source:
http://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/By 2008, the US electorate was fed up with George Bush. In fact, the US ruling class was fed up, too. Internationally, US prestige was at a low point, thanks to the Bush administration's brazen and failed military aggressions. Domestically, the bottom had fallen out of the US economy. It was time for him to go. His failings cast a shadow over the system's legitimacy.
Anyone
with even a passing understanding of US history understood that
“regime change” was in the cards. That is, it was the moment for
the two-party juggernaut to spit out a fresh face untainted by the
previous administration, vigorous, and promising a new direction. It
was essential that new leadership appear different, self-confident,
and representative of policies contrasting with the old regime.
We
saw this before.
Franklin
Roosevelt was such a figure. He came forward as a clean, untainted
alternative to the failed Hoover administration. Disgust with Hoover
was so great, that merely by avoiding large, looming issues, FDR was
able to capture the Presidency with a virtual carte blanche to
rescue the sinking capitalist economy. Yet he was, as a leading
commentator of the time, Walter Lippmann, observed before Roosevelt's
election, “... an amiable man with many philanthropic impulses,
but he is not the dangerous enemy of anything. He is too eager to
please.... Franklin D. Roosevelt is no crusader. He is no tribune of
the people. He is no enemy of entrenched privilege. He is a pleasant
man who, without any important qualifications for the office, would
very much like to be President." All
historians agree that Roosevelt was, first and foremost, practical.
If policies worked or were popular, he supported them.
Over
time, a myth arose that Roosevelt was a savior, a messianic figure
who arose and smote the rich and powerful. Those who organized the
bonus marches, the unemployment councils, the general strikes, the
tenant and share cropper actions of the Depression era, like those
who built the industrial unions that made up the powerful CIO, were
swept under the historical rug. Acknowledging that they were the
source or driving force for New Deal reforms was an inconvenient
truth. That said, Roosevelt's pragmatism, his respect for new ideas
in desperate times, marked him as an uncommon political leader.
The
New Deal myth sustained the Democratic Party for decades, even though
Party leaders began a retreat from the New Deal upon Roosevelt's
death. After 1944, the “New Deal” label fell into disuse as both
political Parties rallied around anti-Communism and a relatively
benign social compact. Political leaders willingly conceded a modest
social contract with labor for cooperation in the anti-Communist
campaign and business unionism.
Anti-Communist
excesses (so-called “McCarthyism”), overt and institutional
racism (segregation), setbacks in foreign policy (Cuba, the U-2)
tarnished the US reputation internationally and stirred discontent at
home by the end of the 1950s.
Once
again, a new face, representing religious diversity, youth,
cosmopolitan life style, and change, emerged as an alternative. John
Kennedy, like FDR, injected vigor into a two-party landscape driven
by the now dominant medium of television. Again regime change was in
order and the appearance of regime change was achieved. Despite
the mythology of the Kennedy Camelot-- and sealed by his
assassination-- Kennedy's administration was ruled by the
continuation of the Cold War and lip-service to domestic discontent.
While some opportunistic adjustments were forced on his
administration, Kennedy largely sought to construct a more
compassionate, tolerant face to US capitalism; his assassination
obviously shows that this was not acceptable to many important,
powerful members of the old club.
Months
after the Kennedy assassination, left pundit I.F. Stone captured
Kennedy's role: “ ...Kennedy, when the tinsel was stripped
away, was a conventional leader, no more than an enlightened
conservative, cautious as an old man for all his youth, with a basic
distrust of the people and an astringent view of the evangelical as a
tool of leadership.”
Less
than a decade later, with the criminal implosion of the Nixon
administration, the credibility of the US political system was
undermined. Resignations, criminal charges and Impeachment bred an
unprecedented cynicism and challenge to two-party legitimacy.
A
fresh face entered from the wings: Jimmy Carter, neither a Senator
nor a corporate attorney, but an obscure Southern Governor and a
peanut farmer. Like Roosevelt, Carter brought a fresh, unstained
image to the political game, a much-needed contrast to the sleaze of
his predecessors.
I
wrote in 2008 of the 1976 election: “Most
citizens looked to the then forthcoming elections with a profound
desire for a new course. The Democrats chose a political outsider,
Governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia. Carter promised to make the
government 'as good as the people.' Pundits hailed Carter as a
departure from the old politics and a fresh, honest voice for change
(e.g. The Miracle of Jimmy
Carter, Howard Norton and Bob
Slosser, 1976).”
I
went on to note that Carter proved to be a prophet of false hope and
absent change. He quickly turned his back on the most progressive
Democratic platform since the New Deal and ushered in economic
policies that were soon to be dubbed “Reaganomics.”
It
was this historical backdrop that prompted me to suggest that
candidate Barack Obama might well be another postured savior at a
moment of crisis in the two-Party system, a carefully crafted,
groomed alternative to a bumbling, embarrassing regime.
There
are some striking and illuminating parallels between this election
season and the Presidential election campaign of 1976... Like the
eight years of the Bush administration, the eight years of Nixon/Ford
produced an unparalleled collapse of support for the Republican
Party. The Watergate scandal coupled with the failure of the US
military in Vietnam and an economic crisis left the Republican Party
wounded and regrouping.
Similar
to 1976 Presidential candidate J. Carter, his presumptive 2008
counterpart, Barack Obama, is viewed as a Washington “outsider”.
He has campaigned as a candidate of change. Pundits hail him as a
fresh voice untainted by the vices of the establishment.
Obama
must contend with similar issues: a brutal military adventure,
collapsing mass living standards, and an economy exhibiting more and
more of the symptoms of “stagflation.” Like Carter,
his campaign is geared to appealing to the mass base of the
Democratic Party: the working class, liberals, and African-Americans.
His campaign strategists will likely recommend - as Carter’s
advisors did - that the candidate tack to the right to garner
center-right and independent votes going into the general election.
Every Democratic Party Presidential candidate since has employed a
similar strategy. Despite this maneuver, Carter managed to lose his
huge lead in the polls and eke out a narrow victory in the November
election. Nonetheless, this failed approach continues to seduce
Democratic Party tacticians. (ZZ, 2008: A Reprise of 1976?
Fall, 2008)
Obama
represented a constant of modern US politics: political crisis or
threat to legitimacy spawning a face-lift, cosmetic changes, and a
re-kindling of “hope” and “change” in the form of a vigorous,
youthful, well-spoken Democrat. And Obama, as an African American,
had the special appeal of breaking through racial barriers and
perhaps sharing some common sensibilities with diverse peoples
outside of the US.
While
contemporary history taught that appearance generally belied actual
change, liberals and most of the US Left succumbed to the allure,
putting aside their picket signs, marching shoes, and petitions to
open their pocketbooks and enthusiasm to the Obama campaign.
With
the November, 2008 victory under his belt, Obama's unprecedented
campaign contributions from the financial sector, his lame,
discredited cabinet appointees, and his blatant, shameless,
scandalizing of his home-town pastor, Reverend Wright, left the
adoring Left unfazed.
By fitting Obama
with the mantle of progressive change, the leadership of the broad
left - much of the peace movement, liberals, environmental social
justice activists, etc. - surrendered their critical judgment,
independence, and influence to a blind trust in a fictitious movement
for change. In the history of social change in the US, every real
advance was spurred by independent organization and struggle,
unhampered by the niceties of bourgeois politics. From the
Abolitionist movement to the Civil Rights movement, from the Populist
movement to the Great Society, from the Anti-imperialist League to
the Anti-Vietnam War movement, the initiative for change sprung from
committed, independent activists who defied the caution and inertia
of elected officials. Why have these lessons been ignored? (ZZ,
Let Obama be Obama? December 29, 2008)
Yet
everyone from the Hollywood liberal set to the Communist Party USA
hailed Obama as the Second-coming of FDR, if not Lincoln.
Over
the top, but representative of the self-delusional moment, one
hopped-up “progressive” wrote in a widely disseminated 19-page
homage
to the election of Barack Obama: "...hundreds of
millions-Black, Latino, Asian, Native-American and white, men and
women, young and old, literally danced in the streets and wept with
joy, celebrating an achievement of a dramatic milestone in a 400-year
struggle, and anticipating a new period of hope and possibility."
Leaving
aside the hyperbole (less than 130 million people voted for BOTH
candidates and 400 years takes us back to well-before there was a
USA), this screed correctly captured the unjustified euphoria that
swept through the Left.
Seemingly,
every generation of the Left surrenders to the false hope of the
Democratic Party; every generation repeats the same mistake.
Tragedy?
Farce?
Today,
the Obama administration owns the betrayal of the EFCA promise to
labor, an untenable healthcare system borrowed from Mitt Romney, 800
hundred deaths a month in the failed state of Iraq, an Afghani nation
that may kick the US military out before it plans to leave, the
destabilization of Libya and Syria, a broken promise on Guantanamo,
widening income and wealth gaps, crumbling infrastructures, a host of
unfulfilled promises, a legacy of corporate coddling, and cowardly
and illegal (drone) murders. The shattering of a racial barrier-- the
election of the first African American President-- has shamefully
served to cover the criminal neglect and decline of the well-being of
African Americans.
And
everyone knows it. In 2013 alone, Obama's approval rating dropped
nine points to 43%; the percentage believing that Obama is honest and
straightforward has dropped ten points to 37%.
And
this is the candidate embraced by the broad Left in 2008?
With
three years left-- two years before the 2016 Presidential campaign
begins in earnest-- Democratic Party influentials are pressing Obama
to establish some kind of legacy to energize the base, to charge up
the “respectable” Left and labor for future elections. As a
lame-duck, he will likely make numerous gestures towards the social,
life-style issues valued by the upper-middle strata-- the
petty-bourgeoisie. There may even be a highly publicized, but feeble
attempt to raise the minimum wage. But expect no serious changes in
ruling class foreign or economic policy. Liberals have demonstrated
that they will not hold elected Democrats to any promises on these
questions.
Will
this herd the sheep-like liberals and soft-Left back into the fold?
Will they repeat again the slavish loyalty of the past? Will they
drink the Kool-aid?
Or
will people finally recognize the Democratic Party trap and begin to
construct a movement towards independent politics, perhaps rallying
around Jill Stein and the Green Party? Will there be a long overdue
departure from bankrupt ideology and shameless opportunism? Will the
idea of people power and the companion notion of socialism take root?
We
have a new year to find out...
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