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United States: `Birthers', `deathers' and haters -- Right-wing populism and liberal retreat

October 11, 2009 — The heat
is on the administration of US President Barack Obama. The energised conservative
base has taken over town hall meetings on health care. There are “birthers”
(those who claim Obama is not a US citizen and ineligible to be president),
“deathers” (those who claim Obama’s health care reform is a plan to kill old
people) and just pure haters. Obama has been personally attacked
as a racist, socialist, communist, Stalinist, fascist, Nazi, Pol Potist, foreigner
and every other name the right finds in its vocabulary.
When Obama led the US
delegation to Copenhagen to get his home town of Chicago the 2016 Olympics — and
failed — he was attacked as “out of touch” by the right. When Chicago was
knocked out in the first round of voting, the right gleefully cheered! The
“country first” crowd forgot that a Chicago Olympics would be in the United States,
not “Obama Land”.
Two weeks later the Nobel
Prize for Peace was given to a surprised Obama. Again the conservatives
attacked Obama saying his “peace prize” would deepen polarisation in the
country. It was as though Obama arranged the award. The world, of course, sees
Obama’s move away from the unilateralism of the Bush-Cheney regime as a step
forward even though Obama continues Bush’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Senior citizens are panicked
by accusations that Obama’s attempt to bring about near universal heath
coverage as a threat to their own — government-run — Medicare program. Some veterans
under a single-payer Veteran Administration program are complaining that “socialism”
is behind Obama’s health plans.
Tinge of racism
Former US President Jimmy
Carter called these right-wing attacks “predominantly racist” in nature. Since
the base of the Republican Party is strongest in the old Confederate states of
the Deep South — Carter is a former governor of Georgia — he tends to know what
he’s talking about.
Others reject this, claiming that
former US President George W. Bush was demonised too. But no previous president
was ever attacked because of his race and had lawsuits filed asserting he was
not born as a US citizen. Obama, for his part, has downplayed the issue,
quipping to a late-night TV host, “I was Black before the election" when a
majority of Americans elected him as president.
Of course, as the first US president
who is African American, Barack Obama has had to play down his race even when
discussing racism and discrimination -- while never denying that history. His July
speech to the 100th anniversary convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the nation’s
oldest civil rights organisation, was a strong defence of the civil rights
movement and pointed to the United States’ long history of slavery and racism. Yet
the speech was barely covered by the mainstream media, which has a habit of
downplaying the issue of race except when it is used as a slander by the right.
The shrill attacks on Obama
by the right have a strong tinge of racism. It is not just a repeat of the Clinton
years or when other “centrist Democrats” have come under assault. The United
States’ long history of racism — and institutional discrimination is the
hardest to uproot — and the refusal of the government to ever apologise or
reject that past of slavery and legal segregation shows the deep-rooted problem
of race in US politics. (It is typical of the ruling elite to say the past is
the past, we must look forward.)
The issues the right is using
to attack Obama is the deep world recession and the current debate about health
care and insurance industry reform, and weaving in race to play off white
anxieties.
Van Jones and ACORN
The viciousness of the rightwing
forces is most evident when the demagogues go after Black activists like Van
Jones of San Francisco. Jones was forced out of his environmental advisory job for
the White House in September after being attacked for derogatory comments about
Republicans, and signing a petition in 2004 questioning why the September 11
terrorist attack took place.
The community organising
group ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) was
targeted by the Republicans in 2008 for its voter registration efforts in poor
communities. Slanders and lies of voter fraud were played up by the right and
then picked up by the mainstream media. The right has been after ACORN, even
falsely claiming Obama worked for the group. One would think ACORN had
committed torture and other crimes against humanity.
The assault led to ACORN’s
entrapment by conservative activists in September that caused most liberals to
drop their support for the organisation. Congress, banks and others that had
been working with ACORN on housing and voter issues broke ties, and Congress,
including most Democrats, voted to “defund” the organisation in September.
Formed in 1970 in Little
Rock, Arkansas, ACORN has registered more than 1 million poor, mostly African
American, voters over the years. It has helped thousands facing mortgage foreclosures.
Neither Van Jones nor ACORN have ever been convicted of crimes like those
committed by the war contractors such as the private security firm BlackWater
that is still in the employ of the State Department and Pentagon.
Yet most liberals quickly
capitulated to the right instead of standing against these smears and attacks. What’s
common — and outrageous — about these slanders is the failure of the Obama
administration and mainstream liberal allies to stand up for those being
demonised.
The real crime of Van Jones was
not his comments, but his history of militant activism. ACORN’s rap sheet is that
it fights for the poor.
Roots of anger
It is important to recognise
that the superheated attacks on Obama are not primarily due to conscious,
thought-out Klan-type bigotry. An undercurrent of deep racism does exist because
of institutional racism, yet it would be a mistake to read all the anti-government
supporters as racists.
The main issue motivating the
anger is the “liberal agenda” (support for more government intervention) promoted
by Obama and most liberals. For some 30 years, Republicans, beginning with former
US President Ronald Reagan and the Democrats afterwards, have denounced “big government”.
The ideological shift to the right on this issue allows the conservative
extremists to confuse most Americans, particularly whites, to believe the government
is the problem. (Many middle-class
minorities hold the same view of government.)
There is a fundamental difference,
however, between right and left populism. Rightist critics of capitalist
inequities see the government, independent of class, as the real enemy,
stealing hard-earned money from working people to redistribute to the
undeserving and shiftless poor (read: undocumented immigrants, Blacks and
Latinos).
That demagoguery taps into
the bigotry of an extreme white racist minority — a smaller proportion of US society than ever in history. The
Republicans in 2008 also used the race card and called Obama “the other” and
“paling around with terrorists”. But it didn’t work.
The bulk of opposition is
aimed at the greed and corporate welfare programs (millions to Wall Street and corporate
America) as the working class suffers home foreclosures and loss of jobs. The
right has been able to tie Wall Street and fear of government together, and
seize centrestage.
At the infamous town hall
meetings in August, the so-called non-profit conservative foundations (e.g.
Freedom Works) effectively tapped the misguided anti-government sentiment. They
were able to mobilise many white working and middle-class Americans to attend these
meetings. The theme at all the events was simple: “Stop a government takeover”
of everything.
Fox News, owned by Australian-born
billionaire Rupert Murdoch, has been a promoter of the “tea party” revolt, including
a large September 12 march on Washington. Glenn Beck, a Fox talk show host with
a best-selling book, summarises this sentiment as “Wall Street owns our
government. Our government and these gigantic corporations have merged”.
Michael Moore’s new movie, Capitalism: A Love Story, hits on many
of the same populist themes. Moore — an ardent and genuine liberal —- directs
his criticism at both the Republicans and Democrats. He fingers all those who
have been bought and paid for by the banks, insurance companies, drug cartels
and other wealthy corporate types. The difference is that Moore sees government
playing a positive role in health care and for society as a whole.
Recognising the contradictions
Another source of white
anxiety (a ``circling the wagons’’ mentality) is the changing demographics of
the US. The trend is not new but in times of economic uncertainty it becomes an
easy target of rightist demagogues.
In 1970 whites made up 87.5 per
cent of the US population. Some 30 years later in 2000 whites were 77.5 per cent
of the population and the percentage decline continues as the African-American,
Latino and Asian-American populations grow.
The African-American population
in 2000 was 36.7 million and the Latino population was 44.3 million. In 1969
there were 9.6 million residents who were foreign born. In 2006 the figure had
rose to 37 million. By 2050 whites will fall below 50 per cent.
The conservatives take these
statistics and twist them (classic scare-mongering) to warn white Americans that
they are “losing their country”. It is a “fact” to older whites that to be an
American means to be white with a Eurocentric outlook. Everyone else is a
hyphenated American.
The Obama election showed how
much that view of the world is an outdated assumption. The younger generations reject
that narrow-minded pre-civil rights attitude about race and who is an American.
Most young whites see Americans as an ethnic rainbow — based primarily on
citizenship.
Unfortunately, the left has
failed to effectively tap the “middle-class” anger and focus it against the
system and push for progressive causes. The reason is because the left itself
is divided, between the socialist left and the much larger liberal left. The
liberal left basically looks to the Democratic Party to lead the fightback and
have responded meekly to the organised right’s campaign against universal
health care, women’s rights, gay rights and many other issues of concern to
Blacks and other minorities, and to society as a whole.
Liberalism versus left populism
The ideology of left
liberalism (historically and today) cannot stand up to conservative extremism. Liberalism,
like conservatism, supports the free market system and the “right” of Wall
Street to make a decent profit. Liberalism, philosophically, supports a
“fairer” market system. It is very difficult to build left-wing populism that
concedes the “goodness” of capitalism.
Genuine leftwing populism cannot be rooted in liberal ideology. Left-wing (or socialist) populism must be based on
the working class, the labour and progressive forces, seeking to take control
of the economy, the government and crucial institutions for the good of society
as a whole.
The illusions in Obama and
his neoliberal-centrist ideology and philosophy have made the once energised liberal
left (when Bush was in power) take a wait and see approach to how the
legislative process plays out, conceding the streets and town hall meetings to
the right.
While there continue to be important
protests against the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, demanding immediate withdrawal,
and supporting single payer healthcare, much of the effort is lobbying and
hoping that Congress will stand up to the right. The weakness of labour and the
lack of a viable independent third political party make it difficult to provide
a political alternative to the Democrats.
The impasse of Obama's brand
of liberalism is not a surprise. He’s doing basically what he promised to do — protect
and defend the interests of the US political and economic system and its
imperial foreign policy.
A leftwing populist movement
marching for its issues and against the right is well overdue. Unless that
begins to develop, the rightist forces, including those with incipient fascist
ideology, will continue to make political gains no matter how nutty their
“birthers” and “deathers” views may seem. History teaches us the perils of underestimating
reactionary forces.
[









Comments
Capitalism: A Love Story
I recognise that Malik Miah isn’t setting out to extensively review Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story and his mention of it is merely in passing. But I think that he does it a major disservice by inferring that the film’s major difference with right-wing American popularism is that “Moore sees government playing a positive role in health care and for society as a whole.”
He isn’t even damning it with faint praise, he is misrepresenting the film’s thrust!
The film actually contains a significant segment discussing the growing popular interest in the concept of socialism in America. It references the great, 1930’s working class rebellions in the US auto industry, complete with factory occupations and battles with the police and draws connections to today, extolling the value of trade unions and solidarity.
Moore even delves into the critiques that progressive Catholics make against capitalism, a direct answer to the US religious right.
Capitalism: A Love Story makes its case from within the boundaries of American popular culture, but that makes its message all the more important. Surely it is by communicating our messages within the norms of our national cultures that we begin the process of opening up the vistas of international socialism to our respective working classes?
It would be a very sectarian socialist indeed who could not celebrate this film.
Barry Healy
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