subjected to a
serious and independent investigation, and not a single official
has been held accountable with so much as a demotion for what
ostensibly represents the worst security and intelligence failure
in the countrys history. An examination of the facts points
inexorably toward collaboration and facilitation at high levels
of the US government in allowing this attack to happen in order
to provide a pretext for war plans that were drafted well before
Bush ever entered the White House.
Almost the same day as Woodwards revelations, it was
disclosed that a Republican Congressman from Florida, Mark Foley,
was implicated in sending inappropriate emails and instant messages
to underage male Congressional pages.
Now which one of these events do you suppose the Democrats
chose to make an issue in their campaign? Of course they seized
on the Foley sex scandal, working it into television commercials
across the country, while ignoring the evidence of the Bush administrations
responsibility for the worst loss of life on American soil since
the Civil War.
The Democrats have also tried to exploit popular opposition
to the war in Iraq for their own political purposes. My opponent
Hillary Clinton typifies their approach. While she postures as
an opponent of the Bush administrations policy in Iraq,
it is not the war for oil itself that she opposes, but the fact
that the administration has bungled the job.
In criticizing the Iraq policy and going so far as demanding
the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Clinton
declared recently that the administration was guilty of numerous
misjudgments. Among them, and I quote, We didnt go
with enough troops to establish law and order, to put down a marker
as to our authority. What is she saying? That the massive
violence unleashed against the Iraqi people in the shock
and awe campaign of 2003 and the subsequent massacres of
civilians in cities like Fallujah wasnt enough. She wanted
more troops and more firepower in order to put down a bigger marker
in bloodto terrorize the population and crush resistance.
Clinton and other leading Democrats have floated a policy consisting
of a phased redeployment of US forces in Iraq to a
more limited mission. What these words mean in practice
is that tens of thousands of American forces would remain in Iraq,
US aerial bombardment of centers of Iraqi resistance would intensify,
and Washingtons attempt to control the countrys oilfields
would continue.
On domestic issues, the Democrats will likewise offer no real
alternative. This is guaranteed by the control exercised over
this partyno less than over the Republicansby financial
and corporate interests.
Again Hillary Clinton, who is the partys presumed front-runner
for the 2008 presidential nomination, provides the best example.
She has amassed a campaign reelection fund that is estimated at
over $40 million, largely thanks to the support she enjoys from
corporate America. She is either the top or next to the top recipient
of funds from the main Wall Street finance houses, the major drug
companies, the healthcare giants and other sections of big business.
She and the Democrats will continue the assault on working class
living standards undertaken by Bush and by her own husband before
them.
This is what makes the campaign being waged by the Socialist
Equality Party in this election so decisive. We are entirely realistic
about this campaign. We are campaigning broadly for our program
and we are asking workers, students and young people to vote for
us, but clearly the central aim of our campaign is not winning
votes. Rather, we intend to use this campaign to politically educate
the working class as to the real nature of the capitalist systemthe
source of war and inequalityand the necessity of building
a fundamentally new party that conducts an internationally coordinated
struggle for socialism.
Whatever the results of the election, they will lead to deepening
popular disillusionment and alienation from the Democratic Party.
Our campaign and the program we advance are offering workers the
only real alternative to wage a struggle against the profit system.
That alternative is the building of the Socialist Equality
Party, working in common struggle with our comrades in the International
Committee of the Fourth International all over the world. I urge
you to participate in this campaign, carefully study our program
and make the decision to join this party.
See Also:
Two parties of war and reaction: Hillary
Clinton, Dick Cheney champion torture on eve of election
[28 October 2006]
New York's Clinton-Spencer debates--a reactionary
charade
Two candidates for war and repression
[25 October 2006]
SEP candidate for US Senate from New York
interviewed on ABC TV in Rochester
[24 October 2006]
SEP candidate for US Senate wins support
at Buffalo New York forum for disabled
[21 October 2006]
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