Beware of Politicians Coopting Your Movement
by Carl Finamore
February 15, 2008
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Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are attracting thousands to
their rallies and setting records for voter turnouts in the Democratic
Party primaries. Reports abound that millions are infused with hope and
optimism.
This 2008 election reminds me of my generation of radicalizing youth
being courted in 1968 by Democratic Party "peace and reform" candidate
Eugene McCarthy. The experience was repeated in 1972 when Senator George
McGovern and Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm vied for the Democratic
Party nomination.
As you may recall, New York City Congresswoman Chisholm was the first
Black woman elected to Congress and the first to run for President in a
Democratic primary. But even with significant civil rights and feminist
credentials, Chisholm didn't get much attention back then and she
dropped from the race with 162 delegates.
As a labor and social activist, I have to ask: Was the Democratic Party
worth our support back then and does it deserve our support today? I
don't think so.
This is really not being talked about much today. Young people don't
seem to be asking too many questions before rushing head long into both
the Clinton and Obama campaigns.
In many respects, the 2008 youth generation is quite different from
1968.
Today's young people have not achieved the enormous self confidence
gained from organizing massive antiwar protests of millions, shutting
down universities and high schools to establish Black, Chicano and
Women's Studies programs, fighting for free speech rights, and forcing
schools to stop cooperation with draft boards and military recruiters.
Our culture has since been steadily depoliticized. Instead of a
political youth culture infused with dreams of building a new society,
we have a cacophony of media white noise promoting obsession with
celebrities and wealth.
Emphasis on the rich and famous is not limited to Hollywood; undeserving
politicians in Washington DC also get star billing.
Looking back forty years, it is not only the youth culture that has
changed.
Democratic candidates are also quite different. In the earlier years,
they projected a far more progressive image then either Clinton or Obama
today.
McGovern's memorable rebuke to conservative Senator John Stennis,
chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, would hardly be
repeated by today's poll-driven, consultant-crafted Democratic
candidates: "I'm tired of old men dreaming up wars for young men to
fight," McGovern defiantly declared. "If he wants to use American ground
troops in Cambodia, let him lead the charge himself."
Toned-down rhetoric is a sign of the times. Democratic Party candidates
today are playing to the disenchanted while the candidates of 40 years
ago were appealing to the rebellious.
The current candidates of the two major parties, however, do share in
common with their elder predecessors the invocation of that abstract and
time-tested mantra about "change." Barack Obama offers "change we can
believe in." Clinton reminds us she's a lifelong "agent of change."
When I hear this, I'm reminded of French journalist and novelist
Alphonse Karr who is credited with the oft-quoted observation that "the
more things change, the more they remain the same."
In fact, not much has changed in Democratic Party campaigns: Image and
personality continue to substitute for genuine discussion of policies
that would actually lead to changing people's lives.
Working Inside or Outside the Democratic Party
Notably, radicalized young social activists in 1968 were far less
impressed with authority and celebrity figures. We hotly debated whether
to support McCarthy, McGovern, or Chisholm.
In 1968, I was the chairperson of the University of Illinois (Chicago
Circle) Committee to End the War in Vietnam and in 1970 of the Chicago
Citywide Strike Council formed immediately after the Kent State and
Jackson State massacres.
These committees were enormously successful. We mobilized thousands of
students in Chicago and aggressively reached out to peace and religious
groups, unions, and to the Black and Puerto Rican communities. Our
purpose was to build broad popular coalitions of action around the
pressing antiwar and social justice demands of the day.
We were confident our actions were making a big impact on American
politics.
I supported those who believed we should stay in the streets building an
antiwar movement independent of the two major political parties and
government. I didn't support the Democratic Party because I believed
then as now that the Democratic Party was itself part of the problem.
Contrary to his sanitized image, it was liberal President John F.
Kennedy who approved the first major escalation of the Vietnam War.
Kennedy sent 15,000 troops to Vietnam and Lyndon Johnson just kept it
up.
Appealing to the Democratic Party for help in ending the Vietnam war
didn't make sense to me.
Especially after the 1968 Tet Offensive in Vietnam, traditional
politicians were beginning to speak out against the war. This was
welcomed. But some of us did not appreciate a focus on their election
campaigns as an alternative to building mass protests.
We saw this as undercutting the heart of the movement's strength, which
was in the streets, independent of control by the political
establishment.
Eugene McCarthy encountered this debate all around him and accurately
described antiwar activists like me as "doing their own thing. In fact,
some of them were a little upset when we started the campaign saying we
were draining off energy; they were more radical."
Yep, that was me. But alas, I was in a minority then just as I am in a
minority now.
Most of my fellow students supported the Democratic Party national
election campaigns in 1968 and 1972. As a mass action campus activist
arguing against diverting the resources of our movement, I sadly
observed the predictable negative consequences.
The powerful "Confront the War Makers" protests of 250,000 in San
Francisco and 500,000 at the Pentagon in Washington DC occurred on
October 21, 1967. But major national actions were not rescheduled for
another two years.
Why? Because of the focus on the 1968 elections.
Rebounding after the elections, the October 1969 Vietnam Moratorium
protests drew an estimated two million. The BBC reported it as the
"largest demonstration in US history."
Little more than a year later on April 24, 1971,

hundreds of thousands
returned for massive national demonstrations in Washington D.C. and San
Francisco. Antiwar demands for "Immediate Withdrawal" were rapidly
gaining majority support.
But again, during the 1972 Democratic Party national campaign, no
national protests were scheduled. As in 1968 election year, local
antiwar actions took place throughout the country but with much reduced
participation.
Considering these experiences, I tell myself that sometimes suffering
the ridicule of standing on the sidelines is better than playing a game
stacked against you.
Putting hopes in the Democratic Party has time and again had a crippling
effect on building independent movements for social justice. This is
true on issue after issue. I do not believe this can be denied nor
ignored.
Real Power
For some of us, the power to change society is not gauged by who wins
the Democratic Party primaries. An alternative view is that real
political power is measured by how conscious working people are of their
own self interests and how well organized they are to promote these
majority values through massive mobilizations. Ultimately, an electoral
response must arise from such mass protests but it will certainly be
much different than either of the two current major parties.
By this measure we find another reason to avoid supporting the
Democratic Party. Unions, feminist and civil rights organizations
self-censor their own voice to coincide with the compromised political
positions of Democratic Party leaders.
In other words, the needs and interests of working Americans are
repeatedly toned down for the sake of working with our Democratic
"friends" in office.
This is probably the most damaging aspect of support for the Democrats.
Voices for social change modify their words to fit positions of a party
that will never challenge the power and wealth of the super rich.
In one example on a critical issue, neither Clinton nor Obama proposes
eliminating the parasitic insurance companies from health insurance.
Most unions, with the grand exception of the California Nurses
Association, AFL-CIO, shove into the background any sympathy they might
have for single-payer health care to avoid embarrassing these
candidates.
Is it not fair to speculate that these same social forces who decline to
take a "single-payer" position on health care also decline to loudly
proclaim demands for "Immediate Withdrawal" from Iraq because it might
embarrass Clinton or Obama?
Are We in or Are We Out?
It was exactly the same pattern 40 years ago.
Neither McCarthy nor McGovern proclaimed the principle of
self-determination and non-interference by a big power in the internal
affairs of another country. They did not, therefore, support the slogan
of immediate withdrawal from Vietnam, the chief demand of the antiwar
movement.
The "peace candidates" urged "Vietnamizing" the war by training South
Vietnamese US allies to conduct the war. They all supported negotiating
with the North Vietnamese a "timetable for withdrawal."
As if the United States has the right to "negotiate" the internal
affairs of another country.
Sound familiar?
None of the current candidates stands for "Bring the Troops Home Now,"
which is the slogan of today's antiwar movement. None of the candidates
renounce U.S. interference in the internal affairs of another country.
On the contrary, all the candidates preach "training the Iraqis to take
over the war."
It is no surprise the 1968 script is now being followed in 2008 by Obama
and Clinton. Personalities may change, but the Democratic Party has not.
The duel between Obama and Clinton is a sideshow distraction from the
real issues much like 1968 and 1972.
It is often pointed out that the Vietnam War ended and the troops
brought home under conservative President Richard Nixon. Yet, most would
agree that neither Nixon nor the insider Washington political
establishment attained the peace.
The evidence shows that unrelenting world-wide streets protests combined
with unyielding determination of the Vietnamese people forced the US
government to bring the troops home.
Yesterday and Today
Of course, the Bush years have been bad. That's why many liberals and
progressives now are apparently lapsing into political amnesia when it
comes to recalling the retrograde legacy of the Clinton Administration.
For example, Clinton's welfare "reform" (i.e., gutting welfare benefits)
was right out of the traditional Republican playbook. It's Ralph Nader's
considered opinion that the Clinton years only produced one beneficial
piece of legislation, the unpaid Family Medical Leave Act.
More recently, Democrats by a large majority voted for the Patriot Act,
voted to authorize the Iraq war and voted repeatedly to continue funding
the Iraq war. In other words, they have enabled the Bush Administration
in all its major foreign policy initiatives.
The Democratic candidates are now telling us in so many words to focus
on electing them, then they will deal with the war. But neither Clinton
nor Obama will guarantee to remove all U.S. troops from Iraq by even the
end of their first terms. Then there is the matter of their stated
support for "counterinsurgency" needs, or maybe invading Pakistan or
Iran.
Living through the incredible enthusiasm for the Obama campaign today
leads me to relive the experiences of my youth. I've seen this before
and it doesn't get easier to take. It's another front row for the
two-party system while the antiwar and other protest movements once
again take a back seat.
I'm more disappointing than ever that the Democratic Party gets another
undeserved infusion of new blood from another hopeful generation of
youth. Meanwhile, our troops remain in Iraq well into the foreseeable
future.
This is why I believe we should stay focused on building protest
movements around issues rather than putting our energy into "protest"
election campaigns around individuals. Especially when these candidates
are products and promoters of the Democratic Party, which itself is
co-administrator with the Republican Party of the 'for profit over
people' government.
We should learn from the past. Those who oppose the Iraq war should stay
focused on building a strong, independent antiwar movement to bring all
U.S. troops home from Iraq now.
Carl Finamore is President of IAMAW Air Transport Local Lodge 1781