Bernie
Sanders’ Phantom Movement
By Chris
Hedges
February 15, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Truth
Dig
" - Bernie Sanders, who has attracted numerous
young, white, college-educated supporters in his bid
for the presidency, says he is creating a movement
and promises a political revolution. This rhetoric
is an updated version of the “change” promised by
the 2008 campaign of Barack Obama and by Jesse
Jackson’s earlier National Rainbow Coalition. Such
Democratic electoral campaigns, at best, raise
political consciousness. But they do not become
movements or engender revolutions. They exist as
long as election campaigns endure and then they
vanish. Sanders’ campaign will be no different.
No movement
or political revolution will ever be built within
the confines of the Democratic Party. And the
repeated failure of the American left to grasp the
duplicitous game being played by the political
elites has effectively neutered it as a political
force. History, after all, should count for
something.
The
Democrats, like the Republicans, have no interest in
genuine reform. They are wedded to corporate power.
They are about appearance, not substance. They speak
in the language of democracy, even liberal reform
and populism, but doggedly block campaign finance
reform and promote an array of policies, including
new trade agreements, that disempower workers. They
rig the elections, not only with money but also with
so-called superdelegates—more than 700 delegates who
are unbound among a total of more than 4,700 at the
Democratic convention. Sanders may have received 60
percent of the vote in New Hampshire, but he came
away with fewer of the state’s delegates than
Clinton. This is a harbinger of the campaign to
come.
If Sanders
is denied the nomination—the Clinton machine and the
Democratic Party establishment, along with their
corporate puppet masters, will use every dirty trick
to ensure he loses—his so-called movement and
political revolution will evaporate. His mobilized
base, as was true with the Obama campaign, will be
fossilized into donor and volunteer lists. The
curtain will come down with a thunderclap until the
next election carnival.
The
Democratic Party is a full partner in the corporate
state. Yet Sanders, while critical of Hillary
Clinton’s exorbitant speaking fees from firms such
as Goldman Sachs, refuses to call out the party
and—as
Robert Scheer pointed out in a column in
October—the Clintons for their role as handmaidens
of Wall Street. For Sanders, it is a lie of
omission, which is still a lie. And it is a lie that
makes the Vermont senator complicit in the con game
being played on the American electorate by the
Democratic Party establishment.
Do Sanders’
supporters believe they can wrest power from the
Democratic establishment and transform the party? Do
they think the forces where real power lies—the
military-industrial complex, Wall Street,
corporations, the security and surveillance
state—can be toppled by a Sanders campaign? Do they
think the Democratic Party will allow itself to be
ruled by democratic procedures? Do they not accept
that with the destruction of organized labor and
anti-war, civil rights and progressive movements—a
destruction often orchestrated by security organs
such as the FBI—the party has lurched so far to the
right that it has remade itself into the old
Republican Party?
The
elites use money, along with their control of the
media, the courts and legislatures, their armies of
lobbyists and “think tanks,” to invalidate the vote.
We have undergone, as
John Ralston Saul has written, a corporate coup
d’état. There are no institutions left within civil
society that can be accurately described as
democratic. We do not live in a capitalist
democracy. We live in what the political philosopher
Sheldon Wolin calls
a system of “inverted
totalitarianism.”
In Europe,
America’s Democratic Party would be a far-right
party. The Republican Party would be extremist.
There is no liberal—much less left or
progressive—organized political class in the United
States. The growth of protofascists will be halted
only when a movement on the left embraces an
unequivocal militancy to defend the rights of
workers and move toward the destruction of corporate
power. As long as the left keeps surrendering to a
Democratic Party that mouths liberal values while
serving corporate interests, it will destroy itself
and the values it claims to represent. It will stoke
the justifiable rage of the underclass, especially
the white underclass, and empower the most racist
and retrograde political forces in the country.
Fascism thrives not only on despair, betrayal and
anger but a bankrupt liberalism.
The
political system, as many Sanders supporters are
about to discover, is immune to reform. The only
effective resistance will be achieved through acts
of sustained, mass civil disobedience. The
Democrats, like the Republicans, have no intention
of halting the assault on our civil liberties, the
expansion of imperial wars, the coddling of Wall
Street, the destruction of the ecosystem by the
fossil fuel industry and the impoverishment of
workings. As long as the Democrats and the
Republicans remain in power we are doomed.
The
Democratic establishment’s response to any internal
insurgency is to crush it, co-opt it and rewrite the
rules to make a future insurgency impossible. This
was true in 1948 with Henry Wallace and in 1972 with
George McGovern—two politicians who, unlike Sanders,
took on the war industry—and in the 1984 and 1988
insurgencies led by Jackson.
Corey Robin in Salon
explained how the Clintons rose to power on this
reactionary agenda. The Clintons, and the Democratic
establishment, he wrote, repudiated the progressive
agenda of the Jackson campaign and used coded
language, especially regarding law and order, to
appeal to the racism of white voters. The Clintons
and the party mandarins ruthlessly disenfranchised
those Jackson had mobilized.
Sanders’
supporters can expect a similar reception. That
Hillary Clinton can run a campaign that defies her
long and sordid political record is one of the
miracles of modern mass propaganda and a testament
to the effectiveness of our political theater.
Sanders
said that if he does not receive the nomination he
will support the party nominee; he will not be a
“spoiler.” If that happens, Sanders will become an
obstacle to change. He will recite the mantra of the
“least worst.” He will become part of the Democratic
establishment’s campaign to neutralize the left.
Sanders is,
in all but title, a Democrat. He is a member of the
Democratic caucus. He votes 98 percent of the time
with the Democrats. He routinely backs
appropriations for imperial wars, the corporate scam
of Obamacare, wholesale surveillance and bloated
defense budgets. He campaigned for Bill Clinton in
the 1992 presidential race and again in 1996—after
Clinton had rammed through the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA), vastly expanded the system
of mass incarceration and destroyed welfare—and for
John Kerry in 2004. He called on Ralph Nader in 2004
to abandon his presidential campaign. The Democrats
recognize his value. They have long rewarded Sanders
for his role as a sheepherder.
Kshama Sawant
and I privately asked Sanders at a New York City
event where we appeared with him the night before
the
2014 climate march why he would not run for
president as an independent. “I don’t want to end up
like Ralph Nader,” he told us.
Sanders had
a point. The Democratic power structure made a quid
pro quo arrangement with Sanders. It does not run a
serious candidate against him in Vermont for his
U.S. Senate seat. Sanders, as part of this Faustian
deal, serves one of the main impediments to building
a viable third party in Vermont. If Sanders defies
the Democratic Party he will be stripped of his
seniority in the Senate. He will lose his committee
chairmanships. The party machine will turn him, as
it did Nader, into a pariah. It will push him
outside the political establishment. Sanders
probably saw his answer as a practical response to
political reality. But it was also an admission of
cowardice. Nader paid a heavy price for his courage
and his honesty, but he was not a failure.
Sanders, I
suspect, is acutely aware that the left is broken
and disorganized. The two parties have created
innumerable obstacles to third parties, from locking
them out of the debates to challenging voter lists
and keeping them off the ballot. The Green Party is
internally crippled by endemic factionalism and
dysfunction. It is dominated in many states by an
older, white demographic that is trapped in the
nostalgia of the 1960s and narcissistically
self-referential.
I spoke
three years ago to the sparsely attended state
gathering of the Green Party in New Jersey. I felt
as if I was a character in Mario Vargas Llosa’s
novel “The Real Life of Alejandro Mayta.” In the
novel, Mayta, a naive idealist, endures the
indignities of the tiny and irrelevant warring sects
of the Peruvian left. He is reduced to meeting in a
garage with seven self-described revolutionaries who
make up the RWP(T)—the Revolutionary Workers’ Party
(Trotskyist)—a splinter group of the marginal
Revolutionary Worker’s Party. “Stacked against the
walls,” Llosa writes, “were piles of Workers
Voice and handbills, manifestos and statements
favoring strikes or denouncing them which they had
never got around to handing out.”
I am all for a revolution,
a word Sanders likes to throw around, but one that
is truly socialist and destroys the corporate
establishment, including the Democratic Party. I am
for a revolution that demands the return of the rule
of law, and not just for Wall Street, but those who
wage pre-emptive war, order the assassination of
U.S. citizens, allow the military to carry out
domestic policing and then indefinitely hold
citizens without due process, who empower the
wholesale surveillance of the citizenry by the
government. I am for a revolution that brings under
strict civilian control the military, the security
and surveillance apparatus including the CIA, the
FBI, Homeland Security and police and drastically
reduces their budgets and power. I am for a
revolution that abandons imperial expansion,
especially in the Middle East, and makes it
impossible to profit from war. I am for a revolution
that nationalizes banks, the arms industry, energy
companies and utilities, breaks up monopolies,
destroys the fossil fuel industry, funds the arts
and public broadcasting, provides full employment
and free education including university education,
forgives all student debt, blocks bank repossessions
and foreclosures of homes, guarantees universal and
free health care and provides a living wage to those
unable to work, especially single parents, the
disabled and the elderly. Half the country, after
all, now lives in poverty. None of us live in
freedom.
This will
be a long and desperate struggle. It will require
open confrontation. The billionaire class and
corporate oligarchs cannot be tamed. They must be
overthrown. They will be overthrown in the streets,
not in a convention hall. Convention halls are where
the left goes to die.
Chris
Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more
than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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