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Saturday, July 16, 2016

The Sanders Sell-Out and the Clinton Wars to Come


Dissident Voice: a radical newsletter in the struggle for peace and social justice


The Sanders Sell-Out and the Clinton Wars to Come

Don’t Call Him “Bernie” Anymore
The worst disservice Sanders has done to his supporters, other than to lead them on a wild goose chase for real change, is to virtually ignore his rival’s vaunted “experience.” He need not have mentioned Hillary Clinton’s Senate record, since there was nothing there; her stint as law-maker was merely intended to position her for a run for the presidency, according to the family plan. But there was a lot in her record as Secretary of State.
As she recounts in her memoir, she wanted a heftier “surge” in Afghanistan than Obama was prepared to order. Anyone paying attention knows that the entire military mission in that broken country has been a dismal failure producing blow-back on a mind-boggling scale, even as the Taliban has become stronger, and controls more territory, than at any time since its toppling in 2001-2002.
Hillary wanted to impose regime change on Syria in 2011, by stepping up assistance to armed groups whom (again) anyone paying attention knows are in cahoots with al-Nusra (which is to say, al-Qaeda). In an email dated Nov. 30, 2015, she states her reason: “The best way to help Israel…is to help the people of Syria overthrow the regime of Bashar Assad.”
In her memoir she criticizes Obama for not doing more to oust the secular Assad regime. She has repeatedly stated during her campaign that she favors a no-fly zone over Syria, like the one she advocated for Libya. That means conflict with Russia, which is bombing sites in Syria, with the permission of its internationally recognized government, under what Russia’s leaders (and many rational people) consider to be terrorists’ control.
Sanders–sorry, I cannot call him “Bernie” anymore, since he has become precisely as avuncular as Dick Cheney—could have effectively attacked Hillary the Skjaldmær(Old Norse for “Shield-maiden,” referring to an often berserk warrior-woman) for her role in the destruction of Libya. But no! Always referring to her deferentially as “Secretary Clinton”–as though her actions in that role merit respect—he rarely alluded to her greatest crime at all. That’s unforgivable.
(Yes, in one debate he mentioned Libya in passing–timidly, and with no follow-up. While he repeatedly mentioned how The Secretary had voted for the Iraq War and he hadn’t, he hardly exuded moral outrage about that or any other Clinton decision. His campaign was all about her Wall Street ties and well-paid, secret talks, the transcripts of which he once wanted to see but has now apparently lost interest. It was never about “foreign policy,” which is supposedly her forte. He may call himself a “socialist,” but he’s no anti-imperialist. He has voted in favor of every “defense spending” bill, supported the NATO assault on Serbia in 1999, supported Israel’s attack on Gaza in 2014, etc.)
He could have attacked Clinton savagely–with the savagery of mere matter-of-fact honesty–by citing those emails exchanged between Clinton and her vicious confidant and former adviser Anne-Marie Slaughter, in which the latter—under the subject line “bravo!”–congratulates her on engineering Obama’s agreement for the bombing of Libya. (On March 19, 2011, as the bombing of Libya began, Slaughter wrote: “I cannot imagine how exhausted you must be after this week, but I have NEVER been prouder of having worked for you. Turning [Obama] around on this is a major win for everything we have worked for.”
He could have quoted that email from Sidney Blumenthal, that Svengali figure who has long been Clinton’s unofficial mentor (along with Henry Kissinger and others): “No-fly! Brava! You did it!” (Brava, if you’re interested, is the feminine form ofBravo.)
He could have repeatedly used that damning clip that reveals Hillary’s joy at the grotesque murder of Muammar Gaddafi–who had become a friend of Tony Blair, Silvio Berlusconi, and the CIA as of 2011–at the hands of Islamist thugs, who rammed a stick and knife up his anus on camera just to make it more humiliating. His ads could have started with some appropriately edited version of this:


And ended with this:



And left the people to draw their own conclusions.
He could have asked, “Why the hell did you appoint Dick Cheney aide Victoria Nuland as Under Secretary of State for Eurasia, and support and fund that coup in Ukraine in 2014 in your goddamn ambition to expand NATO?”
But no. He didn’t have it in him. And now he wants his youthful erstwhile followers to transfer their support to someone who is not only the embodiment of Wall Street, with all its blood-sucking and all its crookedness, but the personification of U.S. imperialism in an era when its depth of crisis has produced a state of perpetual war.
Savvy people in Syria and elsewhere surely understand what the Sanders endorsement means: Syria is the next Libya.
Hillary in the Oval Office, Binyamin Netanyahu at her side, will laugh as Assad gets her knife up his ass, chaos deepens, the draft is re-instated, and boys and girls–of all ethnicities, gay and straight together–march off to fight the Brava Wars drastically reducing youth unemployment and making legions more eligible for the GI Bill.
Even if Sanders doesn’t vote for the war (and why should there be a vote, after all, in this post-constitution era?), he will share responsibility.
Shame! And shame on any once “Bernie” supporter who follows him into his moral morass.
*****
Feel the burn. The burn of the rigged system. Why be drawn into it—the object of Hillary’s praise, for switching so readily from him to her (for the sake of “unity”)?
What is there to unite with, but more corruption, exploitation, and wars based on lies?
The votes that matter are the votes on the street. Either Trump or Clinton will provoke mass upheaval. The key contribution of the Sanders campaign has been to lay bare for idealistic youth the magnitude of the rot in the system itself, while raising (however dishonestly) the prospect of “political revolution.”
It’s the hope Sanders has sold out. But yes, that’s what we need. Social, economic, and political revolution. Too bad he’s chosen the other side.
Gary Leupp is a Professor of History at Tufts University, and author of numerous works on Japanese history. He can be reached at: gleupp@granite.tufts.edu.Read other articles by Gary.

How To Make The Democratic Party Platform Actually Matter









HOW TO MAKE THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY PLATFORM ACTUALLY MATTER
Bernie Sanders’ delegates have shaped the most progressive platform ever. History shows what it takes to turn that into policy.















IN THE FALL OF 1967, Robert Kennedy gathered a select group of trusted advisers at Hickory Hill, his family home in McLean, Va., to discuss his disenchantment with the Vietnam War and his political future.
Among those present was historian and former White House aide Arthur Schlesinger Jr. In his 1978 biography Robert Kennedy and His Times, Schlesinger recalled what was said that evening.
Liberal activist Allard Lowenstein urged Kennedy to launch an anti-war challenge to incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson in the upcoming Democratic primaries. Schlesinger, for his part, warned Kennedy of the political risks of disloyalty to his party and president, suggesting that the senator instead organize a campaign for a peace plank in the 1968 Democratic Party platform. Kennedy was ambivalent about running, but thought Schlesinger’s proposal a pretty weak substitute. He asked, “When was the last time millions of people rallied behind a plank?”
We are, perhaps, about to find out. On June 16, in a speech streamed to several hundred thousand supporters, Sen. Bernie Sanders did not formally concede the Democratic presidential nomination to rival Hillary Clinton, but he implied the time had come to pivot from his candidacy to platform issues. He urged his supporters to rally behind a plank, or rather, a set of planks.
“I look forward in the coming weeks,” he said, “to continue discussion between the two campaigns to make sure your voices are heard and to make sure the Democratic Party passes the most progressive platform in its history.” He pledged to transform the party into one “that has the guts to take on Wall Street ... and the other powerful special interests that dominate so much of our political and economic life.”
That discussion on the platform culminated on July 9 and 10 in Orlando, Fla., at a meeting of the DNC Platform Committee’s 187 members, who were apportioned between Sanders and Clinton supporters based on the results of each state’s primary or caucus.
At that meeting, televised on C-SPAN, the Sanders and Clinton delegates hashed out a platform to be adopted in Philadelphia. The end result: The most progressive platform in the history of the Democratic Party, thanks in large part to Sanders’ delegates. The platform will go to the full convention for ratification, but the Sanders campaign has said it will not further contest any planks.
Progressives on the committee did lose some key votes. Responding to intense White House lobbying, the Clinton supporters on the committee voted down an amendment opposing passage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Similarly, an amendment on Israel and Palestine introduced by Sanders supporters that called for “an end to occupation and illegal settlements” failed 95 to 73.
But the Sanders team’s victories outweighed its loses. The Democratic Party now officially supports a $15 minimum wage, breaking up too-big-to-fail banks and adding a public option to the Affordable Care Act. And in a narrow 81-to-80 vote, the Sanders contingent passed a resolution that called for a “reasoned pathway to future legalization” of marijuana and that the drug be downgraded in the Controlled Substances Act.
Democrats also agreed to a plan to combat climate change that includes a massive investment in renewable energy technologies and calls for putting a price on emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. And while failing to ban fracking, a “unity” resolution on fracking advocates forcing companies to disclose the chemicals they use in the fracking process.
After the platform advanced in Orlando, Sanders’ policy director Warren Gunnels told NBC News that the campaign got "at least 80 percent" of what it wanted, adding, “I think if you read the platform right now, you will understand that the political revolution is alive and kicking.”



The difference this bounty of bracingly progressive planks will make in the election to come, and, more importantly, in the policies adopted by the incoming Clinton administration (barring an increasingly unlikely Trump victory), is less clear.
Robert Kraig, head of Citizen Action Wisconsin and a Sanders delegate to the Orlando gathering, concedes that “platforms usually don’t matter,” but thinks that this time will be different.
“Bernie has already had an impact on Hillary’s campaign promises, moving her leftward on a number of issues,” he says. “The platform itself is being hammered out very publicly, which means its supporters will have a lot of leverage down the road in holding a Clinton administration accountable.” He believes that if progressive Democrats inspired by Sanders remain mobilized past the November election, they will have the clout needed to ensure that President Hillary Clinton fulfills her promises.
To determine whether that’s the case—and what kind of strategies can get us there—a look back at Democratic Party history is instructive.
CARTER, KENNEDY AND THE CLINTONS
In retrospect, Robert Kennedy may have been too dismissive of the value of the planks debated and adopted at party conventions. There have been times in U.S. history when they made a significant difference, not necessarily in determining who would win the general election, but on influencing the future direction of national party politics. In 1896, the Democratic Party adopted a populist-inspired plank calling for the free coinage of silver, an inflationary measure benefiting debt-ridden farmers but anathema to banking and industrial interests. Democratic nominee William Jennings Bryan campaigned on the free silver platform (“You shall not crucify mankind on a cross of gold”) and went down to defeat in the general election that followed. But the 1896 campaign proved a first step in the Democratic Party’s subsequent transformation from the party of states’ rights to the party of the welfare and regulatory state. In 1948, the Democrats’ adoption of a civil rights plank (reluctantly supported by incumbent Harry Truman) had the negative effect of prompting a convention walkout by “Dixiecrat” delegates from the Deep South, but also proved the following November that Democrats could retain the White House without the electoral votes of Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia and South Carolina—a salutary lesson in terms of the future of civil rights legislation. 
One of the last times that the Left played a significant role in shaping the Democratic Party platform was in a largely forgotten episode during the 1976 convention—and in that earlier history lies a complicated and cautionary tale.
The 1968 and 1972 presidential races, famous political disasters for the Democrats, set the stage. Robert Kennedy was assassinated before he reached the 1968 nominating convention in Chicago, Eugene McCarthy’s campaign stalled out, there was violence in the streets and tumult on the convention floor, and, at the behind-the-scenes insistence of Lyndon Johnson, the peace plank that anti-war liberals brought to the convention floor was voted down. The plank’s defeat, in the eyes of some knowledgeable Democratic insiders, helped guarantee the victory of Republican candidate Richard Nixon over Humphrey in November, both by reinforcing the impression that the Democrats had no idea how to end the fighting in Vietnam, and by showing Humphrey as nothing but a puppet of Johnson.
Far from banding together in 1972, the Democrats were, if anything, even more divided. Humphrey caricatured primary rival George McGovern as the candidate of “acid, abortion and amnesty.” As in 1968, the all-too-visible display of party disunity allowed Republicans to portray their opponents as incapable of governing themselves, never mind the country, and Nixon won in a landslide.
THE DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST IMPACT
The Watergate scandal, Nixon’s resignation and a wave of victories in the 1974 midterm elections revived Democrats’ hopes for 1976. In a vigorously contested primary season, with Sen. Scoop Jackson (Wash.) on the right and Rep. Morris Udall (Ariz.) on the left, former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter charted a middle path to the nomination. Beneath the surface, relations among Democrats remained fractious as usual, but Carter knew that he needed to project an image of party harmony to dispel lingering memories of 1968 and 1972.
To that end, the Carter camp agreed to accept a party platform written largely along lines drawn by liberals and labor. Influential in that effort was a newly created advocacy group called Democracy ’76, a kind of pre-internet Moveon.org, determined to influence the balance of power within the Democratic Party. The group was created at the initiative of Michael Harrington’s Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC), itself founded three years earlier in 1973 after the old Socialist Party met a sadly ironic demise when it was, in essence, captured by a pro-Nixon faction. Harrington and DSOC activists Jack Clark and Marjorie Phyfe devised a plan to “build a programmatic tendency of the democratic Left in the Democratic Party” in a coalition effort to shape the 1976 platform. Democracy ’76 attracted the financial and organizational support of progressive unions like AFSCME and the United Auto Workers (UAW), allowing it to hire staff and open a Washington office, and, as Harrington later wrote in his 1988 memoir, The Long-Distance Runner, giving DSOC the wherewithal “to play a role quite out of proportion to our very modest numbers.” At the time, DSOC had only about 3,000 members.
Harrington testified before the convention’s resolutions committee on behalf of Democracy ’76 and was well satisfied with the results, writing shortly afterward that the 1976 platform was “probably the most liberal in the history of the Democratic Party.” Since the early 1960s, when his book The Other America: Poverty in the United States helped spark the War on Poverty, Harrington had been pushing Democrats to establish massive jobs programs along the line of the New Deal’s public works projects. The Johnson administration, determined to fight its “unconditional” war on poverty on the cheap, and increasingly preoccupied with Vietnam, turned a deaf ear to Harrington’s economic strategy. But front and center in the new platform was the promise of federally guaranteed full employment.
“Jobs are the solution to poverty, hunger and other basic needs of workers and their families,” the first plank proclaimed. “Jobs enable a person to translate legal rights of equality into reality.” The platform also included pledges that the next Democratic administration would support legislation to make it easier for workers to join unions, make the tax code more progressive and institute national health insurance.
With Carter’s victory in November, Democracy ’76’s strategy seemed one of the great (and rare) success stories of the American Left in recent memory.
WHERE’S THE PRESIDENT?
But having, in effect, outsourced the writing of the 1976 platform to the Left, would Carter abide by its pledges once in office? As political scientist Sam Rosenfeld writes in a forthcoming history of liberal activism in the 1970s, “Ultimately, the outcome of the convention consisted of a full-throated liberal party platform and a nominee whose commitment to either the platform or the activist ranks of his own party was highly questionable.”
The political honeymoon proved short-lived. Within months of taking office, it became clear that job creation took a distinct second place in Carter’s list of legislative priorities as he increasingly embraced policies of economic austerity intended to tame inflation. The pledges to promote labor law reform, tax reform and national health insurance were similarly consigned by the Carterites to the dustbin. On the first anniversary of Carter’s victory, in November 1977, Harrington’s Democracy ’76, now renamed Democratic Agenda, staged a candlelight march on Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington to “make sure that President Carter … keep the promises contained in the 1976 Democratic platform.”



Carter was unmoved, but his administration kept a wary eye on Democratic Agenda. In December 1978, Democrats were scheduled to hold a midterm convention in Memphis to discuss policy issues. (The first midterm convention was held in Kansas City in 1974, a concession from the party establishment to liberal activists.) As early as May 1977, White House staffers warned Carter that the following year’s conference “can very easily be used by certain elements … to embarrass the president and the administration.”
In the weeks leading up to the midterm convention, Democratic Agenda contacted delegates across the country, seeking endorsements for a series of resolutions that, taken together, amounted to a repudiation of the Carter administration’s austerity policies. The DNC had set a high bar to bring the resolutions to the floor. They needed to be endorsed by a quarter of the 1,600 delegates, with the supporting petitions delivered to DNC headquarters three days in advance of the meeting. But the Agenda’s staff and volunteers managed to reach the magic number to get four of their resolutions on the agenda, including one calling for national health insurance.
Both sides mobilized for an all-out fight. The Carter camp deployed its most talented operatives, including a young lawyer named Hillary Rodham, wife of the newly elected Democratic governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton, who served as a Carter floor whip. Both sides understood that what was ultimately under debate was who would head the Democratic ticket in 1980: Carter or Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy.
At a gathering of Democratic Agenda supporters in Memphis before the convention kicked off, Harrington declared, “The road to victory in 1980 lies in implementing the 1976 platform.” Many delegates to the convention sported “Ted Kennedy for President” buttons.
Kennedy had yet to avow an open challenge to Carter’s renomination in 1980, and administration operatives were eager to dispel any hint that they were concerned by that prospect. Thus there was an element of political calculation when Carter’s press secretary Jody Powell told reporters, “The dispute which appears to be on the horizon in Memphis is not between the President and Sen. Kennedy, but between the administration and the Democratic Agenda.” Still, that a three-year-old Left advocacy group was being named by the spokesman for the president of the United States as its chief opponent at the convention was definitely an example of a rag-tag band of democratic socialists punching above their weight.



Democratic Agenda got its four resolutions to the floor. All were voted down, but the midterm convention was far from a Carter triumph. The president’s own speech to the gathering received a tepid response. That was not the case when Kennedy addressed the gathering on its final day. “The Party that tore itself apart over Vietnam in the 1960s,” he declared, prompting a standing ovation, “cannot afford to tear itself apart today over basic cuts in social programs.” New York Times reporter Hedrick Smith suggested that “the fact that nearly 40 percent of the party’s activists were willing to go on record against Mr. Carter … was firm indication of the schism that has developed between the White House and the liberal wing of the party.” And according to the Congressional Quarterly, “At the Memphis gathering, there is no doubt that the Left was the dominant force.”
Kennedy finally decided to challenge Carter, and for most of 1979 ran ahead of the president in public opinion polls. But Kennedy’s own weaknesses as a candidate and Carter’s “Rose Garden” strategy during the Iran hostage crisis secured his renomination. In the end, of course, Ronald Reagan was swept into the White House in 1980, with many of Kennedy’s blue-collar primary voters, determined to oust Carter from the White House one way or the other, casting their ballots for the Republican candidate.
In the aftermath of this debacle, the Democratic establishment saw to it that Democratic Agenda never had another chance comparable to the Memphis gathering to influence party debate. The DNC restricted attendance at the 1982 midterm conference in Philadelphia to party appointees and officials and thereafter abolished the midterm meetings altogether. Democratic Agenda, so formidable a force in 1977-1978, crumbled in the early 1980s without a trace. Democratic Socialists of America, founded as DSOC’s successor in 1982, continued to follow the Harrington strategy of being “the left-wing of the possible,” backing progressive Democratic candidates.
SO OVER THE RAINBOW
Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition in 1988 was another attempt to bring a Left agenda to the fore in a presidential campaign. Jackson won primaries or caucuses in 13 states, including Michigan, campaigning on themes of racial and economic justice that in some ways anticipated both the Obama and Sanders campaigns. But despite this electoral success, the Rainbow Coalition ended up functioning as a personal vehicle for Jackson, doomed to wither away after a brief moment of influence.
The history of Democratic Agenda’s fizzling in the 1980s does not suggest that history will necessarily repeat itself, and that any influence Sanders delegates bring to bear on writing this year’s Democratic platform is wasted effort. Forty years separate 1976 and 2016, and political history is not an endless loop. The Democratic Party has changed in many ways over the intervening decades, with labor far less important as a constituency, but people of color, women and young people far more so. Carter easily secured the presidential nomination in 1976 by defeating a collection of fairly standard conservative and liberal Democratic rivals. Hillary Clinton had to work a lot harder to defeat a rival who was anything but standard-issue politically: a self-identified democratic socialist.
Carter came into office following eight years of Democratic exile from the White House, and believed he could secure his re-election and political legacy by backing away from his party’s liberal heritage. Hillary would succeed a twice-elected Democratic president with a solid record of progressive achievement. Whatever her inclinations in domestic policy may be, political logic will likely push her in a more progressive direction—certainly in the fall election, and likely beyond.
Conservative triumphs over the past four decades have been policy rather than candidate-driven. George H.W. Bush was not a true believer in Reaganite supply-side fantasies (which he famously denounced in the 1980 primary season as “voodoo economics”). But by the time he came into the Oval Office he knew better than to challenge his own party’s orthodoxy on such questions (“Read my lips…”) The rigidity and unreality of the dogmas favored by policy-driven conservatism would be a poor model for the Democratic Left to emulate. But the organizational drive of movement conservatives to make their ideas count, to make their policy preferences felt—year in and year out, within the Republican party, and at every level of government—is a model worth considering.
The events of the 1970s are a cautionary tale about overestimating the importance of platform planks. That doesn’t mean that the planks that will be passed by Democrats in Philadelphia are unimportant. Some will become law and policy in the years to come.
I can’t speak for a long-departed Michael Harrington, but my gut feeling is that were he around today, even after the bruising experience with Jimmy Carter, he’d say it’s worth giving Hillary a chance to prove her fidelity to the party platform adopted by the Democrats in Philly. Harrington liked to quote Martin Luther King, Jr. (who was in turn quoting 19th century abolitionist Theodore Parker), to the effect that “The moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends towards justice.” It will be interesting to see just how that arc bends in the coming Clinton years, and important to respond accordingly. 

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Berned?




Dissident Voice: a radical newsletter in the struggle for peace and social justice


Berned!

According to this CommonDreams article, Bernie has kept his promise.  You remember, the one he made at the beginning of his so-called “revolution”, that he would endorse la Clinton if she became the Democratic nominee for the presidency.  Considering that it was probably decided before the whole spectacle began, he could hardly have done anything else.  He played his role perfectly, Judas Goating his millenials and other assorted revolutionary wannabes away from anything resembling a slight alternative to the slaughterhouse of dreams.
Triangular Bill perfected this duplicitous strategy, Obama enlarged upon it, and good old obedient Bernie gathered up the strays.  But did he?
There must be millions out there, enraged and humiliated, who just may find the courage to turn elsewhere.  Or simply give up.  It’s hard to say.  Civic and political activism, exercised only once every four years by the people who bother to vote, doesn’t presage a sustained effort.
It’s funny.  There’s a verb in French, Berner (pronounced ‘bare nay’) which means to fool or trick or make a fool of someone.  The person having been tricked is said to have been berné (same pronunciation).  I wonder how many of his useful idiots feel they were Berned.  Hmmm.  Edward Bernays comes to mind, as well.
Given the unlikely possibility that la Clinton’s criminal past somehow resurfaces to provide the necessary blowback to derail her ascension, I am not optimistic.
Steve Church is a former teacher, skipper, and sheep herder living in France. Email him at: steve.church@orange.frRead other articles by Steve, or visit Steve's website.

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

The Berning Man Comes Home to Roost


Dissident Voice: a radical newsletter in the struggle for peace and social justice



Bernie Bird Comes Home to Roost


berniebird_DV

With Bernie Sanders’ endorsement of Hillary Clinton two weeks before the Democratic National Convention, his pledge to “take the fight to the convention floor” is passé.
Berning Man
The Sanders campaign was hatched in talk show host Bill Press’ living room based on two premises: raise issues and do no harm to the Democratic Party. Press, a former chair of the California Democratic Party and author of Buyer’s Remorse: How Obama Let Progressives Down, recalls (pers. com.) they had no idea how popular the campaign would be and no illusions of winning.
How successful has Sanders been in raising the critical class issue of accelerating inequality in the US now that the former Goldwater Girl made-over to be an ersatz progressive is the Democratic nominee?  During the bait phase of the bait-and-switch primary campaign, Sanders electrified whole stadiums with “the economy is rigged, the system is rigged, the Democratic Party is rigged.” These were fighting words that mobilized new constituencies of mostly young people.
Now we are in the switch phase of the campaign. Despite Sanders’ accomplishment in wooing a new generation into the Democratic Party, ungrateful House Democrats booed him when he returned to Washington for not capitulating quickly enough. As one House Democrat said, Sanders’ goal “…for people to embrace his ideas is disconnected from what we are trying to do here.”
Clinton’s speech writers have given her political pitches a progressive veneer without the more radical content of Sanders. Instead, the media focus is increasingly about political gaffes (Clinton “we are going to put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business”/Trump “look at my African American”), personalities (abrasive Clinton/bullying Trump), and individual indiscretions (Clinton’s e-mail/Trump’s university).
Even on the substantive issue of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which both Sanders and Clinton (supposedly) oppose, the Democratic platform will not call out this “free trade” deal by name. The Clinton New Democrats are apparently so confident that the Sanders supporters will toe the line that they don’t feel they have to throw them that bone. The New Democrats are socially liberal on issues such as abortion, neoliberal on economics, and neoconservative on the security state and military dominance.
Sanders’ Successes
In addition to making the s-word somewhat respectable in polite company, “socialist” Sanders should be given credit for pushing the envelope as far to the left as practical and still be within the Democratic Party. Advocating nationalization of the banks, banning fracking, or opposing illegal settlements in Palestine may be popular on the left, but are non-starters in the Democratic Party.
The two premises of the Sanders’ campaign – raising progressive issues and supporting the Democratic Party – are ultimately in contradiction. The Democratic Party is dedicated to a corporate agenda, making it the graveyard of progressive initiatives.
Independent past presidential candidate Ralph Nader commented that Sanders was right in running in the Democratic Party because it gave Sanders a pulpit to promulgate his anti-establishment message. Nader added it was appropriate for Sanders to run as a Democrat because Sanders is fundamentally a liberal Democrat.
Sanders’ concept of “social democracy” translates to a somewhat anemic form of a New Deal program based on a $15 minimum wage, free public education through college, and a small wealth tax, plus campaign finance reform. As Sanders quipped, “I’m not much of a socialist compared to Eisenhower.”
Zombie Liberalism
During the original New Deal, capitalism was in crisis and being challenged by a potentially revolutionary insurgency. The capitalists in response made a grand compact with working people countenancing unionization and a share in labor’s productivity.
Today the liberal project that Sanders hoped to resuscitate is dead but not down. We are now in a neo-liberal era, where the Democrats try to outdo the Republicans in their subordination to the corporations, as we have seen in the one-party state of California. The productivity gains made by labor and profits made from financial speculation go to the 1%, while real wages deteriorate for working people.
Ours is a stagnating capitalist economy, where economic growth rates are declining. The owning classes are not simply greedy; they no longer have the means to uphold the grand compact with labor and also reward themselves. Consequently a political party tied to the corporate elite cannot be a party of progressive social change.
Time to Fly the Democratic Party Pigeon Coop
Discontent with austerity and endless war have given rise to the populist candidacies of Sanders and Trump.  Neither represents an alternative acceptable to most of the ruling elites.  The bulk of the political establishment, including the Sanders campaign, are uniting behind Clinton to defeat Trump.
Progressives don’t have to vote Democrat to ensure a Trump defeat, because Trump doesn’t have a chance of winning. His own class is practically united against him with established Republicans such as Romney scurrying into the Democrats’ big tent. The Bush bunch – Jeb, W, HW – have washed their hands of the Trumpster. And even the infamous Koch brothers are leaning in Clinton’s direction.
Given an easy victory for the Democrat, this electoral season is ripe for a third-party insurgency even if you are worried about Melania becoming the first lady. Now is the time, if it ever were the time, for independent politics to carry on the movement that Sanders temporarily vitalized.
Bruce Dixon of the Black Agenda Report accused Sanders of “sheepdogging” progressives into the Democratic Party. To which progressive supporters of Sanders took umbrage. So prove to the Left skeptics that the Sanders’ “revolution” is real by breaking with the two parties of capital.
The long process of building an independent movement outside of the Democratic Party is a necessary condition for progressive change and an extension of the spirit awakened by the Sanders’ campaign. So wouldn’t it be ducky if the first US woman president would be the likes of independents Jill SteinGloria La Riva, or Monica Moorehead?
Roger D. Harris is on the state central committee to the Peace and Freedom PartyRead other articles by Roger.

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Bernie Sanders, Please Stay In The Race. America Needs You Now More Than Ever

The Huffington Post




THE BLOG
 07/09/2016 12:38 am ET | Updated 22 hours ago

H. A. Goodman Columnist published in The Cleveland Plain Dealer, The Baltimore Sun, The Hill, Salon, The Jerusalem Post www.hagoodman.com





We live in a world where Daily Banter writers are overjoyed a presumptive Democratic nominee isn’t indicted or at risk of jail time. Although Hillary Clinton just circumvented the FBI recommending indictments (even though POLITICO writesComey challenges truthfulness of Clinton’s email defenses), there’s more controversy on the horizon. The State Department has restarted its own email probe, Clinton might actually have lied under oath during the Benghazi hearings, and the Honorable James Comey refused to rule out a Clinton Foundation investigation. I highlight these future political hurdles in the following YouTube segment.
Furthermore, Tim Black explains the magnitude of the Philando Castile shooting in this segment of his show, as well as the horror of the Dallas murders in another powerful segment. America is in turmoil, and while Hillary has accepted moreprison lobbyist money than even Jeb Bush, and Trump is Trump, the nation is longing for an inspiring figure. According to HuffPost Pollster, 55.6% of Americans have an unfavorable view of Hillary Clinton, while 59.8% of Americans have an unfavorable view of Donald Trump. In contrast, Bernie Sanders has a positivefavorability rating, and he isn’t at risk of future indictments or controversy.
Yes, Hillary Clinton barely beats Trump in terms of favorability, which speaks volumes about what could happen in November.
On the other hand, Bernie Sanders still defeats Trump by 10.4 points in an average of polls, while Hillary Clinton according to Real Clear Politics barely beats The Donald by 4.7 points. Hillary Clinton barely escaped indictments, barely beats Trump in terms of poll numbers and favorability ratings, and has less than 2,383 pledged delegates. Therefore, why should Bernie Sanders even think of leaving the race?
In reality, Vermont’s Senator should continue to ignore the bullying and condescension from media pundits and establishment Democrats who never believed in him. Bernie should remain steadfast and force Democratic super-delegates to make a choice during the Democratic Convention. It’s still several weeks away, and there’s time to argue the case that Bernie Sanders defeats Trump by a wider margin, without scandals on the horizon, and without horribly low favorability ratings. On November 8, 2016, Americans might decide they’ve had enough with either defending Clinton, or hearing her excuses for endless controversy.
In addition, Bernie Sanders represents a profound movement and a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. He embodies the hopes and dreams of millions and was able to earn over 12 million votes; without overwhelming name recognition or Super PACS. Sanders did all of this in only one year; against a challenger who consistently had the endorsements of major Democratic politicians in every state.
There are also allegations of election fraud; shielded by an American media that gave Trump and Clinton infinitely more coverage than Bernie. Ultimately, what Sanders was able to accomplish is unprecedented, and to assume that he couldn’t defeat Donald Trump with greater ease than Clinton is foolish. If it’s about winning, Democrats nominate Bernie. If it’s about political patronage, then Democrats nominate Clinton.
Also, if ensuring Trump doesn’t get into the White House is the Democratic Party’s primary goal, then Bernie must stay in the race. If reports are true, and he’s close to endorsing Clinton, then get ready for the lowest voter-turnout in decades. On June 22, Bloomberg explained the repercussions of a Clinton nomination:
Nearly Half of Sanders Supporters Won’t Support Clinton: Poll
 A June 14 Bloomberg Politics national poll of likely voters in November’s election found that barely half of those who favored Sanders ― 55 percent ― plan to vote for Clinton. Instead, 22 percent say they’ll vote for Trump, while 18 percent favor Libertarian Gary Johnson. “I’m a registered Democrat, but I cannot bring myself to vote for another establishment politician like Hillary…”
Still, for many Sanders supporters, opposition to Clinton is the basis of their political identity. Thirty minutes before the start of a June 9 Sanders rally in Washington, D.C., the crowd broke into a chant: “Bernie or bust! Bernie or bust!”
“There’s zero percent chance that Hillary Clinton could ever get my vote,” said Perry Mitchell, a 31-year-old nonprofit worker from Baltimore. “She’s a corporate candidate. I don’t vote for corporate candidates. I don’t do the lesser of two evils.”
Even if the alternative is Trump?
“You’re choosing between fascism and oligarchy,” Mitchell said. His 23-year-old brother, Brady, interjected with a more vivid analogy to the Clinton-Trump choice: “Die by quicksand, or die by bullet?”
The Mitchell brothers represent a brand of diehard Sanders voters who are causing anxiety in Clinton’s world. Like Brooks, both intend to vote for the Green Party’s Stein if Clinton secures the Democratic nomination. It could be that none of these Sanders supporters was ever truly “gettable” for Clinton, regardless of whether or not Sanders ultimately chooses to endorse her. (“She’s a war criminal,” says Brooks.)
If close to half of Bernie voters couldn’t imagine supporting Clinton in late June, there’s no doubt the FBI’s James Comey has increased the number. I explain the reality of Bernie supporters never siding with Clinton (even with an endorsement) in the following YouTube segment.
If Bernie decides to endorse Clinton, I’d have nothing but respect and admiration for Vermont’s Senator, even though I’d disagree with his decision. Bernie Sanders vows to prevent perpetual counterinsurgency wars and quagmires, wants to break up Too Big to Fail banks, has fought against the TPP, and championed every progressive value trampled upon by establishment Democrats. He’s brought energy and light to a political process marred by apathy and darkness.
With Bernie Sanders, the Democratic Party was forced to look into the mirror, and evaluate years of duplicity and disingenuous politics. His policy goals are mainstream and backed up by public opinion polls stating Americans desire to rein in Wall Street greed and stop never-ending wars. If Democrats and progressive media are enamored with a candidate advised by Henry Kissinger and George W. Bush’s neoconservatives, the don’t expect Bernie voters to flock to the polls in November.
Bernie Sanders, please stay in the race. If you don’t, I’ll still love you, but America needs you now more than ever. I was proved right regarding my prediction that Clinton would be indicted in the court of public opinion, and even The Chicago Tribune writes Hillary Clinton disqualifies herself. It’s a long way until November, and things seem to be getting worse, not better, for the Clinton campaign.
Our nation continues to struggle with the issue of race, a Democratic primary that left millions jaded, and a nation divided by a number of contentious issues. A true leader is needed at this point in U.S. history, and even though House Democrats might throw a tantrum, and progressive media might continue to bully Sanders supporters, Vermont’s Senator must remain in the race. He can easily defeat Trump, and since fear of a Republican is what drives establishment Democrats, Bernie Sanders is the only hope in 2016.

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

If Sanders is a True Progressive, He Has One Winnable Option Left


Dissident Voice: a radical newsletter in the struggle for peace and social justice



If Sanders is a True Progressive, He Has One Winnable Option Left

Information Clearing House — Bernie Sanders has played all his cards and has nothing to show except for a frustrated generation of populists trying to figure out what they should do. Sanders argued he would fight the Democratic bureaucracy at the convention, but his fight is already over. Last week the Democrats held their Platform Committee meeting in DC, and while Sanders had nominated five great populists and progressives, they were steamrolled by the stacked delegates of the corporatists candidate Hillary Clinton. The results of the meeting received very little corporate media attention in a usual attempt to cover for Hillary Clinton. All of the Sanders’ proposals were voted down by Clintonites, including: a ban on fracking, a proposal to oppose TPP, the $15 per hour minimum wage proposal, a call for single-payer health care, and a statement of opposition to the illegal Israeli occupation. All were defeated by the Clinton team of delegates. Despite Clinton’s ambiguous rhetoric on the issues, her platform is much clearer, denying anything that smacks of progressive change. So we are at a crossroads. What cards does Sanders have left? None. So he is done. He capitulated by showing his hand and gave away his leverage by agreeing to support the eventual candidate, so he is now finished with nothing else to do.
The important question is, what do the Bernie followers do now? First, one would hope they have learned a very bitter lesson, that the duopoly is thoroughly corrupt and cannot be reformed. It is too far gone and controlled by the war party, financial interests, and the corporatists. They have a vice-grip like stranglehold over the party, and they will never surrender power. They hold all the cards. Some Sanders supporters may have figured this out on the campaign trail, with masses of people being deprived of a vote by election rules set up by the established leaders of the party. Sanders supporters should have seen they had no chance when Clinton started the race with an insurmountable lead in “superdelegates,” before one popular vote was even cast. The Democratic deck was rigged from the git-go, and hopefully some Sanders’ followers now see the ruse of giving voters the illusion of voting. The real decision was never to be made by voters, for they might select the wrong candidate. Party leaders stacked the deck so they would always have the ultimate say and let the people be dammed.
There is no realistic hope of reforming the Democratic party, so the only alternative, if the populist movement is to survive, is to bolt the party. An outside or third party is the only hope of reforming this nation. Sanders is correct in saying Wall Street, corporations, health care industries, and the military industrial complex, have total and complete control of both major parties. In actuality there is little philosophical difference between the two major parties.
Can a third party buck the tide and break the corruption of the other two? Yes, in this particular political environment it could easily win the election because no one is enamored with the choice of candidates put forth by the of the leadership of the two parties. Both Clinton and Trump have the highest unfavorable ratings in the history of US politics. People will vote for Clinton because they hate Trump, and people will vote for Trump because they hate Clinton. It is a bizarre election which clearly demonstrates just how out of touch the leadership of both parties are with the people. If these two candidates represent the best two people in this country to run for the president, then throw in the towel, for the country is doomed.
Meanwhile, beneath the radar, kept a secret by corporate media, are candidates such as Jill Stein. You might never get the chance to hear her, due to the corporate black out of her campaign, but if by chance you do, you might be astounded. She is bright, she is reasoned, she is rational, she is articulate, and she he is presidential. She is everything the two major candidates are not.
Jill Stein has reached out to Sanders and offered him the position of president on the Green Party ticket, with she as the VP, but so far Sanders has not taken the bait because it looks like he may be beholden to the Democratic party leadership. If Sanders is a true Progressive populist he only has one option left, and that is to join a third party. Joining with Jill Stein would could very well mean a third party victory, in light of the resentment of the masses towards both duopoly candidates. Sanders and Stein only need 34% to insure victory, and that should not be difficult as most voters are thirsting for an alternative that is sane, rational, reasoned and civil. Will Sanders prove himself to be a true populist progressive, or will he cave to the democratic leadership, fold up his hot air filled progressive tent and go home?
Joe Clifford lives in Rhode Island. Read other articles by Joe.