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Clinton victories in Ohio, Texas intensify divisions in Democratic
Party
By Patrick Martin
6 March 2008
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With a narrow victory in Texas and a sizeable one in Ohio,
Hillary Clinton dealt a significant setback to the campaign of
Barack Obama and insured that the contest for the Democratic Party
presidential nomination will continue for at least another two
months, until the April 22 primary in Pennsylvania, the last large
state to vote.
The extension of the campaign for the presidential nomination
suggests that the political crisis within the Democratic Party
will intensify and the underlying policy disputes will emerge
more clearly and publicly.
The intra-party strife will benefit the Republican Party, at
least in the short term, since Senator John McCain clinched the
Republican presidential nomination by winning all four contests
on Tuesday. McCain visited the White House Wednesday to receive
an official endorsement from President Bush.
Despite her popular vote victories, Clinton was able to gain
only a net of 12 convention delegates, according to figures reported
Wednesday. Obama held a lead of 101 delegates1,562 compared
to 1,461 for Clinton, according to an Associated Press tally.
Another 12 delegates remained to be allocated due to late vote-counting
in Ohio and the convoluted caucus/primary process in Texas. 2,025
delegates are required for nomination.
In Texas, Clintons narrow 51 percent to 48 percent margin
translated into an even narrower 92-91 margin in convention delegates
after the caucuses, where Obama supporters were in the majority.
In Ohio, Clinton gained a 74-65 edge in delegates after winning
by a ten-point margin in the popular vote, 54 percent to 44 percent.
The campaigns also divided the two small New England states
that voted Tuesday, Clinton taking Rhode Island and Obama Vermont.
Obama is expected to gain the majority of delegates in two
lesser contests in the coming week, caucuses Saturday in Wyoming
and a primary Tuesday in Mississippi. Then there is a six-week
break before the next vote, in Pennsylvania. After that, seven
more primary states remain: Indiana, North Carolina, West Virginia,
Kentucky, Oregon, South Dakota and Montana, as well as a primary
in Puerto Rico June 7.
There is little likelihood that either candidate will gain
the required 2,025 delegates in the course of the remaining contests.
One of the two will be in the lead, with the outcome in the hands
of the automatic delegates (so-called superdelegates), mostly
Democratic Party elected officials and members of the Democratic
National Committee. Some 350 out of the 796 superdelegates have
not yet committed themselves publicly to Clinton or Obama.
Amid the oceans of press commentary and the microscopic dissection
of every possible voting bloc, real and imaginary, there has been
almost no discussion about the political significance of the protracted
and deadlocked character of the struggle for the Democratic presidential
nomination.
There has been no such fiercely contested race since 1968,
when the Democratic Party was severely divided over the Vietnam
War, and these divisionswhich exploded into police violence
against antiwar demonstrators outside the Democratic National
Convention in Chicagoultimately aided the victory of the
Republican candidate, Richard Nixon.
In 1968, the nature of the foreign policy divisions was evident.
First Eugene McCarthy and then Robert F. Kennedy challenged the
incumbent Democratic president, Lyndon Johnson, calling for a
reversal of US policy in Vietnam.
In the face of the Tet offensive by the Vietnamese National
Liberation Front and the mounting US balance of payments crisis
produced by war spending, Johnson announced he would not seek
renomination. Vice President Hubert Humphrey eventually entered
the race as the standard-bearer for the dominant pro-war faction
of the Democratic Party establishment, and after Robert Kennedys
assassination he gained the nomination despite not winning a single
primary.
Forty years later, the split within the Democratic Party is
equally deep and rancorous, but the issues are for the most part
deliberately concealed, both by the politicians and the media,
from the public. These issues relate not to domestic policythere
is little difference between Obama and Clinton herebut to
foreign policy, and particularly the war in Iraq.
Clinton was initially the frontrunner, backed by the bulk of
the party establishment, which lined up behind the war in Iraq
either out of conviction or political cowardice. Clintons
vote for the war authorization in October 2002 signaled her belief
that it was necessary to publicly back the Bush war drive in order
to remain a credible candidate for commander in chief
at some future date. The performance of the congressional Democratic
leadership in 2007when it spurned the mandate of antiwar
voters and refused to take any action to halt the waris
another demonstration of this position.
The Obama campaign was promoted and given the necessary financial
backing by sections of the US ruling elite who regard the decision
to invade and occupy Iraq as a disastrous foreign policy blunder
which has set back the strategic interests of American imperialism,
and whose costestimated at $3 trillion by one recent studyhas
brought the countrys finances close to bankruptcy.
These elements are neither pacifist nor antiwar,
as Obamas militaristic rhetoric in relation to Afghanistan,
Pakistan and other potential targets of US attack makes clear.
But they believe that there must be a change in the public posture
of American foreign policy, one that would have even more impact
if an African-American were to enter the White House.
As Washington Post columnist David Ignatius wrote last
month, Imagine the television footage of Barack Obamas
first trip abroad as presidentthe crowds in the streets
of Moscow, Cairo, Nairobi, Shanghai, Paris, Islamabad.
Much of the Democratic Party establishment seeks to downplay
the war in Iraq, both because of their own complicity in it and
because they fear the consequences of an open posing of the issue
against the pro-war candidacy of McCain. They would prefer a campaign
focused on domestic issues like economic policy and health care.
It is the nature of the American political system that conflicts
over policy are fought out not so much as a matter of parliamentary
debate, but on the bigger stage of a national presidential campaign,
with rival factions compelled to seek mass support. The underlying
political differences, however, are largely manifested in the
form of a bitter clash of personalities and personal ambitions.
The political debate is conducted not frankly and openly, but
rather through political symbolism and the politics of personal
destruction, as manifested in attack ads and so-called negative
campaigning.
Among the most revealing incidents in the run-up to Tuesdays
primariesand one which the Clinton campaign exploited to
significant advantagewas the uncovering of a memo revealing
that Obamas principal economic advisor had met with Canadian
officials to discuss the candidates statement that he would
seek to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement. This
affirmation, the advisor assured the Canadian government, was
a matter merely of political positioning, not actual
policy.
While Clinton made the most of this revelation, her own posturing
on NAFTA has an identical character, and the same could be said
about virtually everything said on the campaign trail by both
candidates, including their duplicitous pledges to end the war
in Iraq.
The other campaign tactic employed by Clinton in the run-up
to Tuesdays primaries was fear-mongering. One campaign commercialfeaturing
a ringing red phone and the images of sleeping childrenappealed
to fears of terrorism and promoted Clinton as the candidate best
suited to be commander in chief. The ad invoked one
of the main themes of the Bush 2004 campaign, and of the campaign
which Republican candidate John McCain will be waging.
This approach is aimed not only at scaring voters into supporting
her, but also at appealing to the only constituency that can hand
her the nominationthe elected and party officials who make
up the superdelegates. Her campaigns argument to them is
that it is more in keeping with US strategic interests to wage
a campaign closer to that of the Republicans on issues of militarism
and foreign policy, and approach Iraq as a matter of tactical
blunders, rather than questioning the justification for launching
the war in the first place.
Obama, for his part, is loathe to wage a defense from the left,
for fear of alienating the sections of the ruling elite that form
the decisive constituency for the Democratic Party. As a result,
it is not only Clinton who is shifting to the right, but the entire
Democratic campaign.
During the days preceding the primaries, Obama found time to
issue two foreign policy statements: the first declaring that
he opposed any US talks with the Palestinian movement Hamas, which
at the time was under Israeli bombardment in the Gaza Strip; and
the second stating his support for the US-backed Colombian government
in its cross-border military aggression in Ecuador. The clear
aim was to portray himself as a credible commander-in-chief,
prepared to carry out the kind of actions that are necessary to
defend the interests of American imperialism.
The Republican Party, the Bush administration, and the McCain
campaign have all seized on Clintons arguments against Obamas
fitness to be commander-in-chief as grist for their own attacks,
should Obama become the Democratic nominee.
In his victory speech Tuesday night, McCain reiterated his
support for the escalation of US military involvement in Iraq
(the surge) and dismissed the conflict between Clinton
and Obama over her vote for the war authorization bill in 2002.
It is of little use for Americans for their candidates to
avoid the many complex challenges of these struggles by re-litigating
decisions of the past, he said. Americans know that
the next president doesnt get to re-make that decision.
Republican consultant Scott Reed gloated, in an interview with
Time magazine, What Hillary has been saying in Texas
is music to our ears. All we have to do is run her ad and put
a tag at the end, Paid for by the Republican National Committee.
The expectation on the Republican side is that if Obama wins
the nomination, a significant section of the Democratic Party
establishment will follow the example of Senator Joseph Liebermanthe
partys 2000 vice-presidential candidateand openly
or tacitly give its backing to McCain.
On the other hand, should Clinton succeed in claiming the nomination
based on the support of superdelegates, under conditions where
Obama retained the lead in delegates chosen in the primary contests,
the likely result would be the alienation of substantial layers
of younger voters who voted for Obama.
See Also:
Obama, Clinton debate in Ohio:
What accounts for the bitter struggle within the Democratic Party?
[28 February 2008]
The two faces of Barack Obama
[14 February 2008]
Clinton campaign in crisis
after Obama sweeps five weekend contests
[12 February 2008]
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