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Presidential candidates strike antiwar pose at Democratic
National Committee meeting
By Barry Grey in Washington DC
7 February 2007
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At the winter meeting of the Democratic National Committee
(DNC), held February 2-3 at the Washington Hilton Hotel, 10 candidates
for the partys 2008 presidential nomination were paraded
before an audience of party operatives, activists and fundraisers.
It was an occasion to indulge in fictions about the fighting principles
and popular sympathies of the party and allow its presidential
aspirants to posture as critics of the Iraq war.
The proceedings left the impression that the party leadership
was out to disprove Lincolns aphorism that you cant
fool all of the people all of the time.
The Democratic sweep of last Novembers congressional
elections imparted an atmosphere of almost giddy self-congratulation,
which had more to do with the perks and prerogatives of power
than with any political convictions. One got the sense that among
the hundreds in the audience, including contingents of College
Democrats, there was new hope for career advancement and the financial
rewards that go with it.
Every speaker was obliged to congratulate DNC Chairman Howard
Dean for the farsighted brilliance of his 50-state strategy
in the November elections. But even the dimmest of the tribute-payers
was aware that the Democrats victory came virtually by default.
Despite the efforts of the party to play down the issue of the
Iraq war, voters went to the polls in the millions to register
their opposition to the war in the only way the two-party system
allowedby voting for the Democrats.

Hence the chorus of antiwar slogans from all of the candidates,
including two of the favorites to win the nominationHillary
Clinton and John Edwardswho voted in October of 2002 to
authorize Bush to go to war.
Before considering the candidates speeches, it would
be instructive to review the official policy statement of the
Democratic Party on the war that was adopted at the weekend meeting.
The resolution is almost a self-parody of duplicity and cowardice.
In the name of rejecting the Bush administrations military
escalation, it justifies a continuation of the US slaughter in
Iraq.
The substance of the resolution is indicated by its title:
Resolution supporting and honoring the men and women who
serve in our armed forces, expressing deep concern over the Bush
administrations performance in Iraq and opposing the escalation
of the war in Iraq.
The Democrats are incapable of criticizing the Bush administrations
war policy without asserting their patriotism and support
for the troops. Beyond that, the title avoids any condemnation
of the war as such. It narrowly criticizes Bushs performance
in Iraq and limits its opposition to the administrations
escalation.
The text of the resolution begins: Whereas we give our
unqualified support to the men and women serving in the United
States armed forces at home and abroad and their steadfast commitment
to defend our nation... Echoing Bushs lies, this declaration
implies that the US aggression in Iraq is about defending the
American people. It implicitly legitimizes the war.
The resolution is laced with evasions and euphemisms, such
as questionable intelligence, which are designed to
downplay the criminal character of the war and obscure the Democrats
own complicity. It presents the Iraq war as a tactical blunder
in the war on terror, asserting that It has
diverted attention and resources away from the unfinished business
of Afghanistan ... and has emboldened the radical regime in Iran...
It implicitly rejects any early end to the US occupation or
any attempt to cut off funding for the war, stating, [W]e
cannot ignore ... the dangers to the US and the world if we abandon
Iraq to civil war... It calls for Congress merely to declare
its opposition to troop escalation and work to prevent
it, so as to enable the US to deescalate and redeploy our
troops without abandoning the country to an uncertain fate.
This reactionary document underscores the hypocrisy that permeated
the DNC meeting and the speeches of the presidential contenders.
Virtually all of them touched on the same laundry list of issuesthe
war, healthcare, global warming, energy independence, poverty,
CEO paystriking a populist pose and making reform promises
they knew they would never carry out.
Some of the dark horse candidatesConnecticut
Senator Christopher Dodd, Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, New
Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, Iowa Governor Tom Vilsacksought
to outflank the frontrunnersNew York Senator Hillary Clinton,
former North Carolina senator and 2004 vice presidential candidate
John Edwards, Illinois Senator Barack Obamaby criticizing
the nonbinding congressional resolutions against Bushs troop
surge as inadequate and calling for a rapid withdrawal of US troops
from Iraq.
Dodd, whose father was a counsel for the US prosecution team
at the Nuremburg trials before becoming a US senator from Connecticut,
was the only speaker to prominently raise the attack on habeas
corpus and the Geneva Conventions codified in the Military Commissions
Act passed last September.
He pledged that as president he would overturn the torture
bill Bush signed last fall. He neglected to mention that
the bill could not have been passed without Democratic support34
Democratic votes in the House and 12 in the Senate.
Retired General Wesley Clark presented himself as a military
man who won wars, touting his role as NATO commander in the 1999
US air war against Serbia.
Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware, the chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, began his remarks by apologizing
for his well-publicized gaffe earlier that week, when he seemed
to suggest that Barack Obama was the first ever articulate
and clean African-American presidential candidate.
He promoted his plan for Shia, Sunni and Kurd autonomy in Iraq
and presented himself as having the foreign policy expertise required
to deal with the global crises facing the US.
The next president will have to end the war in Iraq and
immediately turn to other simmering hot spots before they explode,
he said.
However, the main attractions were Obama, Edwards and Clinton.
The first of these gave a carefully packaged and slickly delivered
sermon in favor of hope and against cynicism.
The advantage of Obamas nontraditional style
is that it permits one to remain almost entirely at the level
of empty generalities. But within that framework, there lodges
a cautious and calculating political operator entirely loyal to
the American ruling elite.
Obama presents himself as a consensus-builder who
can bridge all differences: racial, economic, geographic, political.
He began his remarks by declaring that DNC Chairman Howard Dean
had proved that a progressive, common sense, practical message
is not restricted to red states, not restricted to blue states,
not restricted to one region of the country, its not even
restricted to one party.
He took pains to place his criticisms of the Iraq war within
the context of his support for the war on terror,
saying the next president had to articulate a new foreign
policy for the twenty-first century, one that refocuses our strength
on the wider struggle against terror...
Every candidate for office in the next election,
he declared, should put forward in clear, unambiguous, certain
terms exactly how they plan to get out of Iraq.
Minutes later he contradicted this demand for a plan to end
the war with the following rhetorical flourish: There are
those ... who say, Well, we want specifics, we want details
and we want white papers, we want plans. Weve had
lots of plans, Democrats. What weve had a shortage of is
hope.
John Edwards presents the highly unpleasant spectacle of a
multimillionaire personal injury-lawyer turned politician posing
as the tribune of the poor, the downtrodden and the working man.
He gave an embarrassingly mawkish speech constructed around the
refrain somewhere in America. (There is a poor child,
an overworked and underpaid worker, etc., etc.).
He has set out to make himself the candidate of the trade union
bureaucracy, and accordingly paid tribute to the role of organized
labor.
Lets stand up for the working people whose labor
made this country great, Edwards declared. America
was built by men and women who worked with their hands. And organized
labor has fought for and made better the lives of every working
man and woman ... labor never stands silent where wrongs need
to be righted.... I am proud to stand beside organized labor.
The labor bureaucracy was, in fact, a major presence at the
DNC meeting. AFL-CIO President John Sweeney was among the DNC
members and honored guests on the floor and Linda Chavez-Thompson,
the executive vice president of the AFL-CIO, was on the stage
in her capacity as DNC vice chair.
Edwards tribute to organizations that have spent decades
betraying the working class and are currently hard at work giving
up pensions, health benefits and a living wageand continuing
to shrink to the point of irrelevanceevoked whoops of support
from the crowd.
Edwards adopted a militant tone on the war, saying, We
cannot be satisfied in passing nonbinding resolutions. We have
to use our power. It would be a betrayal, he
proclaimed, not to speak out against the escalation of this
war in Iraq.
The lawyer chose his words carefully: It was not a betrayal
to go along with the war itself, as he had done when he voted
to authorize it. And today it was not the war itself that had
to be opposed, but only Bushs escalation.
Hillary Clinton sold herself as a pragmatic, but tough and
effective politician who gets results. She adopted a folksy pose,
in line with what she calls her conversation with America.
This obviously rehearsed common touch only made her
seem even more phony.
She paid tribute to the great American middle class
with whom the government had broken its solemn bargain: If
you served your country, your country would serve you.
She would devise a new economic strategy to rebuild the
American middle class and renew the promise of America.
Evidently a component of this new strategy is economic nationalism
and an appeal to anticommunist and anti-Asian sentiments. She
moved seamlessly from denouncing closing our factories and
shipping our jobs overseas to a call to Get tough
on China and start standing up for the American worker
again.
Only a few months ago Clinton stood firmly in the pro-war camp
of the Democratic Party, opposing setting any timetables or benchmarks
on the US occupation of Iraq. Only after Democratic voters in
Connecticut repudiated pro-war Senator Joseph Lieberman and defeated
him in the states Democratic primary election did Clinton
begin to adopt a more critical tone.
At the DNC meeting, she defended the effort to pass nonbinding
resolutions on the war and suggested that nothing more could,
or would, be done by the Democratic Congress to impede Bushs
war policy. She pledged to help rein in the president
over the next two years, and to hold the president accountable
and limit the damage.
Hecklers in the audience interrupted her speech. One Iraq war
veteran shouted, How about bringing them home! Clinton
spoke over him and talked about her initiative to cap troop levels.
Then, in what was doubtlessly conceived of as a dramatic statement,
she declared: If I had been president in October of 2002,
I would not have started this war. To thunderous applause,
she followed with: If we in Congress dont end this
war before January 2009, as president I will.
The first of these assertions lacks any credibility, since
in October of 2002 she voted to authorize Bush to go to war. As
for the second, it actually commits Clinton to nothing more than
ending the war within the next six years (or ten years if one
assumes a two-term presidency).
The one candidate who had something of value to say was the
Vietnam-era senator from Alaska, Mike Gravel. In 1971, Gravel
put the Pentagon Papers into the public record by entering 4,100
pages into the record of his Senate subcommittee on Buildings
and Grounds. For this he was sued by the Nixon administration
in a case that eventually was decided, in the governments
favor, by the US Supreme Court.
That same year Gravel carried out
a one-man filibuster against a bill renewing the military draft.
He succeeded in blocking the bill for five months until Nixon
and Senate Republicans agreed to allow the draft to expire in
1973.
He is, in other words, a representative of an earlier generation,
when the two bourgeois parties had considerably more of a popular
base of support and members of Congress had broader social constituencies
beyond their direct corporate backers. There were legislators
such as Gravel who were genuinely opposed to the Vietnam War and
were prepared to take a stand against the White House and the
majority within their own partys congressional caucus.
For precisely that reason, Gravels entry into the 2008
primary race is being treated by the Democratic Party apparatus
and the media as a quaint and somewhat amusing sideshow. His presence
at the DNC meeting was a living reminder of how far to the right
the Democratic Party has moved over the past 35 years.
In his speech, Gravel told the meeting: The Democrats
controlled the Senate on October 11, 2002 and provided political
cover for George Bush to invade Iraq. The Senate leadership could
have refused to even take up the resolution, or a few senators
who opposed it could have mounted a filibuster...
Given the extreme importance of any decision to go to
war ... its my opinion that anyone who voted for the war
on October 11based on what President Bush representedis
not qualified to hold the office of president...
We must bring our troops home nownot six months
from now, not a year from nowNOW! One more American death
for our vital interest is not worth it. We all know
vital interest is code for oil...
The Democrats in control of Congress need to act resolutelyand
Im not talking about some mealy-mouthed, nonbinding resolutions.
They need to precipitate a constitutional confrontation with George
Bush.
The overwhelming majority of those in the hall expressed their
dismay and disapproval by sitting on their hands throughout the
ex-senators speech.
See Also:
Democrats Out of Iraq
caucus puts on a show for its radical friends
[5 February 2007]
Why is the US press silent on Brzezinskis
warnings of war against Iran?
[3 February 2007]
A political bombshell from Zbigniew
Brzezinski
Ex-national security adviser warns that Bush is seeking a
pretext to attack Iran
[2 February 2007]
Steny Hoyer at the Brookings Institution
House majority leader lays out Democratic position on Iraq
[1 February 2007]
The politics of the January
27 rally in Washington
Organizers channel antiwar protest behind Democrats
[29 January 2007]
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