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The politics of the January 27 rally in Washington
Organizers channel antiwar protest behind Democrats
By Barry Grey in Washington DC
29 January 2007
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Tens of thousands rallied in Washington DC on Saturday to protest
the Bush administrations military escalation in Iraq and
demand an end to the war and withdrawal of US troops. Students
and youth from many parts of the country attended. There was also
a significant representation of Iraq war veterans as well as families
of soldiers who have been killed or wounded in Iraq and of men
and women presently deployed in Iraq or Afghanistan. Several dozen
active duty soldiers participated.
However, all those who came to Washington out of a sincere
desire to bring an end to the war were deprived of any serious
or honest political perspective by the organizers of the demonstration,
who deliberately subordinated it to the maneuvers of the Democrats
in Congress and the electoral ambitions of the Democratic Party
in the 2008 presidential race.
United for Peace and Justice, the coalition that organized
the Washington rally as well as smaller protests in Los Angeles,
San Francisco and other cities, brought an array of Democratic
politicians onto the stage at the National Mall, including Ohio
Congressman Dennis Kucinich, who is running for the 2008 Democratic
presidential nomination, Representatives Maxine Waters and Lynn
Woolsey of California, Rep. John Conyers of Michigan and Jesse
Jackson.
A statement issued Saturday by United for Peace and Justice,
entitled Why We Are Marching, made clear the political
alliance between the rally organizers and the Democratic Party.
It praised a bill introduced by congresswomen Woolsey, Waters
and Barbara Lee to withdraw US troops from Iraq within six months
and declared, We stand with this growing Congressional group.
Now is the time for Congress to take the actions within its legal
power, to make history, use the power of the purse to stop the
funding of the war.

In fact, this bill and a similar measure to be introduced in
the Senate by Russ Feingold have no chance of being passed or
even winning significant support from legislators. The Democratic
leadership in the House of RepresentativesSpeaker Nancy
Pelosi and Majority Leader Steny Hoyerand Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid have made it clear they are opposed to blocking
funding for Bushs surge of 21,500 additional
troops, let alone moving to cut off funding for the war as a whole.
Instead they are cynically attempting, by means of nonbinding
resolutions against Bushs military escalation, to appease
and defuse mass antiwar sentiment, while fashioning a new bipartisan
strategy to salvage the US colonial adventure in Iraq.
The purpose of legislative gestures such as those introduced
by Waters and company in the House and Feingold in the Senate
is to give the Democrats a measure of credibility and boost illusions
that this imperialist party can be pressured to adopt a pacifist
foreign policy.
With the Bush administration brazenly flouting public opinion
on Iraq, and losing support in Congress even among Republicans
for its reckless policy of escalation in Iraq and war threats
against Iran, the entire political establishment is careening
toward a political and constitutional crisis of potentially historic
proportions. Both parties are terrified at the prospect of the
mass opposition to the war linking up with other social concerns
of working people and sparking a social movement outside of the
control of either party or any institution of the US ruling elite.
That fear is shared by those who organized the January 27 demonstrations.
The United for Peace and Justice coalition includes the liberal
Democratic MoveOn.org and is headed by such left defenders
of the Democratic Party as the Communist Party Stalinist leader
Judith LeBlanc and veteran protest organizer Leslie Cagan.
They quite consciously set out to present the Democratic Party
as the only legitimate focus for antiwar activity and block the
emergence of a movement against imperialist war from the left,
i.e., one that is independent of the two-party system and advances
a socialist program articulating the interests of the American
and international working class.
Speakers at the January 27 rally repeatedly told the crowd
that the way to bring an end to the war was to lobby the new,
Democratic Congress. The call to pressure the Democratic Congress
was combined with thinly veiled calls to elect a Democrat as president
in 2008. (Little mention was made of the absence from the demonstration
of any of the leading contenders for the Democratic nomination:
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards or Joseph Biden.)
Eleanor Smeal, head of Feminist Majority, proclaimed, We
will return even bigger majorities in 2008 ... Keep your lobbying
shoes on.
Susan Schaer of Womens Action for New Directions declared,
referring to the Democratic Congress, They are the deciders,
not [Bush]. They are the commanders. Now, it is up to them to
make the change... We have to be there behind them, every step
of the way. Some nonbinding resolution is good, but its
not enough.... We can do it. We did it in November, we can do
it next year.
The demonstration was in large part organized as a backdrop
to a new effort to lobby Congress, entitled Americans Against
Escalation in Iraq, which was recently launched by a coalition
of unions and MoveOn.org.
The complicity of the Democrats in the war, from its origin
to the present, was largely ignored, and there was no explanation
of the root causes of the eruption of US militarism in the crisis
of American and world capitalism.
The Washington demonstration had, in fact, a semi-official
character. In the days leading up to the rally, the Washington
Post published articles predicting a mass turnout, providing
a map of the rally site, and advertising the scheduled appearance,
complete with head shots, of such Hollywood celebrities as Jane
Fonda, Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins and Danny Glover. The Friday
edition went so far as to report a relatively balmy and sunny
weather forecast for the next days march. Sundays
Post featured a front-page report on the demonstration
with a large photo of the marchersa marked departure from
the newspapers negligible coverage of previous antiwar marches.
A certain indication of the quasi-official character of the
demonstration and the coordination between the organizers and
the Democratic Party leadership was the stamp of approval given
by the AFL-CIO bureaucracy. The union federation, which initially
supported the war and remained silent for months on end as the
carnage increased, sent Fred Mason, the president of the Maryland-DC
AFL-CIO, to present greetings to the rally in behalf of AFL-CIO
President John Sweeney.
An event organized on the basis of such a bankrupt perspective
could not possibly give serious expression to the intense hatred
of working people and youth for the war and the Bush administration,
and the deep social and economic concerns of the broad masses
of the population.
Among the more odious aspects of the event was a demagogic
rant from Dennis Kucinich, a political imposter and scoundrel
of the first order. The Ohio congressman is seeking to reprise
his role in the 2004 presidential race, when he ran for the Democratic
nomination as supposedly the most resolute antiwar candidate,
only to throw his support at the Democratic convention to the
partys pro-war nominee, John Kerry.
Prior to subjecting the crowd to yet one more keep hope
alive sermon from Jesse Jackson, United for Peace and Justice
National Coordinator Cagan reverently introduced the veteran political
dissembler as someone who has been a part of this movement
and every movement for social and economic justice.
When this reporter interviewed Jackson prior to his speech,
however, the unprincipled and two-faced character of his position
became clear. Asked whether he favored a cutoff of funding for
the war, Jackson replied, Yes. You cant have it both
ways.
When I then asked, All funding, or just for the escalation?
Jackson evaded the question, replying: A, stop the escalation
and B, begin to put together an authentic coalition of the willing
to begin to transition us out of there...
When I asked whether he favored the impeachment of Bush, he
similarly hedged, saying, I favor hearings and investigations.
Lets at least begin to engage in the process to determine
what went wrong and who did what when.
Behind such evasions and doubletalk stand the politics of a
party which, whatever its criticisms of Bushs policy in
Iraq, fully defends the interests of the US corporate-financial
elite both at home and abroad, and has no principled opposition
either to continuing the bloodbath in Iraq or launching new imperialist
wars.
Definite political lessons must be drawn from the complicity
of the Democratic Party in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, not
to mention last summers US-backed Israeli war against Lebanon.
Lessons must similarly be drawn about the politics of nominally
left, opportunist allies of the Democratic Party, such as those
who organized last Saturdays demonstrations.
The only genuine basis for developing a mass movement against
militarism and war is the mobilization of working people on an
international scale independently of and against the parties of
the capitalist ruling elite. This means an irrevocable break with
the Democratic Party and the building of a mass, independent socialist
movement.
See Also:
Students, veterans, workers denounce
Iraq war at Saturday protests
[29 January 2007]
For an international mobilization of workers
and youth against the war in Iraq
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site and the International
Committee of the Fourth International
[22 January 2007]
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