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America
Bushs State of the Union speech highlights crisis of
US ruling elite
By Bill Van Auken
24 January 2007
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President George W. Bushs State of the Union address
was delivered Wednesday in an atmosphere of crisis and demoralization
gripping not only his own Republican administration, but the entire
American political establishment.
The media made much of Bush having for the first time to address
a Democratic-led Congress, but the prevailing mood was not so
much political confrontation as general bewilderment and apprehension,
with the two parties confronting a military and political debacle
in Iraq in which they are both fully implicated.
A president who, as multiple polls released this week have
underscored, is the most despised occupant of the White House
since Richard Nixon at the height of the Watergate crisis, was
treated to repeated standing ovations led by the new Madam
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Democratic Congresswoman
Nancy Pelosi.
However, the applause, backslapping and bathos that have become
the norm for this annual political ritual could not mask the fact
that the US political establishment is torn by deep divisions
and bitter recriminations, with some of the sharpest opposition
to Bushs policies coming not from the newly empowered Democrats,
but from members of his own party.
There is a general recognition not only that the American colonial
war in Iraq has failed, but that the six years of the Bush administration
have produced a colossal decline in the world position of US imperialism.
The new way forward spelled out by Bush in his
speech less than two weeks ago has provoked mounting fears that
the military escalation in Iraq, combined with threats against
Iran and Syria, will only deepen the disaster. Yet the reaction
of Congress resembles the paralysis of passengers facing an impending
train wreck: They know what is coming but can do nothing to avert
it.
Fear of the consequences of Bushs escalation is combined
with even greater dread over the implications of US imperialism
being dealt a decisive defeat in Iraq.
The general perplexity and desperation were reflected in the
elements of unreality and absurdity in Bushs speech. The
commander in chief failed to even mention the war
in Iraqwhich everyone knew was the overriding issue facing
the nationuntil he was more than three-fifths through his
remarks.
The most salient feature of the present state of the
union is the unprecedented decision of a US president to
escalate a war that was overwhelmingly rejected by the people
in elections held just three months earlier. Yet this brazenly
anti-democratic defiance of public opinion was never addressed.
Instead, Bush began his speech with a series of reactionary
proposals on domestic issues. Our job is to make life better
for our fellow Americans, and help them to build a future of hope
and opportunityand this is the business before us tonight,
he proclaimed.
In fact, the business that night, as throughout
the year, was upholding the interests of the banks and corporations
that control both major parties, and Bushs proposals all
reflected this focus. They amounted to a series of coded messages
to the major profit-making sectorsthe energy conglomerates,
the healthcare monopolies, agribusiness and Wall Streetthat
Bush would push new initiatives to boost their profits.
Thus, the president vowed to balance the federal budget...
without raising taxes, that is, to defend his massive tax
breaks for the rich while continuing to slash what remains of
social programs for working people. He demanded that the government
take on the challenge of entitlements, i.e., that
it get down to the business of gutting Social Security, Medicare
and Medicaid.
Bush promoted a thoroughly regressive plan ostensibly to aid
the 47 million Americans who have no health insurance. His cure,
however, was worse than the disease. It would turn health care
benefits offered by employers into taxable income, meaning a further
cut in income for some 30 million Americans. It would also introduce
a universal tax deduction to encourage people to opt out of these
plans, undermining health care coverage for some 160 million people.
Turning to the question of immigration, Bush vowed to advance
legislation aimed at instituting a new version of the bracero
program, guaranteeing agribusiness a reliable supply of oppressed,
low-wage workers, while denying immigrants basic rights.
The president raised a series of proposals supposedly aimed
at ending US dependence on foreign oil. All of these measures
have been crafted to uphold the interests of energy conglomerates
like Exxon Mobil and the Big Three automakers.
When he finally turned to Iraq, it was via the usual route
of falsely casting the war of aggression long planned by Washington
as a response to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks and
as the key front in the global war on terror.
That millions of Americans have long since rejected the claim
that the invasion of Iraq was a reaction to the 9/11 attacks found
no reflection on the floor of the Congress.
Led by Pelosi, Democrats rose repeatedly in standing ovations
for the so-called war on terror and those who are waging it. They
stood and applauded for Bush when he declared that Washingtons
mission was to help men and women in the Middle East to
build free societies and share in the rights of all humanity.
This despite the fact that US policy has killed hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis and turned their country into a nightmare of death and
destruction, while American imperialism continues to base its
regional power on a Zionist regime that oppresses the Palestinians
and on Arab despots who suppress their own people.
The perplexity of the Democrats found its consummate expression
when they were brought to their feet with the following passage
from Bush:
We went into this largely unitedin our assumptions,
and in our convictions. And whatever you voted for, you did not
vote for failure. Our country is pursuing a new strategy in Iraqand
I ask you to give it a chance to work. And I ask you to support
our troops in the fieldand those on the way.
Here Bushs speechwriters earned their pay. The passage
made clear that the Democrats in Congress were Bushs partners
in crime, voting the White House a blank check to wage a war of
aggression against Iraq. It also spelled out that Democrats and
Republicans alike reflected the consensus position within Americas
ruling elite that military force must be used to assert the interests
of US capitalism worldwide, most decisively by seizing control
of world energy supplies.
Failure of this strategy has, from the standpoint of the political
establishment, vast and catastrophic consequences for US imperialist
interests worldwide. That is why, under the cynical slogan of
support our troops, the Democrats will continue to
fund the war.
The political bankruptcy of the ostensible Democratic opposition
to Bushs war policy was underscored in the partys
official response, delivered by freshman Democratic Senator Jim
Webb from Virginia, himself a Vietnam veteran and former Republican
secretary of the navy.
After describing the war as mismanaged, Webb stumbled
over his prepared remarks in a revealing way. The majority
of the nation no longer supports this war, he began, and
then corrected himself to say, no longer supports the way
this war is being fought; nor does the military.
The reality is that the overwhelming majority does indeed oppose
the war. According to a poll released by NBC and the Wall Street
Journal on the eve of the speech, 65 percent want all US troops
out of Iraq by the end of the year. But the Democrats are committed
to its continuation.
As Webb continued, We need a new direction. Not one step
back from the war against international terrorism. Not a precipitous
withdrawal that ignores the possibility of further chaos.
All the Democratic talk of redeploying US troops
is merely an alternative strategy for continuing the occupation
and the war against the Iraqi people, relying less on US combat
infantry units and more on Iraqi surrogates backed by American
advisors, rapid deployment forces and air power.
The much vaunted nonbinding Senate resolution opposing Bushs
surge states in its first sentence, ...the United
States strategy and presence on the ground in Iraq can only be
sustained with the support of the American people and bipartisan
support from Congress. It continues by declaring, ...maximizing
our chances of success in Iraq should be our goal, and the best
chances of success requires a change in current strategy.
Bushs speech amounted to a pleading appeal for this bipartisan
supportfor the Democrats and wavering members of his own
party to give his intensified assault on the Iraqi people a chance.
While the Democrats, as well as much of the Republican Party,
fear the potentially disastrous consequences of this new tactic,
they counterpose only another means of continuing the war.
The State of the Union address and the Democratic response
have underscored the impossibility of waging a genuine struggle
to end the war in Iraq outside of the fight to mobilize working
people independently of and in opposition to both the Democratic
and Republican parties, and the corporate ruling elite whose interests
they serve.
See Also:
On the eve of State of the Union speech
US political crisis mounts over Iraq war escalation
[23 January 2007]
For an international mobilization of workers
and youth against the war in Iraq
[22 January 2007]
The war in Iraq and American democracy
[20 January 2007]
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