Will 2012 be the Final Election of Lesser Evilism?
Just when the Obama campaign couldn't appear any less inspiring, Paul Ryan was put forth as the Republican vice presidential candidate. Suddenly team Obama was supplied with enough political munitions to scare every last American over the possible destruction of Medicare, Medicaid, cuts to Social Security and the various other evils inherent in Ryan's proposed national budget. Consequently, many Liberals and Leftists across the spectrum are now focused on preaching the horrors of a Republican presidential victory and thus the necessity of re-electing Obama.
But critical thinkers are immune to scare tactics. It's no coincidence that the Obama campaign is not running on its own merits, but the lack of merit of its opponents. Many Obama supporters, such as leftists Bill Fletcher Jr. and Carl Davidson, argue that Obama's record doesn't matter, because this election is about defeating the right wing's "white supremacy and political misogynism."
For progressive economist and former Labor Secretary under President Clinton Robert Reich, Ryan's budget represents the nightmare of "social Darwinism", and therefore Obama must be elected.
This writer will not argue with the above points about the far right, since there obviously exists deep elements of racism and misogynism in its camp. But voting for Obama is no way to fight these evils; quite the contrary.
Voting for the Democrats does not empower working people to fight against right-wing extremism. Instead, working people are forced to give away their power to a political party that is in no way beholden to them, since the Democrats have a corporate agenda divorced from the needs of the vast majority of working people. There is no way to hold Democrats accountable once they're in office, especially when they've all but stopped making campaign promises to working people.
By now it should be clear to most Americans that the Democrats and Republicans are corporate-owned parties, and as such they are free to act as they wish, regardless of the political rhetoric they spew.
For example, in 2008 Obama promised Latinos a more humane immigration policy, and then proceeded to deport people more than Bush Jr. did. Obama likewise promised organized labor the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), as well as a more pro-labor policy. EFCA was then betrayed and Obama presided over the most anti-labor environment since Ronald Reagan.
When he campaigned, he voiced support for single-payer health care. He promised to renegotiate NAFTA. When he was elected, he declared single-payer health care “off the table” and did nothing about NAFTA. When he campaigned, he denounced Bush’s tax cuts for the rich; as president he extended them.
Let's not forget Obama's bank bailouts, Afghan "surge,” free trade deals, domestic spying, pro-corporate "race to the top" education program, etc. When the Wisconsin uprising happened Obama did not even visit the state; when the Occupy movement was being repressed nationally, Obama's silence implied support for the anti-democratic police actions.
The point is that Obama and the Republicans are in general agreement about the trajectory of this country and strive through various social policies to create a difference that is largely fictional.
But is not voting for Obama a bulwark against racism? In reality, ethnic minorities in the U.S. suffer directly as a result of Obama's foreign policy. By continuing Bush's wars in the Middle East and North Africa, Obama is re-enforcing racism at home. Foreign wars for conquest and occupations are fueled by racism, since they lack the inspirational purpose that would otherwise enhance combat morale.
When U.S. troops return home, many bring back the racist beliefs supplied to them as their fighting fuel, which can sometimes result in the kind of massacre that recently occurred at the Sikh temple in Wisconsin. The broader population too is subjected to the type of unconscious racism that must result from passive support of foreign wars across the globe, the victims of which want nothing more than U.S. bombs and military bases out of their countries. It's obvious that if Obama were bombing England — and not Afghanistan — Americans would feel more inclined to protest.
Obama, like Bush, is a war criminal. His drone assassinations in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia — and likely others — are in obvious violations of the Geneva Convention.
Former President Jimmy Carter said of Obama's foreign policy:
"It is disturbing that, instead of strengthening these principles [of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights], our government's counter-terrorism policies are now clearly violating at least 10 of the declaration's 30 articles, including the prohibition against 'cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment'."
When it comes to the domestic economic policies of the right wing, the Democrats have proved an important ally in implementing the corporate agenda. Obama himself has been instrumental in pushing Congress to implement "entitlement reform" — cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and other social programs, opening the political door that Paul Ryan exploited in his anti-entitlement budget proposal.
The only force capable of putting up a true fight against the far right is the power of organized working people, who, by putting faith and resources in the Democratic Party, are squandering their own independence and power.
Arguing that voting Democrat is a "lesser of two evils" is not an argument at all, but rather a statement about the fundamental political problem that is the two party system.
Liberals, Leftists, and working people in general cannot simply accept the lesser of two evils argument as meaningful, but must actively fight to change the absurdity that is the two party, corporate owned political system. This change cannot happen when labor and liberal groups funnel energy back into team Obama as they overlook the destruction his administration is causing at home and abroad.
The final philosophical barrier against breaking with the Democrats is again put forward by Bill Fletcher Jr. and Carl Davidson, who essentially argue that the failure of the last four years was due to the progressive social movement that failed to "put significant pressure on the Obama administration" through an "independent progressive strategy.”
In short, this means that the "social movement" created by Obama's 2008 campaign did not maintain its independence and organization adequately to hold Obama accountable.
This is patently nonsense.
For one, the activists who campaigned for Obama did so under his organizational umbrella. There never existed an independent pro-Obama "movement.” More importantly, when average people are inspired enough to become active in politics, they do so with the expectation that "their" candidate will serve "them.” When their candidate betrays them, the natural response is demoralization, not organized protest and sustained action. Any average person who understands what Obama really stands for would not actively campaign for him, and thus will be unable to "hold him accountable" once he's in office.
Anyone who believes that there exists anything near a social movement to campaign for Obama in 2012 is deluding themselves in embarrassing fashion. Many working people will hold their nose and vote for Obama, but this motivation does not include phone banking, door knocking, or financial contributions. The passion that Obama inspired by his demagoguery in 2008 has been crushed by reality, leaving an election that will be determined by the "big donors" and consequently, the number of TV commercials that can be purchased by the rich.
And because the rank and file of labor and liberal groups will not campaign for Obama in a significant way, he will be even less likely to reward them politically, thus ensuring an even deeper slide into the corporate abyss if he is elected.
Also, average working people are pushed into the camp of the right wing by Obama's anti-worker policies, since the far right offers "solutions" to the two party system, while labor and community groups only offer more corporate Democrats.
The only thing that the Democratic and Republican parties respect is power, which they also fear. The Wisconsin and Occupy movements inspired people across the country, while striking fear into the heart of the two party system. And while the Democrats did their best to co-opt both movements, the potential for independent political action still exists.
Scaring the two party system to pass pro-working class policies requires mass, independent mobilizations for demands that address the real needs of working people, such as a massive federal jobs program, Medicare For All, saving and expanding Social Security, providing full funding for public education and social services, all to be paid for by taxing the rich and corporations. The Democrats cannot be scared by groups that are donating their time and resources into electing Democrats, while tricking their constituents into believing that Obama is a "pro-worker" candidate.
Ultimately, the only way out of the irrationality of the two party system is for working people to organize independently. In dozens of other countries this task was completed decades ago when labor unions broke with the traditional parties and used their own organizational and financial resources to build their own political party to represent all working people.
This remains the task of the day in the United States. Organized labor is the only social force among working people at this time with the resources capable of building a party able to compete with the two parties of big business. If unions broke with the anti-union Democrats and raised their own pro-worker demands, tens of millions of Americans would happily leave both the Democrat and Republican parties.
The Democrats cannot be reformed; their "progressive caucus" has proven unwilling to inspire working people with bold action, and serves only to give political cover to the corporate soul of the Democratic Party. Working people are overdue for change, and won't be fooled again by fake promises of hope.
Shamus Cooke is a social worker, trade unionist, and writer for Workers Action (www.workerscompass.org) He can be reached at shamuscooke@gmail.com
http://www.alternet.org/election-2012/2012-elections-have-little-do-obamas-record-which-why-we-are-voting-him
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-reich/paul-ryan-social-darwinism_b_1769827.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/jimmy-carter-attacks-barack-obama-over-assassinations-and-drone-attacks-7888925.html



This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Davidson, Carl at Aug 14, 2012 18:15 PM
Both Bill and I work with PDA. We think it does represent a tool for independent political organization and action among workers at the base. Where I live, we doubled our size in the 2008 effort, and we worked independently of the incumbent Dems. In fact, in the last round, together with our trade union allies, we were able to take down our Blue Dog concgressman. His replacement isn't much to brag about, but the Blue Dog caucus has one less member.
PDA and the Congressional Progressive Caucus it is aligned with is only 80 votes, but it's a start. It's a 'third pole' in Congress, with its own platform, the People's Budgets, out of Afghanistan, and more. The task is to grow it, as wel as develop the social movements that it can serve to represent. In any case, in this round, the left-progressive task is first to defeat every Republican we can, building our own organizations in the process. That's the core argument.
Reply this comment
Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By McGehee, Michael at Aug 16, 2012 13:20 PM
Reply this comment
Re: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Davidson, Carl at Aug 16, 2012 15:35 PM
We organize these people into PDA around its platform, not Obama's--although they may overlap on a few points, like defending Roe v. Wade and Planned Parentahood. If you come in mainly attacking Obama, or even saying you're indifferent as to whether he wins or not, I seriously doubt you will get very far at all. People will take you for a Tea Party plant at worst and a Green diversion at best--although in the latter case, if you know who the main enemy is, you might be able to get by an help out.
We then cooperate with the local trade unions and NAACP to defend the right to vote, and to get out the vote, organizing into our ranks as we go along. In CDs where PDA has a someone running, like John Conyers, we focus of getting him past the primary and re-elected. Same with Barbara Lee, one of the heads of PDA and of the congressional Progressive Caucus. In our district, which up until now was represented by a Blue Dog, we assisted the unions in taking him down.
What you have to do will vary from CD to CD, but use you imagination, expand the electorate in a progressive direction, beat back the GOP Voter ID/supress the vote efforts, and you'll build a decent organization that belongs to you, helps the Progressive Caucus and defeats Romney/Ryan.
It's hard work, requires some thinking outside the box--but I've yet to hear a better approach. I hear a lot of 'build a direct action movement,' which is fine, but that's not really an eiter/or proposition. If your group has doubled in size after the campaign, then you have wom a victory, even if your favored candidate did not. It's all about building strength in a war of position.
Reply this comment
Reply to Davidson & Fletchetr: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Gool, Selim at Aug 16, 2012 16:29 PM
THE arguments put forwards to support Barak Obama by Misters Bill Fletcher, jn and Carl Davidson is obfuscation, or a choise bewteen a corporate ass kisser and drone-wielding devil we know, the other a corporate asshole and devil we’d rather not.
IT IS ALL ABOUT OBAMA´s RECORD, BROTHER!
The facts: THERE IS A sharp reality disconnect in the Black community.
On the one hand, the Black population continues to support the first African-American president, Barack Obama, by more than 90%.
On the other, the plight of the Black communities is at its worst condition in three decades.
Official unemployment is over 16% —twice that of whites — and in the high 30% for young African Americans.
Black household income is in decline and the lowest of the five major ethnic groups.
Poverty is at the highest levels in 30 years.
President Obama’s policies have not benefited the Black community, other minority communities or the working class , white and black, as a whole.
The so-called middle class with decent jobs are mortaged up to their ears.
Thousands of government jobs are being eliminated as the far right attacks city, state and federal employment.
The ongoing economic stagnation has devastated these communities.
The rich have gotten wealthier and the top one percent barely feels any pain.
Many workers now believe that Social Security and Medicare must be modified to “protect” them.
A majority of white workers don’t support Obama.
When Obama travels, he rarely if ever sets foot in communities of color.
When he talks about the “middle class” he rarely mentions the plight of "people of color" — too afraid of the extremist white backlash.
Black elites have remained basically silent on this failure of progressive leadership.
Will criticism of Obama help the white racist elements in the Republican Tea Party and society as a whole?
The far right sees this weakness as the opening to do what they would have never tried under a white president — Republican or Democrat.
Criticism by prominent Black academics has focused on Obama’s failure to fight for the working class and the poor, and deal with the real poverty of the Black community.
Obama’s accomplishments pale when measured against his actual (not rhetorical) pro-Wall Street and U.S.-first “anti-terror” foreign policies.
The ruling class has the best man in the White House to advance its agenda.
The fundamental contradiction in U.S. politics today is that Obama is probably the best “Republican president” in the modern era.
Attacks on civil liberties and civil rights have escalated over his two years with little serious mass opposition or fightback.
Obama’s policies on war, the economy and most issues have been to the RIGHT of every Democratic president and many Republicans (e.g. Nixon and Ford).
His Affordable Health Care plan that includes individual mandates comes out of the conservative Heritage Foundation.
The uses of military drones to kill uncharged Americans (e.g. U.S.-born citizens Anwar al-Awlaki and Samin Khan who are called “terrorists”) are examples of Obama’s use of illegal, unconstitutiona l actions.
So is the NDAA, signed into law by Obama on Dec. 31, 2011, which obliterates the most important constitutional protections (due process and habeas corpus).
Those taken into custody by the military, which becomes under the NDAA a domestic law enforcement agency, can be denied and held indefinitely in military facilities, like Bradley Manning is today.
Obama has systematically escalated the use of CIA power more than any president in U.S. history — including George W. Bush!
In the economy, the Bush-Obama bailout of the Wall Street banks and Obama’s reduction of tax rates for the rich stinks.
What’s needed is a movement, like what Martin Luther King led, with the forcefulness of Malcolm X, which starts with the issues of jobs, war and redistribution of wealth.
It must be directed at Wall Street, big business and government. Against unemployment and homelessness, caused by foreclosures and the sub-prime housing scam.
Blacks will vote overwhelmingly for Obama, which is why rightwing state legislatures are pushing through all kinds of measures to restrict and suppress Black and minority voting.
If anything, the "Occupy Movement" showed that it IS possible to organise ourside of the bi-polar political system - its just that the black elite, its organisations and mouthpieces are so tied to the Democratic Party.
The Occupy movement is important precisely because it grew out of disenchantment with Obama.
This prevailing logic of supporting the lesser-than-two-evils, fitting for an era of diminished expectations, is the most important political resource of the Democratic Party.
So, sorry Misters Fletcher and Davidson, I d´ont buy your cheap arguments!
Reply this comment
Re: Reply to Davidson & Fletchetr: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Davidson, Carl at Aug 16, 2012 20:55 PM
One more. The 'Black elite' in Pennsylvania are fight the GOP effort to deny the franchise this round the large numbers of Blacks, the young and the elderly. Are you with them or against them? Or does this even matter to you?
Reply this comment
Re: Re: Reply to Davidson & Fletchetr: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Donahue, Paul at Aug 17, 2012 03:03 AM
Unfortunately, I am not with the black leadership on many issues at all here in Pittsburgh. They are for the most part quite right-wing. They have done practially nothing to fight the dismantling of public transportation here in Pittsburgh If I meet another black person at the bus stop saying the solution to the dismantling of PAT transit is " free market competetion" (presumably promoted by Rev. Sims or other black-baptist pastor?) I am going to puke.
And I will never forgive the black-Democrat county councilpersons (the same Rev. Sims, and I forgot the name of the other ) whose votes deep sixed the Allegheny County Living Wage Ordinance back in 2000 - never to be revived again. They are traitors to their class and race!
And do you recall "Bonusgate" - the vicious illegally public-funded attack against Green Party ballot access by the Democrats - which backfired into a huge propaganda coup for the Republicans (the Green Party never being mentioned in the news coverage)? Hoist with their own petard!
The Democrats can go to hell.
Reply this comment
Re: Re: Re: Reply to Davidson & Fletchetr: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Davidson, Carl at Aug 17, 2012 14:39 PM
Reply this comment
Re: Re: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Agnostic, Justin at Aug 16, 2012 17:01 PM
I get your point of war of position, and using the attention that the electoral contests garb in the general public to build a grassroots movement. The question I have for you is, how do you bridge from the electoral activities to extra-electoral activities?
So I will start from two propositions: First, the electoral system in this contrary is backwards, and has historically served to deflate left movements rather than be a fruitful ground for a Gramcian "War of position." Second, a significant portion of the population which is not part of the Left but tend to be sympathetic to the Left's goals see electoral politics as their primary political tool (and therefore political activity outside of that arena is largely invisible to them).
The Left then has historically been trapped. It either surrenders electoral politics, and thereby surrenders a significant tool in which to have contact to large masses of poeple; or, the left enters electoral politics and runs the risk of its energies being coopted and exhausted.
What you are suggesting is that we can have our cake and eat it too, so to speak. For me to buy that I would have to see how electoral activities can be used to energize and expand extra-electoral social movements. Because, ultimately I believe the electoral game to be far to rigged for the Left to win significantly there.
Your thoughts?
Justin
Reply this comment
Re: Re: Re: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Davidson, Carl at Aug 16, 2012 21:12 PM
Here in Western PA, we build our PDA group by taking part, year in and year out, in two social movements--the fight for single-payer 'Medicare for All' and 'Out Now' from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Not exclusively--we took part in civil rights, workers rights and women's rights battles, too. We supported OWS and took part in the G8 battles in Pittsburgh.
On health care, we made it our business, through mass meetings, rallies, vigils and going door-to-door, to get every union, every labor council, the county government, and the city councils of three local towns, to endorse HR 676. We marched on DC on the matter.
On the war, we held a demo/vigil outside the county courthouse every Saturday for eight years, plus showed films, held mass meetings and took part in regional mass mobilizations in Pittsburgh, New York and national efforts in DC, filling up buses. Today we set up booths--'War is Making You Poor' at local fairs and festivals visted by tens of thousands of people.
Through this year-round activity in these two social movements, we were able to find the best elements among the local workers and community residents, and bring them into PDA, which we them deployed in various electoral efforts as well.
It's like breathing in and breathing out. The two go together. Before the 2007 campaign began, we had about 100 workers. After the campaign, it was about 200, with another 200 on our lits in a circle beyond that. We are almost entirely workers, and blue-collar retirees in our composition, but we need more young people. But then our entire county has a dearth of younger people, as they have been our main 'export', searching for jobs.
Reply this comment
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: This is the USA, not 'other countries'
By Agnostic, Justin at Aug 23, 2012 23:59 PM
What are your thoughts: Does your local crew of PDA in Western PA recruit more people in the electoral cycle or in the year round activities?
Also, do you think that your group's make up is largely made of the same individuals when engaged in electoral work, and doing rallies and direct action. Or, do you think two circels tend to develop?
Justin
Reply this comment