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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Take Back America conference: Democratic candidates seek progressive
support
By David Walsh
23 June 2007
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At the Take Back America conference, held in Washington
June 18-20, leading Democrats played to a crowd of 3,000 Democratic
Party activists and members of liberal protest groups, promising
an end to the war in Iraq and a number of social reforms. The
crowd met the politicians more than halfway and chose, for the
most part, to believe them.
The annual Take Back America conferences have been
organized by the Campaign for Americas Future, a liberal
Democratic Party organization co-directed by Robert Borosage.
A contributing editor at the Nation magazine, Borosage
was a long-time director of the Institute for Policy Studies,
a liberal think tank, and served as an advisor to the campaigns
of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and Senators Carol Moseley-Braun, Barbara
Boxer and Paul Wellstone.
The premise of Take Back America is that the country
has been hijacked by a cabal of neo-conservatives under George
W. Bush and needs to be restored to a healthy condition.
Six of the Democratic presidential hopefuls addressed the meeting:
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards, Dennis Kucinich,
Bill Richardson and Mike Gravel.
In his opening remarks to the conference, Borosage sounded
several themes. He observed that the political winds were changing,
saying, The conservative era that defined our politics for
the last quarter century is at its end. Public opinion had
turned sharply against the Bush administration and Americans
are looking for a [new] way forward.
Borosage outlined a program of limited social reforms, a policy
repudiated decades ago by the Democratic Party, and warned of
the need to revive the American dream. He declared,
Corporations are now shredding the social contract that
was the linchpin of the American dreamsecure jobs that provided
a family wage, health care, paid vacations, and pensions ... We
must sustain the American dream. He did not draw out the
explosive political implications of a failure to do so.
Borosage identified what he described as the elements of a
new majority coalition for progressive change, which could
push the Democratic Party to the left. All of the components of
this new majority were in attendance at the conference:
the trade union bureaucracy (Richard Trumka of the AFL-CIO, officials
from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees,
as well as the Service Employees International Union), the Democratic
pressure group MoveOn.org, the liberal think tanks (Economic Policy
Institute, Center for American Progress, Institute for Policy
Studies), progressive bloggers, and others.
The Nation magazine was well represented. Its editor
and publisher, Katrina vanden Heuvel, shared the platform with
three US senators in a panel on energy policy. Retired Chrysler
CEO Lee Iacocca addressed a workshop entitled Just Business:
Progressive Policy and Business Voices. Former Clinton administration
functionaries and campaign advisers such as John Podesta and Donna
Brazile spoke on other panels.
These forces, along with wealthy individual backers of Take
Back America like Hamilton Fish (George Soros political
adviser), millionaire Ned Lamont, Barbra Streisand and the like,
form the backbone of the Democratic Party lefta
thoroughly establishment crowd.
Last years conference was marked by noisy booing of Sen.
Hillary Clinton of New York because of her defense of the Iraq
war. The political winds have no doubt changed
since then, with the popular mood even more opposed to Bush, the
war, the mounting attacks on social conditions and democratic
rightsand bitterly disillusioned with the Democratic-controlled
Congress.
Borosage and the other organizers of this conference, however,
are not leading a shift to the left. They are making every effort
to control the popular radicalization and subordinate it to the
Democratic Party. That is their overriding political concern
In commentary on the conference this year, both before and
afterward, the organizers and the media asserted that the dominant
feature was a move to the left by the various candidates in response
to public opinion. Politico.com termed it the sometimes
ungainly scrambling to the left on the question of US withdrawal
from Iraq. Borosage suggested, Theyve all moved
dramatically. The director of MoveOn.org, Eli Pariser, told
the media, The dynamic is more positive this year. You have
all the candidates trying to be the out of Iraq candidate.
Explaining why the leading candidates had all decided to appear
at the Take Back America meeting this time, Washington
Post columnist E.J. Dionne noted, A large majority of
the country has now decided that the establishment was wrong to
support the war, and that those who opposed itincluding
the leftwere right. This is true, and sections of
the establishment Democratic Party are attempting
to shore up their positions.
The three Democratic frontrunners, Clinton, Obama and Edwards,
are in fact accomplices of the Bush administration in the invasion
and occupation of Iraq. Clinton and Edwards voted to authorize
the war in October 2002, and all three senators (or former senators
in Edwards case) voted for one or more of the massive war
appropriations bills over the course of the past four years.
The opposition of Clinton and Obama to the most recent funding
bill was an act of political cynicism. Each waited until it was
clear that his or her no vote would not help defeat
the $100 billion funding bill, and each had already endorsed stripping
it of any restrictions on US military action.
Needless to say, this did not prevent them, along with Edwards,
from flaunting their supposed anti-war credentials.
Obama and Edwards spoke back-to-back on June 19. The Illinois
senator had some difficulty keeping his ego in check. It
has now been a little over four months since we began this campaign,
he said. And everywhere weve been ... weve been
getting these inspiring, humbling crowds of thousands. For a lot
of people, its the first political event of their lifetime.
He added, half-jokingly, Id like to take all the
credit myself, but I know thats not the only reason theyre
coming Toward the end of his remarks, modestly, Obama told
the crowd, I am confident about my ability to lead this
country. But I also know that I cant do it without you.
In the time remaining after he talked about himself and his
accomplishments, Obama cursorily addressed the Iraq war. He called
it a dangerous diversion from the struggle against the terrorists
who attacked us on September 11, and promised to pursue
the goal of bringing all combat brigades home by March 31,
2008. He made clear that his principal objection to the
Iraq war was that it was an occupation of undetermined length,
at undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences.
Edwards began his address with the question of the Iraq war,
declaring, I voted for this war and I was wrong to vote
for this war. And I take responsibility for that, I will have
to live with that. He did not, it must be said, look like
a man who was haunted by the thought of hundreds of thousands
of dead and a country destroyed. He implicitly criticized Obama,
Clinton and the rest of the Congress for accepting Bushs
May 1 veto of a war-funding bill that included a timetable for
withdrawal.
Edwards, a multi-millionaire, went on to claim that I
will speak for the poor, I will speak for the uninsured, I will
speak for the disenfranchised. This is my life and Im going
to do it as long as Im alive and breathing.
An article in the New York Times June 22 revealed that,
according to tax filings, the main beneficiary of the nonprofit
organization Edwards created after the 2004 election with
the stated mission of fighting povertythe Center for
Promise and Opportunitywas Mr. Edwards himself.
It was primarily a vehicle, according to the Times, for
financing Edwards travels and paying for his political staff.
The following day, June 20, Hillary Clinton, like the rest,
denounced the Bush administrations Iraq policy. She promised,
without providing details, We are going to end the war in
Iraq and finally bring our troops home. Some in the crowd
were restive during her speech, shouting Impeach him [Bush],
which Clinton ignored, and Out of Iraq now!
She termed the conflict in Iraq a sectarian civil war, as though
the US occupation, which she voted to authorize, had played no
role in fomenting civil strife. When she carried on, declaring,
The American military has succeeded. It is the Iraqi government
that has failed, there was considerable booing. Clinton,
flustered, continued ironically, I love coming here every
year. She went on, I see the signs that say Get
us out of Iraq That is what we are trying to do.
In the course of her comments, Clinton also asserted that there
was no conflict between science and faith and that we are all
good stewards of Gods creation. She concluded
her remarks with the obligatory populist pitch, pledging to enact
government policies that would help people treated as invisible
by the Bush administration.
Dennis Kucinich, the Ohio congressman, followed Clinton. He
made the most left speech of the candidates, calling
for a cutoff in funding for the war in Iraq and for US troops
to be brought home. Kucinich, who has no hope of winning the Democratic
nomination, called for single-payer, not-for-profit health
care, trade policy based on environmental policy, respect
for the Constitution, and the impeachment of Vice President Dick
Cheney. (He did not explain, and never has, why Bush is any less
guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors than Cheney).
Kucinich was well-received. He carries out a particular function
in the campaign: to deceive people into thinking the Democratic
Party, one of the political instruments of American big business,
is a peoples party, capable of bringing about
social reform. He is, ostensibly, the embodiment of the progressive
wing of the party, whose existence is supposed to prove, despite
everything, that the party can be made to defend the interests
of ordinary citizens and pursue a policy of peace.
No one in the left-liberal crowd apparently cared to remind
him of his conduct in 2004, when he ignominiously capitulated
to John Kerry, endorsing the latters right-wing, pro-war
candidacy at the Democratic national convention.
The appearances by the candidates, their anti-war demagogy,
their phony concern for the poor, the operations of all the liberal
operatives, the Take Back America conference itselfall
of this adds up to nothing more than a sordid political maneuver.
The American population is moving sharply to the left, but the
Democratic Party has been on nearly three-decade lurch to the
right. Borosages claim that increasingly progressives
are driving the Democratic debate, and that We are
setting the agenda, is a product of either self-delusion
or a deliberate effort to deceiveor both.
The corporate-financial elite sets the agenda on all critical
issues for the Democratic Party. The eventual Democratic presidential
candidate in 2008 will be someone who has been carefully tested,
vetted and given his or her marching orders by powerful sections
of the American oligarchy. Those orders include, of course, the
ability to tack to the left when necessary, to play
the populist card. In that sense, the ability to maneuver and
manipulate the audience at the Take Back America conference,
not all that daunting a task, is merely one of the tests that
the candidates must pass to qualify for the nomination.
See Also:
An independent voice of
Wall Street:
Billionaire New York mayor may run in US presidential campaign
[21 June 2007]
Why the Nation remains silent on Cindy Sheehans departure
from the Democratic Party: Part One,
Part Two, Part
Three
[18 June 2007]
US commander warns Iraq war will go on
for a decade
[18 June 2007]
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