|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US political establishment lines up behind Barack Obama
By Patrick Martin
4 February 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Click here to download this article
as a leaflet.
As the contests for the presidential nominations of the Democratic
and Republican parties head into the potentially decisive primary
voting on February 5, there has been a pronounced shift in favor
of the campaign of Senator Barack Obama of Illinois, reflected
in a surge in opinion polls, large turnouts at campaign rallies,
a flood of campaign contributions, and a series of high-profile
political and media endorsements.
The past week has seen a significant intervention by the ruling
elite to promote the Obama campaign, acting through its political
representativesparticularly Senator Edward Kennedy, longtime
leader of the liberal wing of the Democratic Partyand through
the corporate-controlled mass media.
Kennedys endorsement of Obama was a devastating blow
to the Clinton campaign, signaling that Obama, far from representing
an insurgency, was becoming the consensus candidate of the Democratic
Party establishment. This was followed by a slew of newspaper
endorsements, including 34 in California, among them the Los
Angeles Times and La Opinion, the most widely read
Spanish-language daily.
Opinion polls published Saturday and Sunday found Obama essentially
tied with the longtime frontrunner in the Democratic nominating
contest, Senator Hillary Clinton, both nationally and in the critical
state of California. That state is among the 22 voting Tuesday
and awards the largest single number of delegates, more than ten
percent of the total, to the Democratic National Convention.
If Obama wins California and gains a majority of delegates
chosen in the Super Tuesday primaries and caucuses,
he would become the overwhelming favorite to win the Democratic
presidential nomination and face the presumptive Republican candidate,
Arizona Senator John McCain.
The Obama surge is undoubtedly a significant political event,
but like any phenomenon in American politics, it has to be analyzed
from two standpointswhat it reveals about changes in mass
consciousness, and what it reveals about the ongoing policy discussions
and political struggles taking place within the ruling elite.
For millions of voters, and particularly for young people,
the response to Obamas campaign reflects both a deep-going
desire for significant social and political change, as well as
widespread illusionsfostered assiduously by the mediathat
the election of the first black president would represent a fundamental
break with an old and discredited political order in the United
States.
Obama is not, however, the product of the civil rights struggles
against racial oppression, nor is he associated with any popular
movement from below. His career has far more in common with those
of Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell, individuals selected and
groomed by the American ruling class to carry out its policies.
Like them, he is being used to put a new face on fundamentally
reactionary policies and institutions.
In policy terms, there is little to distinguish Obama from
Clinton, although her 2002 vote in the US Senate to authorize
the war in Iraq has served as a lead weight around her neck throughout
the campaign. The war is overwhelmingly unpopular among the American
people as a whole, and among young people and Democratic primary
voters in particular.
While Obama has never presented himself explicitly as an antiwar
candidate, he has sought to take advantage of Clintons record
of support for the war, and his own early criticism of it, arguing
that he would be a more effective opponent against McCain, a diehard
advocate of the war.
It is necessary to distinguish sharply between the political
shift among working people and youth, a movement to the left which
presages the outbreak of mass social and political struggles,
and the efforts of the ruling elite to manipulate popular sentiments,
manufacture illusions, and disarm the masses politically.
The Obama campaign is not the vehicle of a leftward movement
in the United Statesas proclaimed by liberal groups such
as MoveOn.org and publications like The Nation. It is a
preemptive attack by the ruling class against such a movement.
Its function is to delude the American people and divert their
growing opposition to war, economic crisis and attacks on democratic
rights back into the dead-end of the Democratic Party.
While the American people will cast ballots on November 4,
the real decisions are made long before then, in the selection
of candidates and framing of the election by the media and the
corporate bosses and billionaires who finance and politically
screen the candidates.
It was millions in startup money from wealthy backers
that made it possible for a very junior senator from Illinois,
a man who four years ago was serving in the Illinois state legislature
and unknown nationally, to become a viable presidential candidate.
The largely flattering treatment of the Obama campaign, not
only in the liberal sections of the media but in the right-wing
press as wellRupert Murdochs New York Post
endorsed him in the February 5 primary in that statedemonstrates
a broader agreement in the ruling elite that some sort of new
departure in US politics may be required. This, of course, will
be a cosmetic and not a fundamental shift.
Virtually all sections of the US ruling elite have now drawn
the conclusion that the Bush administration is a disastrous failure.
The world standing of America has declined catastrophically, while
the base for imperialist policies has eroded within the United
States itself, as the vast majority of the American people rejects
the war in Iraq and opposes its extension into Iran, Syria, Pakistan
or other potential targets.
The president who enters the White House in January 2009 will
face immense crises both at home and abroad. To address these
crises from the standpoint of the needs of the financial aristocracy
will require the imposition of unprecedented sacrifices on the
American people. That in turn will require a new political approacha
turn to the Democratic Party, which has always been relied upon
by big business to use its image as the party of the people
to defend the profit system.
The huge swing to the Democratic Party in campaign contributions
from big business reflects this emerging consensus. According
to recent financial reports to the Federal Election Commission,
investment bankers have tilted their financial support overwhelmingly
to the Democratic Party, giving roughly equal amounts to Clinton
and Obama. In total contributions, both Clinton and Obama collected
more than $100 million apiece in 2007, more than twice the largest
amount raised by any Republican, while Obama raised an additional
$32.6 million in January 2008 alone.
Among those backing the Obama campaign are such pillars of
the US political establishment as Zbigniew Brzezinski, national
security adviser to President Jimmy Carter and an arch-Cold Warrior;
retired Air Force General Merrill McPeak and a host of other retired
military brass; billionaire Warren Buffett, the second-richest
man in America; and an array of Wall Street and corporate executives,
none of whom could be suspected of any sympathy for radical social
change.
Important sections of the ruling elite have concluded that,
particularly for the overseas interests of American imperialism,
a President Obama would provided important advantages. He would
at one stroke put a new face on American foreign policy,
and make it more likely that Washington could overcome the international
isolation and global hostility created by the arrogant unilateralism
of the Bush White House and its failed intervention in Iraq. And
it may well require a Democrat in the White House to reinstate
the draft and provide the manpower required to sustain and expand
the US drive for military domination of the oil-rich Middle East
and Central Asia.
An argument along these lines is made in Sundays editorial
in the Los Angeles Times, the most widely read newspaper
in California. The Times has not made an endorsement in
a presidential primary contest since 1972, but broke with that
tradition to back Obama in the Democratic primary and McCain among
the Republicans.
The Times editorial says Obama electrifies young
voters ... because he embodies the desire to move to the next
chapter of the American story. It praises his early opposition
to the war in Iraq, while noting approvingly his understanding
that some liberal orthodoxies developed during the last 40 years
have been overtaken by history. This last comment indicates
that Obama has reassured the ruling elite that there will be no
return to policies of liberal reform or expensive government social
programs.
Then comes the meat of the argument: An Obama presidency
would present, as a distinctly American face, a man of African
descent, born in the nations youngest state [Hawaii], with
a childhood spent partly in Asia, among Muslims. No public relations
campaign could do more than Obamas mere presence in the
White House to defuse anti-American passion around the world...
The Los Angeles Times, owned by Tribune Corporation,
one of the giant US media monopolies, is not here declaring any
opposition to the principle of US world domination embraced by
all sections of the moneyed elite. It is rather voicing the desire
to turn away from an exclusive reliance on the use of military
force alone to sustain that dominance.
A sizeable section of the US ruling class recognizes, in the
wake of the Bush debacles in Iraq and Afghanistan, that it is
necessary to revive methods of diplomacy, political propaganda,
economic penetration and the use of alliances to promote imperialist
interests. It should go without saying that this soft power
is to be employed in combination with, not as a substitute for,
military force.
An Obama presidency (or a Clinton presidency, should her campaign
ultimately prevail), would thus represent a fine-tuning or adjustment
in American foreign policy, but no let-up in American imperialisms
drive to war and conquest, which arises not out of the brains
of George W. Bush and Richard Cheney, but out of the historical
crisis of American and world capitalism.
Obama is merely the product of an effective marketing campaign
which has utilized media outlets ranging from Rupert Murdoch to
The Nation to sell this new version of a very old productthe
Democratic Party friend of the people, previously
incarnated in the insurgent candidacy of Jimmy Carter
in 1976, then in the man from Hope, Bill Clinton himself,
in 1992. An Obama presidency would no more represent a fundamental
change in American politics than the election of Carter and Clinton
did, and if Murdoch & Co. feared it would, he would never
have been allowed anywhere near the White House.
The typical Obama speech is a mass of nebulous phrases about
uniting America, without the slightest acknowledgement that social
and economic interests of working people, the vast majority of
Americans, are diametrically opposed to those of the corporate
and financial elite. In perhaps his most noteworthy comment, after
the South Carolina primary, he explicitly rejected the notion
that the wealthy dont care about the condition of ordinary
people.
Obamas mantra of bringing everyone together may appeal
to the naïve illusions of youth who are making their first
political experiences, but Obama and the Wall Street bankers and
media moguls who are promoting him know exactly what they are
doing. Theirs is a conscious policy of blurring social and political
differences and denying class divisions in a society more deeply
divided along economic lines than ever before in its history.
The World Socialist Web Site opposes all those who seek
to bolster the shattered credibility of the Democratic Party.
The only road to progressive social change in the United States
is the road of the political independence of the working class,
through a break with the Democratic Party and the whole structure
of capitalist politics, and the building of a mass political movement
based on a socialist and internationalist perspective.
See Also:
McCain leads race for Republican
presidential nomination after Florida vote
[31 January 2008]
Obama wins South Carolina
Democratic presidential primary
[28 January 2008]
Clinton-Obama row over Iraq
record masks consensus on continued occupation
[16 January 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |