One week until the US elections

28 October 2008
With only one week remaining before Election Day, the opinion polls
indicate that Barack Obama and the Democratic Party will likely
register a substantial victory. In addition to gaining control of the
White House, the Democrats stand to increase their majorities in both
houses of Congress, possibly obtaining the 60-40 margin in the Senate
required to end filibusters and force a floor vote on legislative
proposals.

Predictably, Democratic leaders are already issuing excuses as to why
a lopsided Democratic victory should not be interpreted as a mandate
for a significant change of policy in an Obama administration, and why
no such change will be forthcoming.

As the New York Times observed in a front-page article Sunday on the
implications of a sizeable Democratic victory, popular expectations of
immediate action on health care, home foreclosures, jobs and other
social issues “could be difficult to meet even with enhanced numbers
in the Senate as well as the House.”

The Times noted: “The nature of the Democratic majority, expanded
partly through the election of centrists and even conservatives, would
also temper Democratic zeal to pursue an overly ideological agenda,
Democrats said.”

The newspaper quoted a series of Democratic Party leaders warning
against “overreaching” and urging a cautious legislative agenda. House
Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland told the Times, “We are going
to get new members with a clear understanding that the reason they won
is appealing to independents and disaffected Republicans, and they are
going to want to continue to do that.”

The most significant feature of the elections is that the entire
campaign has been overtaken by an economic crisis which neither party
anticipated. The response of both candidates, apart from some campaign
theatrics, has been identical. For all the mud-slinging, once issues
critical to the class interests of the American ruling elite emerged,
Obama and his Republican opponent John McCain joined in endorsing,
over popular opposition, a multi-trillion-dollar bailout of the banks.

What will an Obama victory mean? It will not be long before the
campaign platitudes about “hope” and “change” and the “fierce urgency
of now” will be exposed for what they are. The American people will
confront an administration committed to relentlessly pursuing the
interests of American imperialism at home and abroad. It will become
apparent that the chief difference between Obama and Bush is not the
right-wing character of their policies, but the skill with which these
policies are carried out.

Even as the final stretch of the campaign unfolds, and in the midst of
an economic crisis widely acknowledged to be the deepest since the
Great Depression, American imperialism continues its bloody rampage,
with missile strikes in Afghanistan and Pakistan and incursions into
Syria. The entire election is an expression of the bankruptcy of the
existing political set-up and the failure of American democracy.

Once again, as in 2002, 2004 and 2006, the massive popular opposition
to the militaristic and anti-democratic policies of the Bush
administration can find no genuine expression within the framework of
the two-party system, and the basic policies of war and social
reaction will continue regardless of the outcome of an election.

For all of Obama’s demagogy about “bringing the country together” and
uniting rich and poor, it will rapidly be shown that he, no less than
Bush, is a political representative of the financial aristocracy.

The fundamental lesson that must be drawn is this: The American
working class confronts the necessity of breaking free of the
Democratic Party and the entire framework of capitalist politics. The
only alternative to growing social misery and ever more violent
eruptions of militarism is the development of an independent political
movement of the working class in opposition to the existing economic
and political order and based on a program for genuine democracy and
social equality—that is, a socialist program.

The Socialist Equality Party has intervened in the elections, running
Jerry White for president and Bill Van Auken for vice president, for
one essential purpose: to clarify the fundamental class issues and lay
the basis for the political struggles of the working class that will
develop in the aftermath of the vote.

Barry Grey


On Oct 29, 10:05 am, ChattyDaisy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> John Mellencamp's latest music video pretty much sums up the USA and
> the corrupt Bush Administration of the last 8 years and why everyone
> who cares about this country should vote for Barack Obama.
>
> Scroll down this page and click on the video...
>
> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ragogna/huffington-post-video-pre_...
>
> Regards,
> Daisy
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