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New Yorks Clinton-Spencer debatesa reactionary
charade
Two candidates for war and repression
By Bill Van Auken
25 October 2006
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The back-to-back debates held last weekend between New Yorks
Democratic Senator Hillary Clinton and her Republican opponent,
the right-wing former mayor of Yonkers, John Spencer, were a political
charade, summing up everything that is reactionary about the political
monopoly exercised by the two-party system.
I, as well as other candidates for the US Senate from New York,
was excluded from these debates in order to reinforce this monopoly.
Clinton could not tolerate the inclusion of a challenger from
the left, opposing her policies of militarism and defense of the
profit system from the standpoint of the interests of working
people and a socialist perspective.
The Democratic incumbent and her Republican opponent made it
clear that they both support not only a continuation of the war
against Iraq, but intensified military threats against Iran and
North Korea as well.
Both declared their support for the wholesale attacks on democratic
rights enacted under the Bush administration, with Clinton vigorously
defending her record of support for the USA Patriot Act. And neither
candidate advanced even a hint of a program to meet the needs
of ordinary working people in New York, who face a mounting crisis
due to falling real wages, rising housing costs, lack of health
insurance and unemployment.
The debates were held in the political context of the recent
Johns Hopkins University survey revealing that the US war in Iraq
has claimed the lives of some 655,000 Iraqis, and in the wake
of Congresss approval of the 2006 Military Commissions Act
legalizing torture and abrogating habeas corpus.
Yet the lions share of the
questions posed in this so-called debate centered not on these
critical issues facing the American people, but on Ms. Clintons
personal political ambitions and celebrity status. Reporters asked
the Democratic senator whether she was happy with her life and
why people either loved or hated her. The main issue
in the debates was not Clintons policies, but whether or
not she would run for the Democratic presidential nomination in
2008.
Noticeably absent from the largely toothless queries of the
reporters was any reference to her statement the previous week
supporting legislation empowering the president to order the torture
of suspects under undefined extraordinary conditions,
a position that places her to the right of sections of the Republican
Party. Also untouched was the decision taken by Clinton and the
rest of the Democratic leadership not to block passage of the
Military Commissions Act so as to avoid Republican charges that
the party is soft on terrorism.
In the course of the questioning about Iraq, Clinton claimed,
If we knew then what we now know, there never would have
been a vote and there never would have been a war. She went
on to indict Bush for being ill-prepared for what needed
to be done in order to be successful and to declared her
own determination to see the mission completed.
If her first statement were indeed true, Hillary Clinton should
have resigned long ago for gross incompetence and dereliction
of her most elementary duties of legislative oversight.
As her socialist challenger, I can point to point to my record
on this issue. Unlike Clinton, who belatedly claims that she was
deceived, I wrote article after article for the World Socialist
Web Site in 2002 exposing the Bush administrations so-called
evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction as lies, and warning
that the vote cast by Ms. Clinton would rapidly lead to a war
of aggression and ultimate catastrophe.
It was not a matter of unique foresight on my part. Tens of
millions of people took to the streets of cities around the world
because they recognized the charges against Iraq to be a phony
pretext for seizing the worlds second-largest oil reserves.
Why didnt Clinton know as much as those millions?
One more lie
In the end, Clintons claim that she didnt know
is just one more lie. She and other Democratic leaders were well
aware that Bushs claim that Iraqs nonexistent weapons
of mass destruction posed a threat to the US was a pretext for
launching a long-planned war of conquest. They, like the Republican
administration, believed these lies to be the best means of foisting
this war onto the American people.
As for her remarks about Bushs failure to wage a successful
war, the obvious conclusion is that far more troops were, and
are, needed to crush the Iraqi resistance and complete the mission
of reducing the country to a US semi-colony, with its oil resources
safely in the grip of the American energy corporations. The unstated
corollary of this criticism is that many more troops must be found,
something that points inexorably toward the reinstitution of the
military draft.
Clintons right-wing Republican opponent, who trails the
incumbent by a two-to-one margin, all but labeled any criticism
of the administration on the Iraq war as treason. He made a valid
argument, however, in reviewing Clintons record of having
voted for the war, while attempting to disassociate herself from
any responsibility for the resulting debacle, and for having alternatively
called for the sending of even more troops and the redeployment
of those already there. Does anyone understand what that
means? he asked.
Clinton also signaled her support for stepped-up militarism
against both North Korea and Iran, declaring that she favored
keeping all options on the table, meaning new wars
of aggression.
When accused by Spencer of having opposed the USA Patriot Act,
Clinton bristled, affirming that she had supported this repressive
legislation, having objected only to the fact that New York did
not get more money to implement police-state measures.
The entire character of these debates was representative of
the present political establishment and the system it defends,
based upon social inequality, repression and reaction. The first
was held Friday night in Rochester, an economically depressed
upstate city that has seen 35,000 jobs destroyed since Clinton
was first elected, and the second in New York City on Sunday morning.
In both cases, the debates were held behind an army of Secret
Service agents, police and private security guards. As for the
audience, it consisted of a relative handful of Democratic and
Republican hacks, combined with a sprinkling of well-heeled donors.
At the University of Rochester, the site of the first debate,
students were given explicit instructions not to go near the debate
auditorium, which was less than a third full for the event. The
audience at the second, held in the studios of WABC television,
was even smaller.
I and SEP supporters demonstrated outside both the events,
demanding that all candidates be allowed to debate. Green Party
members and their Senate candidate, Howie Hawkins, also turned
out to protest the exclusionary policy both in Rochester and Manhattan.
Also present were demonstrators from local antiwar groups.
In Rochester, security expelled both Hawkins and me from the
university when we attempted to hand out our respective statements
denouncing exclusion from the debates. A group of gay students,
who had come to protest their own exclusion from the event as
well as the positions of Clinton and her Republican challenger
on same-sex marriage, were similarly chased off of their own campus.
When Hawkins and I attempted to approach the press room after
the debate to speak with the media, a phalanx of police blocked
our path and threatened us with arrest if we didnt leave.
We later learned that the university and a number of its faculty
members had held their own meeting with students to protest what
had effectively become the hijacking of the university by Time
Warner Corp., the debates corporate sponsor, in league with
the board of trustees.
No explanation was ever given for the policy of excluding all
candidates save the Democrat and the Republican from these debates.
During the Democratic primaries, Time Warner, a major donor to
Clintons campaign, refused to organize a debate on the grounds
that the failure of Clintons challenger to raise more than
half a million dollars in campaign contributions meant that he
was not a serious candidate.
These undemocratic criteria have no basis whatsoever in election
law. The Socialist Equality Party was placed on the ballot by
25,000 New Yorkers who signed our nominating petitions.
Having met the onerous requirements set by the state of New
York for ballot access, my candidacy is every bit as legitimate
as those of Spencer or Clinton. The arbitrary rules for debates
set by private corporations together with the Democratic and Republican
parties are designed to exclude all candidates except those backed
by the corporations or those who are multimillionaires in their
own right, as well as to narrow the political discussion to views
that are acceptable to Americas financial oligarchy.
In the end, it wasnt just me who was excluded, but millions
of New Yorkers and hundreds of millions around the country who
want an immediate end to the war in Iraq, oppose the sweeping
attacks on democratic rights and want to see a halt to the staggering
growth of social inequality. They too were denied a voice.
While kept out of the debate between Clinton and Spencer, the
SEP organized its own independent activities in New York state.
The day before the first debate, the SEP held a successful campaign
rally in Buffalo, and on the day of the second debate a well-attended
meeting in New York City. On Monday, I participated together with
Hawkins of the Greens and the Libertarian Party candidate for
US Senate Jeff Russell in a press conference in Albany to denounce
the exclusion, which was covered by several newspapers and television
stations.
The Socialist Equality Party condemns this undemocratic, exclusionary
policy, but it hardly comes as a surprise. The truth is that American
working people, the vast majority of the population, are systematically
excluded from any genuine participation in a political system
that is organized by two big business parties against their interests.
The central aim of the Socialist Equality Partys election
campaign is the building of a new socialist movement based upon
these broad masses of politically excluded and politically alienated
working people. Only such a movement can bring an end to war,
political repression, social inequality and the capitalist system
that creates them.
See Also:
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]
SEP campaign reaches students in New York
[19 October 2006]
Message to US troops by SEP candidate
for US Senate from New York: For an immediate end to the Iraq
occupation, bring the troops home now!
[18 October 2006]
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