The CIA Democrats in the 2020
elections
By Patrick Martin
August 23, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - In the course of
the 2018 elections, a large group of former
military-intelligence operatives entered capitalist
politics as candidates seeking the Democratic Party
nomination in 50 congressional seats—nearly half the
seats where the Democrats were targeting Republican
incumbents or open seats created by Republican
retirements.
Some 30 of these candidates won primary contests
and became the Democratic candidates in the November
2018 election, and 11 of them won the general
election, more than one-quarter of the 40 previously
Republican-held seats captured by the Democrats as
they took control of the House of Representatives.
In 2020, the intervention of the CIA Democrats
continues on what is arguably an equally significant
scale: besides the reelection campaigns of the 11
representatives who won seats in the House in 2018,
half a dozen of those who lost 2018 races are
running again in 2020. Some of these are running for
House seats again, while others have been promoted
by the Democratic Party leadership and are running
for the US Senate. And an entire new crop of
military-intelligence operatives is being brought
forward, some running for Republican seats targeted
by the Democratic leadership as possible takeovers,
others in seats not currently considered
competitive.
The bottom line: at least 34 Democratic
candidates for the House of Representatives have a
primarily military-intelligence background, up from
30 in 2018, as well as three of the party’s 35
candidates for the US Senate, compared to zero in
2018. For each branch of Congress, this represents
about 10 percent of the total.
As we explained in 2018, the extraordinary influx
of candidates coming directly from the
national-security apparatus into the Democratic
Party is a two-sided process: the Democratic Party
establishment welcomes such candidates as a
demonstration of the party’s unshakeable devotion to
the interests of American imperialism; and
military-intelligence operatives are choosing the
Democratic Party over the Republican Party in large
numbers because they are attracted by the Democrats’
non-stop campaign against the Trump administration
as too “soft” on Russia and too willing to pull out
of the Middle East war zone.
CIA Democrats for US Senate
Three Democrats seeking US Senate seats in
November have a primarily military-intelligence
background, including two who ran unsuccessfully for
House seats in 2018. In each case, the CIA Democrat
won a contested primary, with the support of Senate
Minority Leader Charles Schumer and the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC), defeating a
more liberal candidate.
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Cal Cunningham was the choice of the Democratic Party establishment to be the party’s candidate for US Senate from North Carolina, challenging first-term incumbent Thad Tillis. He defeated Erica Smith, an African-American state senator who ran on a more liberal platform, supporting Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.
While Cunningham served one term in the North
Carolina state senate, beginning in 2001, his
principal role has been as an attorney, both in
private practice and in the military. He enrolled in
the Army Reserve after the 9/11 attacks, joining the
Judge Advocate General (JAG) corps, and was sent to
both Iraq and Afghanistan to handle criminal cases
involving members of the US military and military
contractors in the two war zones.
According to his campaign biography, “Cal has
served with various units from Fort Bragg, including
XVIII Airborne Corps and First Special Forces
Command (Airborne). In recent years, Cal has trained
special operations forces at the U.S. Army John F.
Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School. Cal
continues to serve in the rank of Lieutenant Colonel
with an Army Reserve unit that trains one weekend a
month.”
Cunningham is relying heavily on his association
with the military in a state which hosts the fourth
largest number of military personnel, including such
bases as Fort Bragg (Army) and Camp Lejeune
(Marines). His campaign web site declares, “At Fort
Bragg and abroad, the paratroopers, Reservists and
special operators Cal served with in the Army taught
Cal a deeper form of patriotism and honor.”
Also running for US Senate seats are two female
former pilots, Amy McGrath and
Mary Jennings Hegar, who are
challenging Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
in Kentucky, and former Senate Majority Whip John
Cornyn in Texas, respectively. McGrath defeated
Charles Booker, an African American state legislator
backed by Bernie Sanders and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez, to win the Democratic nomination in
Kentucky. Hegar defeated state senator Royce West of
Dallas, also African American, to win the Democratic
nomination in Texas.
McGrath was perhaps the most heavily publicized
of the military-intelligence candidates in 2018,
when she narrowly lost a race against Republican
Congressman Andy Barr in Kentucky’s 6th
Congressional District, centered on Lexington. She
has been able to raise phenomenal amounts of money,
partly because of her high-profile military
career—she retired as a lieutenant colonel as a
Marine Corps fighter pilot—and partly because her
opponent, McConnell, is so widely hated.
Despite her war chest of more than $40 million,
however, McGrath is a decided underdog against
McConnell, who himself has a huge campaign
fundraising machine and is finishing his sixth
six-year term in the Senate.
MJ Hegar was an Air Force helicopter pilot who
spent three tours of duty in Afghanistan on search
and rescue operations, in the course of which she
was shot down once by Taliban fire, wounded, and
received a Purple Heart. She came to prominence
through a lawsuit against the Pentagon policy of
barring women from combat. She narrowly lost a 2018
race against Republican Congressman John Carter in a
district outside Austin, Texas, in the course of
which her five-minute campaign video, promoting her
military record in a noxious combination of
militarism and feminism, became a viral sensation
and raised millions in donations over the internet.
Hegar received the nod from the DSCC after former
congressman and failed presidential candidate Beto
O’Rourke declined to challenge Cornyn. She survived
a primary and runoff, but is considered a longshot
candidate against Cornyn, a three-term incumbent.
Eleven campaigns for reelection
All 11 CIA Democrats first elected in 2018 are
running for reelection. Five are considered
prohibitive favorites to win: Mikie Sherrill in New
Jersey, Chrissy Houlahan and Connor Lamb in
Pennsylvania, Elissa Slotkin in Michigan, and Jason
Crow in Colorado. The remaining six are in
competitive races: Jared Golden in Maine, Max Rose
in New York, Tom Malinowski and Andy Kim in New
Jersey, Abigail Spanberger and Elaine Luria in
Virginia.
That distinction made, however, “competitive” is
a relative term. All six are favorites to win
reelection, particularly because President Trump is
projected to lose heavily in each of their
states—Maine, New York, New Jersey and Virginia.
Only in Maine, where the state awards its electoral
vote by congressional district as well as statewide,
is Trump mounting a significant campaign, seeking to
take the electoral vote of Golden’s 2nd
Congressional District, as he did in 2016.
From a fundraising standpoint, the most reliable
indicator of success—and ruling class support—in
American legislative contests, the 11 CIA Democrats
must be considered overwhelming favorites to retain
their seats. They have raised a combined total of
$42 million. Their 11 Republican opponents have
raised a combined total of $10 million. Only
Republican Thomas Kean, opposing Malinowski in New
Jersey’s 7th Congressional District, has a campaign
war chest comparable to the incumbent’s, but still
only half as large.
Let us recall briefly who these 11
representatives are and their military-intelligence
background:
Jason Crow, Colorado’s 6th
Congressional District: Paratroop commander in Iraq
war, then Army Ranger special forces in Afghanistan
for two tours.
Jared Golden, Maine’s 2nd
Congressional District: The only rank-and-file
soldier in the group, spent four years as a Marine
infantryman, deploying to Afghanistan in 2004 and to
Iraq in 2005-2006.
Chrissy Houlahan, Pennsylvania’s
6th Congressional District: A 10-year veteran of the
Air Force, leaving it as a captain.
Andy Kim, New Jersey’s 3rd
Congressional District: Civilian war planner and
adviser to US military commanders in Afghanistan,
Iraq director for National Security Council under
President Obama.
Connor Lamb, Pennsylvania’s 17th
Congressional District: Marine Corps captain and
Judge Advocate General (prosecutor) until 2013, now
major in the Marine Corps Reserves.
Elaine Luria, Virginia’s 2nd
Congressional District: Navy commander, deployed six
times to Middle East and Western Pacific, commanded
assault craft supporting a Marine Corps deployment.
Tom Malinowski, New Jersey’s 7th
Congressional District: Assistant secretary of state
for democracy, human rights and labor in the Obama
administration.
Max Rose, New York’s 11th
Congressional District: Army combat officer in
Afghanistan 2012-2013, still in the active reserves.
Mikie Sherrill, New Jersey’s
11th Congressional District: Navy helicopter pilot,
with 10 years’ active service in Europe and the
Middle East.
Elissa Slotkin, Michigan’s 8th
Congressional District: CIA agent with three tours
in Iraq, National Security Council for both Bush and
Obama, assistant to Director of National
Intelligence John Negroponte, then principal deputy
assistant secretary of defense for international
security affairs.
Abigail Spanberger, Virginia’s
7th Congressional District: CIA operations officer
stationed in Europe for nearly a decade.
In each case, the candidates moved seamlessly
from positions as military commanders, intelligence
operatives or foreign policy officials to running
for Congress as candidates of the Democratic Party.
Only Golden ran for a lower office, winning a seat
in the Maine state legislature, before seeking a
seat in Congress.
In their first two years in Congress, the CIA
Democrats carried out two significant common
actions. The five women—Houlahan, Luria, Sherrill,
Slotkin and Spanberger—formed a joint fundraising
committee to promote female candidates who shared
their military-intelligence background. And six of
them—Crow and the five women—co-signed an op-ed in
the Washington Post in September 2019
calling for an impeachment probe into President
Trump’s dealing with Ukraine. This was a crucial
turning point in the effort that culminated in
Trump’s impeachment three months later.
Likely reinforcements for the CIA
Democrats
Four of the military-intelligence candidates who
lost congressional races in 2018 are running again
in 2020, and are likely to win seats in Congress.
Dan Feehan, Minnesota 1st
Congressional District: A military officer who
served two tours in Iraq between 2005 and 2009,
where he headed an Army Ranger sniper team, Feehan
then joined the Obama administration, first as a
White House aide, then as an acting assistant
secretary of defense. He narrowly lost a race in
2018 for the southern Minnesota seat previously held
by Democrat Tim Walz, now governor of Minnesota.
Republican Jim Hagedorn, who won by only 1,312 votes
in 2018, announced in February that he was being
treated for stage-four kidney cancer, but he remains
a candidate for reelection. Feehan has substantially
outraised Hagedorn, by $2.2 million to $1.6 million,
according to reports filed with the Federal Election
Commission through July 15.
Gina Ortiz Jones, Texas 23rd
Congressional District: An Air Force intelligence
officer in Iraq, Ortiz Jones followed up a 12-year
military career with continued work as a US
government adviser in Latin America, South Sudan and
Libya, then reviewed foreign investments from a
national security standpoint for the Office of the
US Trade Representative. In 2018 she lost a tight
contest, by a margin of 340 votes out of more than
200,000 cast, against Republican incumbent Will
Hurd, himself a former CIA agent, in the
congressional district that comprises most of the
Texas-Mexico border region, from El Paso to Laredo.
Hurd has now retired, leaving Ortiz Jones the likely
favorite to succeed him. This will be another “spy
vs. spy” contest, against whichever Republican
hopeful prevails in a lengthy primary recount. Tony
Gonzales is a 20-year Navy veteran and intelligence
officer specializing in cryptology; Raul Reyes is a
retired Air Force lieutenant colonel specializing in
cyberwarfare operations. Ortiz Jones has raised a
massive $4.1 million for her campaign, more than
double the sums raised by Gonzales and Reyes
combined, and leads them by 10-1 in terms of cash on
hand.
Sara Jacobs, California 53rd
Congressional District: An Obama State Department
official turned Hillary Clinton campaign aide,
Jacobs was engaged in counterterrorism work in
Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa, according to her
campaign website, and advised Clinton on foreign
policy. She lost a Democratic primary in 2018 in the
adjoining 49th Congressional District, where
millionaire attorney Mike Levin went on to win the
seat for the Democrats. After longtime incumbent
Representative Susan Davis announced her retirement
in the heavily Democratic 53rd District, Jacobs
switched districts in an attempt to capture the
vacant seat. She finished first in the all-party
primary in June, and will face another Democrat,
state legislator Georgette Gomez, in the November
election. While Gomez is a local elected official
who is running on the basis of her Hispanic
identity, Jacobs has far more financial resources,
as the granddaughter of Qualcomm founder and CEO
Irwin Jacobs.
Sri Preston Kulkarni, Texas 22nd
Congressional District: After running an
unexpectedly competitive race in 2018 against
Republican Representative Pete Olson, Kulkarni is
now considered the favorite following Olson’s
decision to retire rather than seek reelection.
Kulkarni is a career State Department official who
boasts of his role in defense of American
imperialism. His campaign website declares: “From
Jerusalem to Iraq to Russia, Sri served in some of
the toughest places in the world, representing the
interests of the United States...” Of South Asian
descent on his father’s side, Kulkarni is running in
a district in the southwest suburbs of Houston—once
held by right-wing Republican Tom DeLay—which has
undergone rapid demographic change due to an influx
of Asian immigrants.
There is a fifth military-intelligence candidate
who is considered a likely winner in 2020,
Jackie Gordon, a retired career military
police commander, who is seeking the seat left
vacant by the retirement of Republican Peter King in
the 2nd Congressional District of New York, on Long
Island. Gordon spent 29 years in the military,
including multiple tours of duty in combat zones:
“as a battle captain in Baghdad during the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq, and as Commander of the 310th
Military Police Battalion in Afghanistan in 2012”
according to her campaign website, as well as “an
operations officer at Guantanamo Bay,” the US base
which is the site of a notorious prison and torture
center. Gordon, who is African American, was elected
to the Babylon Town Council while still on active
duty and retired from the Army Reserve in 2014 with
the rank of lieutenant colonel.
In the course of the 2018 elections, a large
group of former military-intelligence operatives
entered capitalist politics as candidates seeking
the Democratic Party nomination in 50 congressional
seats—nearly half the seats where the Democrats were
targeting Republican incumbents or open seats
created by Republican retirements. Some 30 of these
candidates won primary contests and became the
Democratic candidates in the November 2018 election,
and 11 of them won the general election, more than
one quarter of the 40 previously Republican-held
seats captured by the Democrats as they took control
of the House of Representatives. In 2020, the
intervention of the CIA Democrats continues on what
is arguably an equally significant scale.
More military-intelligence and FBI candidates
The number of contested congressional seats in
2018 was unusually large, as the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee targeted 115 seats,
about half of those in the Republican caucus.
Candidates from military-intelligence backgrounds
won the nomination for 30 of those seats, making
them the largest single occupational group, ahead of
lawyers (20), state and local politicians (26),
businessmen (15), and others (24).
The likely takeover targets have shrunk in number
because of the Democratic success in 2018. Only 31
seats are on the DCCC’s “red-to-blue” shopping list,
and even of these, one is held by a Democrat
already. That leaves 30 seats now held by
Republicans but targeted for potential takeover. Of
these, five have military-intelligence operatives as
the Democratic nominees: Feehan, Jones, Jacobs,
Kulkarni and Johnson, profiled above.
Another 18 military-intelligence candidates are
running in districts held by Republicans that are
not currently considered competitive but could
become so in some cases if the Democratic edge in
the election widens significantly—it is currently
averaging about seven percent in the polls. The
number of CIA Democrats in the House of
Representatives could rise to as many as 20,
depending on political shifts between now and
November 3.
Reviewing the biographies of these candidates,
based on the information they themselves chose to
present on their campaign websites, gives a glimpse
of the social types who are being attracted to and
mobilized by the Democratic Party’s campaign against
Trump, and particularly by the incessant claims that
Trump is a Russian stooge and that his victory in
2016 was the product of “Russian meddling” in the
elections.
By region, these candidates include:
Northeast
New Jersey, 4th Congressional District:
Stephanie Schmid, a retired Foreign Service
officer, is opposing incumbent Christopher Smith, an
anti-abortion zealot who has held the seat for 40
years. A former attorney, Schmid joined the Foreign
Service in 2011 and worked in Haiti, Brazil and
Washington, D.C. Her website declares, “Stephanie
has proudly served with Republican and Democratic
leaders who have always put country before party.”
Pennsylvania, 13th Congressional District:
Todd Rowley, a retired FBI
counterintelligence officer, is the Democrat
opposing first-term Republican John Joyce. Rowley is
a former policeman, state trooper and paramedic who
spent 24 years as an FBI agent engaged primarily in
paramilitary and counterintelligence operations,
including liaison with the CIA and the Director of
National Intelligence.
Maryland, 1st Congressional District: Mia
Mason is a retired 20-year military
veteran, who “completed a total of 5 combat tours
between Iraq and Afghanistan while serving in the
Navy and Army,” according to her campaign website.
She was discharged from the military for being gay
and then brought back in. She was “onboard USS
Kitty Hawk CV-63 for Operations Enduring
Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.” She is opposing
five-term Republican incumbent Andy Harris in a
district that comprises the rural eastern shore of
Maryland.
Pennsylvania, 14th Congressional District: William
Marx retired from the Marines after a
16-year career and is now a high school teacher and
local councilman. He is running against first-term
incumbent Republican Guy Reschenthaler in this
southwest Pennsylvania seat.
Midwest
Ohio, 14th Congressional District:
Hillary O’Connor Mueri was a Navy pilot,
who flew combat missions during the Iraq war to
provide close air support to ground forces. She went
to law school after the military, specializing in
product litigation in the aviation industry. Mueri
is running against four-term incumbent David Joyce
in a mixed suburban and rural district extending
northeast from Cleveland along Lake Erie.
Wisconsin, 1st Congressional District:
Roger Polack was recruited by the US
intelligence services while a student at the
University of Wisconsin and trained to specialize in
Asian affairs. His web site declares: “Roger served
multiple tours as a civilian intelligence officer in
Afghanistan, spending 20 months on the ground first
as an analyst for, and then Deputy Director of, the
Afghanistan Threat Finance Cell. He sat face to face
with Taliban detainees, helped plan law enforcement
and military operations, and managed the
intelligence priorities of 40 civilian and military
staff.”
In other words, the Democratic candidate in the
district formerly held by Republican Paul Ryan, now
by first-term Republican Bryan Steil, should be
investigated for possible connections to torture and
assassination. But in the eyes of the Democratic
Party leadership, this record is a credential, not
the mark of Cain.
Indiana, 3rd Congressional District: Chip
Coldiron is an Army veteran deployed twice
to Afghanistan, who became a health care worker and
then schoolteacher after leaving the military. He is
running against four-term incumbent Jim Banks in a
district centered on Ft. Wayne.
South
Kentucky, 6th District: Josh Hicks
is a Marine veteran turned policeman. In his four
years on active duty, he was deployed twice with the
24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, rising to the rank
of sergeant. He went to work as a policeman in
eastern Kentucky, becoming a member of the SWAT
team. He is running against four-term incumbent Andy
Barr in a district centered on the city of
Lexington.
North Carolina, 11th Congressional District:
Morris Davis is the former chief
prosecutor at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp,
although he was forced out by the Bush
administration because he objected to the use of
testimony obtained through torture of detainees. The
Guantanamo posting was the culmination of a 25-year
military career as a Judge Advocate General in the
Air Force. Davis is running for the Asheville-based
seat formerly held by Mark Meadows, now White House
Chief of Staff for Trump. He was initially a heavy
underdog to 25-year-old Madison Cawthorn, a
right-wing activist who won an upset victory in the
Republican primary, but Cawthorn is now caught up in
a scandal over social media postings of his trip to
see Hitler’s vacation hideaway in the Bavarian Alps,
which he tweeted was “on his bucket list” of
must-see locations.
Georgia, 1st Congressional District:
Joyce Marie Griggs retired with the rank of
lieutenant colonel after a 33-year career in Army
intelligence. She won the Democratic primary to face
incumbent three-term Republican Buddy Carter in a
district centered the city of Savannah. According to
her website: “Among her many decorations, medals,
and badges are the Bronze Star, Defense Meritorious
Service, and Global War on Terrorism Service medals,
and the Parachutist badge.” Griggs had three tours
in Iraq in 2007, 2008 and 2010.
Georgia, 9th Congressional District:
Devin Pandy, like Griggs, is a career Army
intelligence officer, who initially specialized in
electronic warfare systems maintenance and was
deployed overseas five times, to Panama, Kuwait,
Iraq and Afghanistan, retiring as a Chief Warrant
Officer 2. He boasts of coming from an Army family,
with his grandfather in World War II, his father in
the Persian Gulf War of 1990-91, and his brother and
sister-in-law also in the military. Pandy is the
Democratic candidate for the seat vacated by
right-wing Republican Doug Collins, who is running
for US Senate. He will face Republican Andrew Clyde,
a businessman and Navy veteran with a huge financial
advantage.
Florida, 1st Congressional District:
Philip Ehr is a repeat candidate from 2018,
when he lost to incumbent Matt Gaetz, perhaps the
most fervent Trump supporter in Congress, by a 2-1
margin in a district that comprises Pensacola and
much of the Florida Panhandle. According to his
campaign website, in the course of his 26-year
career as a Navy seaman and pilot: “He flew
reconnaissance missions in the Cold War, Desert
Storm and post-9/11 operations; oversaw U.S. air
operations in NATO’s 78-day bombing campaign in the
Balkans; organized operational intelligence support
to non-DOD Federal agencies; improved electronic
warfare readiness of Allied forces; and provided
strategic advice to senior leaders in Washington and
London.”
Florida, 12th Congressional District:
Kimberly Walker was in the Army for eight
years, then a prison guard, and is now a civilian
employee of Centcom, the US military command for all
operations in the Middle East and Afghanistan,
headquartered in Tampa. After the military and
prison system, Walker was hired as an IT contractor
at MacDill Air Force Base, then “accepted a position
as a Software Engineer at United States Special
Operations Command (USSOCOM).” Later she became a
contractor for Centcom headquarters. She is the
Democratic candidate against four-term incumbent
Republican Gus Bilirakis, who has a 50-1 advantage
in terms of fundraising.
Florida, 18th Congressional District: Pam
Keith is a former Judge Advocate General in
the Navy, who continued in the legal profession and
became a legal counsel to Florida Power & Light.
Keith lost the Democratic primary in 2018 to another
military-intelligence candidate but ran again in
2020 and won Tuesday’s primary easily. She will
oppose two-term incumbent Republican Brian Mast,
himself a combat veteran who lost his legs to a
roadside bomb in Afghanistan.
Alabama, 1st Congressional District:
James Averhart retired from the Marine
Corps as a Chief Warrant Officer Five after a
30-year career, mainly as a military policeman,
rising to head the Marine Corps Correction Service
(the prison for Marines convicted of criminal
offenses on duty). He was in combat in Operation
Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm (the two
phases of the 1990-1991 Persian Gulf War). As the
Democratic candidate in the Mobile-based 1st
Congressional District, left vacant by the
retirement of Republican Bradley Byrne, Averhart is
a prohibitive underdog to Republican nominee Jerry
Carl, a Mobile County commissioner, who has raised
$1.7 million to Averhart’s $50,000.
Oklahoma, 2nd Congressional District:
Danyell Lanier is a Navy veteran and health
care trainer who won an uncontested primary for the
Democratic nomination against five-term incumbent
Republican Markwayne Mullin. Lanier’s website gives
little biographical information about her. Mullin
has raised $1.3 million compared to $18,000 for
Lanier.
Colorado, 4th Congressional District: Ike
McCorkle is a retired Marines Corps special
forces officer, who boasts of a military family,
including two grandfathers, his father, a brother
and two cousins. According to his campaign website,
he retired in 2014 “to recover from eighteen hard
years of service in the USMC Infantry and Spec Ops
communities.” McCorkle deployed six times overseas,
four times in combat, was wounded multiple times,
and medically retired with the rank of captain. He
is the Democratic candidate in the heavily rural
district covering the eastern third of Colorado,
against three-term incumbent Ken Buck, an extreme
right-winger.
Utah, 2nd Congressional District: Kael
Weston spent seven years as a military
adviser in Iraq and Afghanistan, more than any other
State Department official. According to his campaign
website, he was “State Department Political Adviser
to a dozen Marine commanding generals, including
during and after the biggest battle of the Iraq War
(Fallujah, 2004-2007).” He also played a significant
role in Afghanistan, in the city of Khost and as a
Marine Corps adviser in Helmand province, one of the
bloodiest battlegrounds against the Taliban. Weston
is a published author and has written regularly for
the corporate media on counterterrorism and military
subjects. He will be the Democratic candidate
against four-term incumbent Republican Chris
Stewart, who is a heavy favorite and enjoys a 4-1
fundraising advantage.
Some conclusions
There is one other aspect of this list that has
political significance. It represents the
intersection of the pro-imperialist orientation of
the Democratic Party and identity politics. Of the
18 candidates given thumbnail descriptions above,
six are African American (Griggs, Pandy, Walker,
Keith, Averhart and Lanier), and three more are
white women (Schmid, Mason and Mueri). In other
words, half of these military-intelligence
candidates are examples of “diversity,” although
enabling minorities and women to commit the same
crimes previously committed by white men would not
seem to be an improvement.
Not every one of these 18 candidates is a monster
or a war criminal. But then there are those whose
background is so filthy that they provide an
unanswerable argument against claims, put forward by
groups like the Democratic Socialists of America,
that it is possible to “reform” the Democratic Party
and even to transform it into a vehicle for social
progress.
What does it say about the Democratic Party that
it has, among its candidates for Congress, a half
dozen career military intelligence operatives, the
longest-serving civilian adviser to US military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, the former chief
prosecutor at Guantanamo Bay, and the former
overseer of prisons for the Marine Corps? What of
the record of FBI counterintelligence officer Todd
Rowley? His campaign website deserves a more
extended citation:
Todd served as the FBI’s senior liaison
representative to the U.S. Intelligence
Community (USIC) regarding the FBI’s role in
support of and counterintelligence efforts
related to U.S. government overseas sensitive
and classified construction projects in critical
threat countries. Todd regularly interacted with
FBIHQ and USIC senior executive managers and
personnel throughout the USIC, representing the
FBI’s security and counterintelligence interests
related to a host of critical threat and
national security matters…
Todd traveled overseas extensively in support
of this critically important mission. During
Todd’s distinguished FBI career, he was
entrusted with some of our country’s most
sensitive and classified intelligence
information and was called upon to provide
testimony in Federal Court and Grand Juries, as
well as being the affiant in Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC)
proceedings.
What does such an individual see in the
Democratic Party? And equally important, what does
the Democratic Party see in him?
This list, however tedious—and hideous—is
instructive. It gives a picture of the social
elements that comprise a significant fraction of the
Democratic Party. These candidates, drawn from the
military-intelligence apparatus, demonstrate the
real nature of this organization, a political
instrument of Wall Street and the imperialist state.
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