http://www.michigancitizen.com/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=76&twindow=Default&mad=No&sdetail=5663&wpage=1&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=&pform=&sc=1070&hn=michigancitizen&he=.com

The Democrats’ Class War
By David Sirota
CREDO action 

For all the hype about generational and gender wars in the 2008 Democratic 
presidential primary, we have a class war on our hands. And incredibly, 
corporate America’s preferred candidate is winning the poorer “us” versus the 
wealthier “them”-a potentially decisive trend with the contest now moving to 
working- class bastions like Ohio and Pennsylvania.

In most states, polls show Hillary Clinton is beating Barack Obama among voters 
making $50,000 a year or less-many of whom say the economy is their top concern.

Yes, the New York senator who appeared on the cover of Fortune magazine as Big 
Business’s candidate is winning economically insecure, lower-income communities 
over the Illinois senator who grew up as an organizer helping those communities 
combat unemployment. This absurd phenomenon is a product of both message and 
bias.

Obama has let Clinton characterize the 1990s as a nirvana, rather than a time 
that sowed the seeds of our current troubles. He barely criticizes the Clinton 
administration for championing job-killing trade agreements. He does not 
question that same administration’s role in deregulating the financial industry 
and thereby intensifying today’s boom-bust catastrophes. And he rarely points 
out what McClatchy Newspapers reported this week: that Clinton spent most of 
her career at a law firm “where she represented big companies and served on 
corporate boards,” including Wal-Mart’s.

Obama hasn’t touched any of this for two reasons. First, his campaign relies on 
corporate donations. Though Obama certainly is less industry-owned than 
Clinton, the Washington Post noted last spring that he was the top recipient of 
Wall Street contributions. That cash is hush money, contingent on candidates 
silencing their populist rhetoric.

But while this pressure to keep quiet affects all politicians, it is especially 
intense against Black leaders.

“If Obama started talking like John Edwards and tapped into working-class, 
blue-collar proletarian rage, suddenly all of those white voters who are 
viewing him within the lens of transcendence would start seeing him 
differently,” says Charles Ellison of the University of Denver’s Center for 
African American Policy.

That’s because once Obama parroted Edwards’ attacks on greed and inequality, he 
would “be stigmatized as a candidate mobilizing race,” says Manning Marable, a 
Columbia University history professor. That is, the media would immediately 
portray him as another Jesse Jackson -a figure whose progressivism has been 
(unfairly) depicted as racial politics anathema to white swing voters.

Remember, this is always how power-challenging African-Americans are 
marginalized. The establishment cites a Black leader’s race- and class-unifying 
populism as supposed proof of his or her radical, race-centric views. An 
extreme example of this came from the FBI, which labeled Martin Luther King Jr. 
“the most dangerous man in America” for talking about poverty.

More typical is the attitude exemplified by Joe Klein’s 2006 Time magazine 
column. He called progressive Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., “an African American 
of a certain age and ideology, easily stereotyped” and “one of the ancient band 
of left-liberals who grew up in the angry hothouse of inner-city, 
racial-preference politics.”

The Clintons are only too happy to navigate this ugly cultural topography. 
After a rare Obama attack on Hillary Clinton for supporting policies that 
eliminated jobs, Bill Clinton quickly likened Obama’s campaign to Jackson’s, 
and the Clinton campaign told the Associated Press Obama was “the black 
candidate.” These were deliberate statements telling Obama that if he talks 
about class, they’ll talk about race.

And so, as Marable says, Obama’s pitch includes “no mention of the class 
struggle or class conflict.” It is “hope” instead of an economic case, bromide 
instead of critique. The result is an oxymoronic dynamic.

Obama, the person who fought blue-collar joblessness in the shadows of 
shuttered factories, is winning wealthy enclaves. But Clinton, the person whose 
globalization policies helped shutter those factories, is winning blue-collar 
strongholds.

Obama, who was schooled by the same organizing networks as Cesar Chavez, is 
being endorsed by hedge fund managers. But Clinton, business’s favorite, is 
being endorsed by the United Farm Workers- the union that Chavez created.

Obama, the candidate from Chicago’s impoverished South Side, is finding support 
on Connecticut’s gilded south coast. But Hillary Clinton, the candidate 
representing Big Money, is finding support from those with relatively little 
money.

As the campaign heads to the struggling Rust Belt under banners promising 
“change,” this bizarre class war may end up guaranteeing no real transformation 
at all.

David Sirota is a bestselling author whose newest book, The Uprising, will be 
released in June of 2008. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America’s Future 
and a board member of the Progressive States Network - both nonpartisan 
organizations. His blog is at www.credoaction.com/sirota.

Reply via email to