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The Nation urges Cindy Sheehan not to run for Congress
against Nancy Pelosi
By David Walsh
23 August 2007
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The Nation magazine, a leading voice of left-liberalism,
has come out in opposition to antiwar activist Cindy Sheehans
decision to run for Congress as an independent against Democratic
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.
Sheehan, whose son Casey was killed in 2004 in Iraq and who
set up a protest camp outside George W. Bushs Crawford,
Texas ranch in 2005, announced earlier this month that she would
contest Pelosis seat in San Franciscos 8th Congressional
District.
In a piece headlined Dear Cindy: Please Dont Run,
posted August 11 on the Nations web site, columnist
Katha Pollitt advises Sheehan not to contest the seat on three
spurious grounds.
First, Pollitt implies that Sheehans only complaint against
Pelosi is that the latter has failed to push for Bushs removal
from office, and asks, should impeachment really be a litmus
test?
The failure of the Democratic leadership in Congress to press
the issue of impeachment may have triggered Sheehans decision
to oppose Pelosi, but it is by no means the only reason for her
break with the Democrats, and Pollitt knows this perfectly well.
As early as Sheehans May 26, 2007 open letter to the Democrats
in Congress, she explained she was leaving the Democratic Party
because of its capitulation over the Bush administrations
request for an additional $100 billion to fund the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
It is worth recalling that the Nation, along with most
of the left and the mass media, kept silent about
Sheehans letter explaining her rupture with the Democrats.
In two comments about Sheehan at the time, the Nations
John Nichols referred only to her May 28 statement in which
she expressed weariness and some bitterness over her experiences
in the antiwar movement, and declared that she was temporarily
stepping back from her activities.
Pollitt maintains this policy. She refers to Sheehans
somewhat murky blog post she wrote in May, announcing her
resignation from the antiwar movement, but says nothing
about Sheehans more important letter of resignation from
the Democrats.
In a statement officially announcing her candidacy, made at
a press conference in San Francisco August 9, Sheehan referred
to impeachment only once. Her criticisms of the Democratic Party
were of a more general character.
Arguing that the American electorate had placed the Democrats
in the majority in Congress out of disgust with the Bush administration,
Sheehan declared that Congress, under the speakership of
Ms. Pelosi has done nothing but protect the status quo of the
corporate elite and, in fact, since she has been the Speaker,
the situation in the Middle East has grown far worse.
Sheehan asserted that the rich are getting richer, the
poor are getting poorer and the middle class is rapidly disappearing
along with the American dream of home ownership.
She went on: The PATRIOT Act and Military Commissions Act
need to be repealed and habeas corpus needs to be restored. These
things can only happen with fearless leadership, not fearful capitulation
to a lying President.
She explained that she was running out of opposition to the
corporately controlled two party system.
Sheehan is raising a critical political issue, however limited
her program and perspective may be: that both the Republicans
and Democrats speak for the wealthy elite. Since the Nation
is dedicated to propagating the myth that the Democrats represent
something different, a progressive, peoples
party, Pollitt prefers to make life easier for herself by simply
ignoring the contents of Sheehans arguments.
In any event, Pollitts attitude toward impeachment is
entirely light-minded. She tells her readers, Sure, it would
be emotionally satisfying to haul the president before the Senatelook
how much fun the Republicans had with Clinton. I understand why
some of my Nation colleagues are so keen on it.
The Democrats failure to pursue impeachment demonstrates
their congenital cowardice and their complicity in the crimes
of the Bush administration. That the Democrats reject the removal
of a president who has systematically violated the US Constitution
and numerous laws, launched a war on the basis of lies, arrogated
to himself quasi-dictatorial powers and overseen the establishment
of the legal and institutional apparatus for a police state exposes
their unwillingness and inability to defend basic democratic rights.
In fact, however, the decay of the democratic processes cannot
be halted by means of impeachment, which would merely alter the
leading personnel of a political system that answers exclusively
to the demands of a financial oligarchy.
Pollitts second argument against Sheehan is equally worthless.
She claims that Sheehans run is futile. Since,
according to Pollitt, Sheehan has no chance of defeating
Pelosi, she shouldnt bother running. What is one to make
of such reasoning?
In the first place, as Sheehan has pointed out, A great
majority of citizens in Californias 8th Congressional district
want the Bush regime impeached and want our troops home from the
Middle East. In November 2004, some 64 percent of San Franciscos
voters supported a local ballot measure to withdraw US troops
from Iraq. Two years later, 59.4 percent of the citys voters
supported a measure calling for the impeachment of Bush and Vice
President Dick Cheney. Pelosi has defied both votes, facilitating
the passage of funding for the Iraq war and refusing to call for
Bushs removal.
However, whether Sheehan has a serious prospect of winning
the election or not is a secondary matter. What type of political
figure supports a candidate only when he or she stands a good
chance of success? The type that makes up the editorial staff
of the Nation: well-heeled, complacent, opportunist. Matters
of principle mean little or nothing to such people, and fighting
against the stream is unthinkable.
Pollitt speaks about the contest for the 8th Congressional
district as if her and the Nations own role do not
come into play. The magazine, after all, is a link in the chain
of causation. If the Nation were to throw its support behind
Sheehan, that would have a certain impact, particularly in a city
like San Francisco.
In fact, Pollitt and the magazines staff as a whole are
supporting Pelosi against Sheehan, although they dont care
to say this explicitly. Pollitt writes, Pelosi has been
a cautioustoo cautiousleader, and if a lefter candidate
could take her seat, fine. But its clearly not fine,
because Pollitt is advising Sheehan, someone who enjoys considerable
popular support, to desist from opposing the House speaker.
It is a favorite line of the Nation that Pelosi and
company have been overly cautious in their opposition
to Bush. As John Nichols commented delicately, Pelosi is
a war critic, but she has never gone to the mat on the issue.
The reality is otherwise. The Democrats in Congress were politically
complicit in the preparations for war in Iraq and the March 2003
invasion itself, and they remain complicit in the ongoing neo-colonial
occupation.
As Sheehan has noted, the escalation of the war has taken place
since the Democrats regained a majority in Congress and
was only made possible by their collaboration. They are critical
of the Bush administrations tactics, particularly since
the results have been so obviously disastrous, but they have no
disagreement with the global war on terror, a phrase
that conceals the American ruling elites drive for world
domination. They propose shifting the main battlefield to Afghanistan
or elsewhere, while maintaining tens of thousands of US troops
in Iraq to safeguard American control over its oil supplies.
The reverence evidenced by left-liberal circles for Pelosi
is a sign of their right-wing orientation. A Democratic
speaker of the House, and the first woman in the job! The
fact that Pelosi is a multi-millionaire supporter of American
imperialism and militarism, who voted for the Patriot Act and
supported Bushs program of warrantless wire-tapping, doesnt
faze Pollitt or her colleagues terribly much.
The Nations immediate task is to sanitize whichever
one of the right-wing candidates gains the Democratic Party 2008
presidential nomination and present him or her to its readership
in left colors. The editorial staffs distaste
for Hillary Clintonor, more precisely, fears about her lack
of credibility due to her reactionary track recordwill not
prevent them from climbing on board Clintons campaign band-wagon
should she be the chosen nominee.
Pollitts third argument against Sheehans candidacy,
if examined carefully, highlights some of the class issues involved
in the conflict between the Nation and Sheehan. In the
patronizing fashion that is the wont of the upper-middle-class
snobs who publish the magazine, Pollitt writes: Most important,
Sheehan already has a crucial role in our politics: as an activist.
More than any other single person, she changed the discourse about
the war. She put a middle American face on the antiwar movement
at a time when it was widely caricatured as a ragtag collection
of hippies, Stalinists, and movie stars.
Pollitt continues: No matter that she sometimes seemed
to be conducting her political education in public. She was a
mother wrenched out of her ordinary life by tragedythat
is a very powerful and inspiring symbolic role. ... Still, the
place for symbolic protest is in protest movements. Elections
are about something else and are played by different rules. There,
symbolic figures are mostly wasting their time, and tend to emerge
smaller than they went in.
In other words, Sheehan should leave politics to her betters.
The condescension, still polite in tone at this point, contains
an immense amount of hostility. From now on, Sheehan is someone,
as far as the Nation is concerned, with a target on her
back. Her candidacy, far from being futile and symbolic,
threatens to put a spotlight on the bankruptcy of the two-party
system and might encourage a dangerous breach in the present set-up.
Pollitts intervention is something of a preemptive strike.
The Nation and its writers speak for a privileged layer
of American society, which views the ascension of the Democrats
as desirable for the advancement of its own interests. Sheehan
reflects something different, the growth of antiwar and left-wing
sentiment within the working population, and an increasing alienation
from the two-party system.
After coming in for criticism for her comments from some readers,
Pollitt returned to the Sheehan question on the Nations
web site August 20. Flippant in the face of a war that has produced
the deaths of hundreds of thousands, the columnist now says about
Sheehans decision, Really, whats the harm?
But she doesnt mean this either, as the piece goes on to
demonstrate.
About campaigns such as Sheehan is undertaking, she observes,
But beyond generating (maybe) a few headlines and offering
likeminded voters a chance to raise a fist in the air, what is
achieved? Is an organization built? Is the ground prepared for
a more powerful bid next time? Are ideas put into the political
discourse that werent there before? Is the winner pushed
to the left? Too often, in fact almost always, the answer to these
questions is no.
In the first place, if an antiwar candidate runs in Californias
8th District, someone who denounces the corporate control of both
parties, against a leading Democrat, then, yes, this might at
the very least put ideas into the political discourse that
werent there before. It is to Sheehans credit
that she has chosen to run as an independent against Pelosi.
The notion that the only purpose of an independent political
campaign would be to push one of the existing parties or politicians
to the left simply lays bare Pollitts politics:
utter prostration before the two-party system. The Nation
staff is unable to conceive of the world without the Democratic
Party. This is not merely an ideological problem, or the result
of a lack of political imagination. This layer is tied to the
Democrats by a thousand social and financial threads.
As part of its campaign against Sheehans candidacy, the
Nation is operating an online poll of its readers, asking
Should Cindy Sheehan be challenging Nancy Pelosi in the
08 race? But the reader is not offered the choice
of answering Yes or No to this question. Instead he or she is
only permitted to select one of these options: Absolutely.
Someone needs to hold Pelosi accountable for taking impeachment
off the table, Sure. The whole process is a circus
anyway; we might as well add another sideshow, No
way. Sheehan already has a crucial role to play as an activist,
Im sick of Sheehan. Didnt she retire from politics?
The questions reek of cynicism and unseriousness, and an unquestioning
acceptance of the existing political set-up.
See Also:
Why the Nation remains
silent on Cindy Sheehans departure from the Democratic PartyPart
one
[18 June 2007]
Iraq war opponent Cindy Sheehan
resigns from the Democratic Party
[30 May 2007]
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