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George Bush took office, he has run roughshod over anyone in his way to
help his rich friends get even richer.
Bush's corrupt administration exploited the tragedy of 9/11 to launch
two wars to expand U.S. imperial domination, which has only increased
our chances of being targeted for terrorism. An August 13 report from
the Congressional Budget Office confirmed that Bush's $1.7 trillion in
tax cuts overwhelmingly benefited the richest 1% of the population. And
Bush has aggressively attacked labor unions, women's reproductive rights,
same-sex marriage, civil liberties (especially of Muslim Americans), and
environmental regulations.
Four years of Bush has been plenty for millions of Americans who are now
eager to vote for anybody but Bush – whoever has the best chance
of beating him.
Unfortunately, though, the Democratic candidate, John Kerry, is no real
alternative. Many would be surprised to discover that Kerry, in fact,
voted for many of Bush's policies as a Senator from Massachusetts.
Kerry voted for Bush's war on Iraq, the Patriot Act, "No Child Left
Behind," and the war on Afghanistan. On June 23, 2004, he voted to
increase the Pentagon budget to $447 billion to continue Bush's colonial
occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Like Bush, Kerry promises to cut the corporate tax rate and strongly supports
"free trade." He voted for NAFTA and the WTO, accelerating the
exportation of decent jobs from the U.S. and increasing sweatshops and
pollution in Mexico and other semi-colonial countries. Kerry also supports
Israeli Prime Minister Sharon's apartheid wall that is seizing even more
Palestinian land – again, just like Bush.
Of course, differences do exist between the Democratic and Republican
parties, but what stands out, especially in this year's presidential race,
is their similarities, not their differences.
On women's reproductive rights, where Kerry and Bush have differences,
Kerry stated that he believes life begins at conception and that he would
appoint anti-choice judges to federal courts.
Similarly, Kerry opposes Bush’s bigoted proposal to write discrimination
into the Constitution and ban same-sex marriage. But Kerry supports civil
unions rather than marriage – a back-of-the-bus compromise that
provides LGBT people far fewer rights and benefits. He also supports letting
each state decide whether or not to discriminate against LGBT people’s
right to marriage, and within his own state he supports a constitutional
amendment to ban it!
Just about the only thing Kerry's got going for himself is that he's simply
not George Bush.
The problem with the “anybody but Bush” strategy, though,
is that it writes a blank check to John Kerry and the Democrats to do
whatever they want. Electing Kerry would change the face in the White
House, but it won’t fundamentally change White House policy.
Two Parties, One Agenda
The
amount of corporate cash flooding into the coffers of both parties, sometimes
from the very same corporations, says a lot about why both parties share
the same basic corporate agenda. The Bush campaign set a fundraising record
of $240 million, but the Kerry campaign also set a record for a challenger,
trailing Bush by only $6 million! On top of this, the Republican National
Committee has raised $245 million, and the Democratic National Committee
has raised $156 million (New York Times, 8/21/04).
The arguments between Republican and Democratic politicians are usually
over different strategies for carrying out the same corporate agenda.
John Kerry, for example, might mask his corporate policies with a slicker
gloss than the crass neo-conservatives in Bush's cabinet.
Bush succeeded in implementing his right-wing corporate agenda not because
most ordinary Americans have enthusiastically supported him. On the contrary,
poll after poll shows most Americans oppose Bush's policies. The key reason
Bush has been able to push his unpopular agenda through is because of
the active collusion of the Democrats in Congress, including Senator John
Kerry.
Almost all the Democrats in Congress voted “to support the president”
in the war on terrorism, giving Bush a free hand to wage war on Iraq.
Every single Democrat in the Senate voted to increase the Pentagon budget
to $447 billion. 193 of 260 Democrats voted for the Patriot Act. All but
one Democrat voted for the war on Afghanistan.
Most Democrats voted for Bush's tax cuts and "No Child Left Behind,"
and 16 Senate Democrats, including Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle,
voted for Bush's deceptively named Partial Birth Abortion Ban.
Since a majority of the country opposes Bush's policies and his approval
ratings are the lowest they've been since he was handed the presidency,
you'd think the Democratic candidate would be creaming this babbling buffoon.
The race has remained close, though, because voters cannot get excited
about Kerry’s me-too, copy-cat campaign in which he has been trying
to out-do Bush's conservative, militaristic image. Kerry is also deeply
compromised by representing the discredited Democratic Party with its
long history of broken promises.
Forty percent of Americans want the U.S. to withdraw from Iraq; 73% believe
corporations have too much power; and 80% want universal healthcare; yet
these views of the vast majority of the population are not being represented
by either of the two main presidential candidates.
Ralph Nader’s Challenge
However,
there is a candidate this year who is speaking up for the millions of
workers who are shut out of the political system – Ralph Nader.
Running as an independent, Nader is demanding the complete withdrawal
of U.S. troops and corporations from Iraq, cracking down on corporate
crime, and national healthcare.
He says he’s running because “mass concentrations of power,
privilege, wealth, technology, and immunity have placed [corporations’]
rampaging global quest for maximum profits in the way of progress, justice,
and opportunity for the very millions of workers who made possible these
corporate profits but who are falling behind, excluded and expendable.”
Nader also wants to abolish the racist death penalty and the War on Drugs,
implement strong environmental protections, and end U.S. support for Israel’s
occupation of Palestine.
Many people would strongly prefer Nader over Kerry, but they say Nader
doesn’t stand a chance of winning. Voting for Nader would probably
help Bush get re-elected, so wouldn't it be better to vote for the Democrat,
the lesser evil?
The Democratic Party always claims credit for passing laws protecting
civil rights, workers, and the environment, but these gains were only
won through mass struggles of ordinary people.
For example, under Richard Nixon, a conservative Republican, we won abortion
rights, an end to the Vietnam War, the Environmental Protection Agency,
workplace safety standards, expanded welfare benefits, huge increases
in Affirmative Action programs, and much more. Of course, Nixon didn't
implement such progressive measures out of the kindness of his heart.
The Black revolt, the anti-war movement, wildcat strikes, and the women’s
liberation movement forced him to pass these reforms to ward off a revolutionary
challenge to the capitalist system.
Liberal Democrat Bill Clinton, on the other hand, administered the genocidal
economic sanctions on Iraq, allowed abortion rights to be eroded, dramatically
cut EPA funding, and attacked Affirmative Action. Again, this was not
because Clinton was more evil than Nixon but because the leaders of progressive
movements failed to organize an effective fight-back which would embarrass
their “ally” in the White House.
The only way to force profit-driven corporations and their two parties
to accept demands that benefit workers and oppressed people is by organizing
our own independent, powerful movements. Every vote for Kerry, though,
will send the Democratic Party the message that they can get away with
Republican-lite policies. The stronger our own mass movements from below
and the more protest votes for Nader, the more we will pressure whichever
corporate stooge is elected, and the more reforms we will win.
More Influence with Kerry?
Many
prominent progressives, such as Michael Moore, Noam Chomsky, and Howard
Zinn, agree with the importance of strengthening progressive movements
but still urge people to vote for Kerry, especially in battleground states
where the race is close. They acknowledge how pathetically similar Kerry's
policies are to Bush's but claim that progressive movements would have
more influence with Kerry than Bush.
But what influence did social movements have on the last Democratic president,
Bill Clinton?
Remember Clinton's promise to provide universal healthcare? Well, the
number of uninsured rose from 36 to 45 million during Clinton's eight
years in office.
Clinton broke his promise to the gay rights movement on gays in the military,
and he let down the labor movement on the minimum wage and the striker
replacement ban.
He broke all these promises even though the Democrats controlled the House
and Senate his first two years in office.
Clinton was elected with the support of civil rights groups like the NAACP,
yet the number of people in jail almost doubled from 1.3 to 2 million
and the number of executions tripled, with devastating effects on communities
of color.
Clinton did fulfill his promises to his corporate masters, however, by
aggressively pushing through NAFTA and "Welfare Reform" and
presiding over the biggest polarization of wealth since the Great Depression.
Clinton was also elected with help from the women's movement by promising
to pass a Freedom of Choice Act to bar states from restricting abortion
rights, and to repeal the Hyde Amendment which prohibits federal Medicaid
funding of abortions. Clinton not only forgot about these pledges but
even restricted abortion access. He barred federal employees' health insurance
from covering abortions; he banned abortions in military personnel hospitals
abroad; and he prohibited federal funding of federal prisoners' abortions.
As religious conservatives steadily rolled back abortion access during
the Clinton years, the liberal leaders of groups like NOW and NARAL held
back from calling protests, waiting in vain for President Clinton to come
to their defense, allowing the terms of the abortion debate to shift in
the right’s favor.
This election year, gay rights groups who are focusing on getting Kerry
elected are refraining from fighting Bush's attacks on same-sex marriage
rights because they don’t want to expose Kerry's rotten position
on the issue.
Openly gay Representative Barney Frank (D-Mass.), for example, opposed
gay marriages in San Francisco, arguing that “the time wasn’t
right…When you're in a real struggle, San Francisco making a symbolic
point becomes a diversion."
Rather than help build this emerging civil rights movement, Frank and
other gay rights groups are focusing their energy on “the real struggle”
of electing a candidate who opposes their civil rights!
The AFL-CIO labor federation is pouring an unprecedented amount of money
into electing Democrats this year – $160 million. All this money
for what? To elect corporate-controlled Democrats who will inevitably
turn around and attack workers' wages and benefits.
The labor movement should direct this $160 million and its powerful resources
toward mobilizing support for the Million Worker March and pro-labor,
independent candidates like Nader. Instead, AFL-CIO union leaders are
actively opposing the Million Worker March because they claim a march
on Washington to pressure D.C. politicians to adopt a pro-worker agenda
distracts from labor’s main priority – electing Corporate
Kerry!
This shows how any support at all for the Democratic Party, even if it
is intended to be limited to a simple vote on Election Day, tends to undermine
social movements – the only means by which workers and oppressed
people have ever made real gains.
Time for a New Party
There's
no sense in progressive movements trying to compete with Corporate America
for control over the Democratic Party. Workers and activists need to stand
up for ourselves and get out of this abusive relationship with the Democratic
Party once and for all.
Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich promised that supporting
him would help pull the Democratic Party to the left. But when Kucinich
endorsed right-wing Kerry at the Democratic National Convention, what
compromises did his left-wing supporters get in return? Not a single change
in Kerry's platform. Nothing.
In fact, a New York Times/CBS News poll showed over 90% of convention
delegates opposed the war on Iraq, yet the delegates, including Kucinich
supporters, unanimously adopted a pro-war platform amid cheers, applause,
and flag-waving.
Kucinich succumbed to pressure from top party leaders not to even raise
his demand to immediately bring the troops home from Iraq in his speech
at the convention. Delegates were prohibited from bringing peace signs
into the convention, and one was arrested and thrown out for defying this
dictate.
We are now approaching 1,000 American deaths in Iraq. How many deaths
will it take before we stop supporting parties want to continue that nightmare?
Voting for Nader is the best way this election to popularize the idea
of workers and oppressed people breaking free from the trap of big business
politics and building our own independent political party. This crucial
step would massively strengthen our movements by allowing us to unapologetically
advance our own agenda and defeat the corporate agenda of both major parties.
"There
were so many military men at the Democratic convention I almost
expected John Kerry to mount the stage and recite the war speech
from 'Henry V.' As it is, he called for bulking up the military,
doubling the size of the Special Forces and crushing the terrorists.
He hit Bush from the right, and when he got around to bashing
the Saudis, I thought I'd wandered into a big meeting of The
Weekly Standard [conservative magazine] editorial board."-
Conservative commentator David Brooks's description of
the Democratic National Convention
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"The differences between the Republican and Democratic Parties
involves no issue, no principle in which the working class has
any interest... every [worker] who has intelligence enough to
understand the interest of [their] class and the nature of the
struggle in which it is involved will once and for all sever [their]
relations with both." - Eugene Debs, former leader
of the American Railroad Union and Socialist Party presidential
candidate
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