|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Hillary Clinton in Detroit: Democrat preaches American nationalism
to union bureaucracy
By Patrick Martin
11 June 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Saturdays Detroit town hall meeting for Hillary Clinton,
sponsored by the Detroit and Michigan AFL-CIO, should dispel any
illusion that the election of a Democratic president in 2008 will
put an end to the aggressive, America-first foreign policy that
produced the Bush administrations invasion and occupation
of Iraq.
The Democratic frontrunner told an audience of 600 people,
mostly union officials and workers close to the union bureaucracy,
that the solution to the problems of working people in the United
States is a tougher line on trade with China, Korea, Mexico and
other countries. At the same time, she portrayed the US debacle
in Iraq as the fault, not of the Bush administration, but of the
Iraqi people themselves.
The Detroit event is one of seven forums sponsored by the AFL-CIO
nationwide to promote the Democratic presidential candidates.
Clintons appearance was her first in Michigan since she
officially launched her campaign.
The AFL-CIO officials were clearly uneasy at holding a town
hall meeting in the most impoverished large city in America and
a metropolitan area with some of the most extreme contrasts between
wealth and poverty. The audience was carefully selected to ensure
that the discussion did not get out of control. Local unions distributed
the tickets required for admission, and those who participated
in panel discussion with Clinton or asked questions from the floor
were prescreened.

One rank-and-file steelworker made reference to this vetting
process as she asked Clinton about fuel efficiency standards in
the automobile industry. Im not sure why Im
asking this, she said, before reading out the question written
for her by a union official. A school teacher who spoke passionately
about the need for greater equality in funding between rich and
poor school districts began her remarks apologetically. Maybe
Im not supposed to say this, she remarked.
The bulk of Clintons speech was a litany of standard
liberal promises of better jobs, better schools, better health
care and a better environment. She pledged quality, universal
health care, revitalizing our manufacturing sector,
an Apollo-style government program to deal with the energy crisis,
and a universal pre-kindergarten program to improve public education.
These pledges were received with rapturous applause by the
audience, consisting largely of officials and members of such
unions as the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME), the American Federation of Teachers (AFT),
the apparel, retail and hotel workers union UNITE HERE,
the postal workers, and the construction trades.
The United Auto Workers, which regards Clinton as too friendly
to free trade and environmental regulations on the auto industry,
was nearly invisible, although one laid-off UAW member was among
a panel of three who told stories of economic and social hardship,
to which Clinton responded.
The Democratic frontrunner did not bother to square her reformist
pretenses with her pledge of a return to the economic policies
of the 1990s, carried out by her husbands administration.
The first Clinton White House focused on balancing the federal
budget and satisfying the demands of the bond market, essentially
precluding any significant increase in spending to meet urgent
social needs.
Nor did Clinton address the impact of the enormous squandering
of resources on the Bush administrations wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq, which she and the other leading Democratic presidential
candidates intend to continue. She only touched briefly on the
subject of Iraq, and used language carefully crafted to sound
more antiwar than it was, proposing, in substance, a policy not
greatly different from options currently under consideration at
the Pentagon.
Clinton set a goal to start bringing combat troops out
of the civil war in Iraq, a formulation which suggests that
tens of thousands of US troops would remain in Iraq indefinitely.
(On other occasions, she has suggested combat troops exiting Iraq
would be redeployed elsewhere in the Middle East or to Afghanistan,
keeping them in the war zone).
She went out of her way to emphasize that there should be no
criticism of the performance of the US military in Iraq. Our
troops did what they were asked to do, Clinton declared,
citing the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the seizure of sites where
weapons of mass destruction were located (which turned out not
to exist), and the establishment of a level of security sufficient
to hold elections for a new Iraqi government.
According to Clinton, the failure in Iraq is the fault of the
Iraqis. The civil war is the Iraqis responsibility,
she said, adding that she would tell the Iraqis there will
be no more aid until they resolve their problems. Again,
the words are carefully chosen. She threatens a cutoff of aidi.e.,
US subsidies to the Iraqi puppet regimenot a cutoff of funding
for the US war, the only means by which the Democratic-controlled
Congress could actually force an end to the war.
Despite the low profile Clinton gave the Iraq issuerelegating
it to the 25th minute of a 30-minute speechher suggestion
that she would end the war produced the loudest ovation of the
morning.
It is obvious that in downplaying the war in Iraq in her speechonly
a few days after a Democratic presidential debate in New Hampshire
that focused largely on that subjectClinton was responding
to the concerns of the AFL-CIO bureaucrats who organized the town
hall meeting.
The union bureaucracy, steeped in chauvinism and nationalism,
has no principled opposition to the war in Iraqeven now,
after more than 3,500 US soldiers and hundreds of thousands of
Iraqis have been killed. They look at the war exclusively from
the standpoint of how it may affect the electoral fortunes of
the Democratic Party in 2008.
In the parochial world of the privileged union bureaucrats,
the issue of the war is subordinated to the far more important
question of putting a Democrat in the White Houseone who
will look with greater favor on their own narrow concerns about
increasing their dues base and income from government programs.
Clinton has clearly taken the measure of the AFL-CIO bureaucracy
and tailored her remarks accordingly, combining a bit of social
reform demagogy with a poisonous dose of chauvinism and American
nationalism. We will do nothing to undermine American interests,
she declared, summing up her approach to all public policy matters,
foreign and domestic.
Even her signature social issue, health-care reform, was presented
from the standpoint of American economic interests. American corporations,
particularly the Big Three automakers, are at a deep disadvantage
because of legacy costs for pensions and medical care for retired
workers, she said. Their competitors are based in countries with
government-run or government-financed medical systems, she pointed
out, calling for action to relieve the US companies of their legacy
costs. Under capitalism, such action means, in one way or another,
depriving retired workers of the benefits they are due.
In the world according to Clinton, not only the war in Iraq,
but virtually every other problem confronting the American people
is caused by foreigners, or by Bush being insufficiently tough
with foreigners.
The gargantuan federal budget deficit? Bush has mortgaged the
country to China, so that weve had to borrow money
from China to pay for body armor for the troops in Iraq.
Bushs deficits, she declared, were undermining Americas
ability to defend itself economically and diplomatically, because
you cant be tough on your banker.
The decline in jobs and real wages? The Chinese dont
play fair on trade, Clinton said. She criticized the Bush
administration as too soft on trade, saying, You dont
give away the US market. She called for a form of protectionism,
which she labeled smart trade, and declared that on
that basis she would vote against ratification of a free trade
agreement between the United States and South Korea, because South
Korea was excluding American imports, especially US-built cars,
from its domestic market. She also called for the establishment
of a new high-level government position, trade prosecutor, to
go after countries that practiced unfair competition
In both her opening statement and subsequent remarks responding
to the panel of rank-and-file unionists, Clinton resorted to a
time-worn cliché of American politics, the assertion that
the American worker is the most productive, hardest working
in the world.
Such statements combine flattery and distortion in equal measure.
They hark back to the daysthree or four decades agowhen
American capitalism dominated the world market and when trade
union action, for all its intrinsic limitations, could win concessions
in the form of wage and benefit increases.
That era is long gone. The long-term decline in investment
in US industry (the responsibility of the capitalists, not the
workers), means that American workers are far from the most productive,
as measured by output per man-hour, having fallen behind much
of Western Europe and Japan.
Living standards for American workers have also fallen behind.
Average real wages are higher in Germany and much of Europe, and
social benefits ranging from vacation time to health care are
far superior to the abysmal level prevailing in the US.
More fundamentally, the globalization of the world economy
means that no country any longer possesses a monopoly on advanced
industrial technology, scientific technique, or labor skill. This
has an enormously positive potential, creating the conditions
for raising the living standards of working people everywhere
to a decent level for the first time in human history.
But within the framework of capitalism, dominated by giant
corporations and rival nation-states, globalization has become
a means of enriching a tiny privileged elite, while systematically
reducing the living standards of working people to the lowest
common denominator.
See Also:
Democrats pose as Iraq war opponents
in New Hampshire debate
[5 June 2007]
Detroit town hall meeting on impeachment
provides political cover for the Democratic Party
[5 June 2007]
US antiwar protest groups silent on Cindy
Sheehans resignation from Democratic Party
[2 June 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |