On the eve of the US elections
3 November 2008
In the run-up to Election Day, with polls pointing to a lopsided
victory by the Democratic Party, both Barack Obama and leading
congressional Democrats are making it clear in advance that a popular
repudiation of the Bush administration will not determine the policies
of an Obama White House or Democratic Congress.

Having capitalized on popular hatred for President George Bush and
mobilized working and young people on the basis of calls for “change”
and “new politics” and invocations of the “fierce urgency of now,”
Obama and the Democratic leadership are taking pains to reassure the
ruling elite that if they win the election, they will carry out a
thoroughly conventional and conservative agenda that upholds the
interests of the financial aristocracy.

The mantra of spokesman after spokesman is that the Democrats should
not “overreach,” that they should disavow “one-party rule,” and that
bipartisan consensus should be the goal of the new administration.
They are, in other words, repudiating the most fundamental precept of
democracy—that the decision made by the voters on Election Day should
determine public policy.

Tens of millions of people are going to vote for Obama in the hope
that this will lead to a rapid end to the war in Iraq and to domestic
policies that promote jobs and decent living standards, as opposed to
the unrestrained profiteering by big business and the wealthy fostered
by the Bush administration.

The policy of the incoming administration will not be guided by these
popular illusions, however, but by the reality of a worldwide
financial crisis, a deepening slump in the United States, and the
ongoing resistance to imperialist military occupations in Iraq and
Afghanistan.

A principal concern of Obama and his key strategists is that a large-
scale Democratic victory will arouse popular expectations that they
have no intention of meeting.

The disavowal of any political mandate in Tuesday’s voting was spelled
out by the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, Senator John Kerry,
in an appearance as an Obama surrogate on the NBC Sunday interview
program “Meet the Press.” Program host Tom Brokaw asked Kerry about
statements from House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles
Rangel, a New York Democrat, that Obama should move rapidly on tax
cuts for middle-income and low-income families, health care reform and
a substantive program to promote alternative energy.

Asked how he would pay for such policies, Rangel had replied, “Don’t
ask me where the money will come from. I’m going to go to the same
place that Paulson went”—referring to the $700 billion bailout of Wall
Street authored by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

Brokaw asked Kerry, “Is that responsible fiscal policy?” The senator
responded, “I don’t agree with all of that and nor does Barack Obama.
Barack Obama is the person running for president and he’s made it very
clear we’re going to have to restore fiscal responsibility to
Washington.”

Kerry added that Obama would seek significant Republican input and
involvement in his administration. “He’s going to govern in a way that
brings the country together, and no matter what our majority, he’s
going to seek to reach a broader consensus because that’s the only way
we can govern America at this time.” The senator suggested that the
Democrats would not seek to use their majority to push through
policies opposed by the Republicans. “We don’t need to pass things by
51 votes or 60 votes,” he said, referring to the Senate. “We need to
build 85-vote majorities.”

This statement deserves serious consideration. Insistence on “85-vote
majorities” in the Senate means giving the Republican minority veto
power over government policy. It amounts to a repudiation of any
conception of democracy.

If the Democrats win on Tuesday, it will be because of broad popular
sentiment for a reversal of the policies of war and social reaction
pursued for the past eight years by Bush. But Kerry insists that it
would be wrong for the Democrats to govern as though they had a
mandate.

The anti-democratic character of this stance was underscored as Kerry
voiced his agreement with comments by former Democratic Senator Bob
Kerrey, who declared recently: “By my lights, the primary threat to
the success of a President Obama will come from some Democrats…
emboldened by the size of their congressional majority… Obama will
need to communicate the following to Congress, in no uncertain terms:
The Democrats have not won a mandate for all their policies. Rather,
the American people have resoundingly registered their frustration
with a failed status quo, and the next president must chart a new,
less partisan course.”

Such a position is in stark contrast to the way the Republicans
governed after Bush was installed in the White House in 2000 by the
Supreme Court. Although Bush had lost the popular vote to his
Democratic opponent Al Gore, and the Republicans had far smaller
majorities in the House and Senate than the Democrats will enjoy after
November 4, the incoming administration boasted that the election had
delivered it 100 percent of the power.

Bush proceeded to make policy accordingly, ramming through (with
significant Democratic support) massive tax cuts for the wealthy, and
then embarking on wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and a host of other
policies that were widely opposed by the American public.

Kerry’s remarks are an indication that an incoming Democratic
administration will do as the Democrats did after their sweeping
victory in the 2006 congressional elections, which was propelled
largely by popular hostility to the war in Iraq. The newly installed
Democratic majorities in the House and Senate pledged to work with
President Bush on a bipartisan basis. The new House Speaker, Nancy
Pelosi, immediately ruled out any effort to impeach Bush and
eventually agreed to continue funding the Iraq war throughout the
remainder of Bush’s presidency.

The comments by Kerry and other Democratic spokesmen underscore the
essentially fraudulent character of the entire 2008 election. Despite
large increases in voter turnout and widespread involvement by new
layers of the population, particularly youth and students, the
American people will end up serving as little more than extras in a
conflict within the ruling elite. Once Election Day is past, Obama
will put “hope” and “change” back in his briefcase and go about his
real business: defending the interests of corporate America.

The Democrats responded with alacrity to the danger of a meltdown in
the financial markets, turning over trillions in public funds to bail
out the banks and speculators. The same political figures will turn to
working people after the election and tell them that there is no money
to provide health care, jobs, education and other social benefits,
especially given the need to spend even more for wars in the Middle
East and Central Asia.

Patrick Martin


On Nov 4, 8:17 am, PNY <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was until just a day or so ago.  Then someone on Oprah said, "There
> is no such thing as an undecided at this point.  You either don't want
> to say or you don't care."  ...or something like that.  So, I figured
> I better make up my mind quick before people start talking about me.
>
> Honestly, I am not thrilled with either candidate.  But, in the end, I
> am going with my party (which by the way, only became my party after
> the LAST Presidential election - when I thought I could have a say in
> who we put forth as a candidate!).
>
> I made my decison based on one final thought about the candidates and
> it is really quite simple:  I think it would be unhealthy for one
> party to have complete control over our system.  And the Dems, as hard
> as they tried, did not scare me into believing McCain is another
> George Bush.  I just don't see it.
>
> What really did scare me was was the idea that I could be anything
> like some of the posters I've seen post from the liberal point of
> view.  (Not necessarily on this board.)  The idea that I could
> possibly agree with them on anything was WAY too scary for me.
>
> Luckily for me, I do think that life will go on, the earth will
> continue to rotate, the sun will rise again, and most Americans will
> try their best to do what is best for the country, regardless of who
> wins.
>
> On Nov 3, 2:37 pm, wncs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Just wondering.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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