I passionately supported the Greens in 2000 and 2002. I traveled
125 miles to see Dennis Kucinich speak when he came to Los Angeles
in May, and had the pleasure of introducing him to a crowd of
several hundred when he visited Santa Barbara recently. Kucinich is
a guiding light in Congress and, of the nine Democratic presidential
contenders, his views most closely mirror my own.
Yet I won't be voting for Kucinich in the Democratic primaries,
nor will I vote Green in the general elections. My support will go
to Howard Dean.
Yes, I've read the unfavorable commentaries on Howard Dean by
writers whose opinions I greatly respect, like Norman Solomon and
Alexander Cockburn. And yes, I know that I disagree with some
critical components of Dean's platform. Progressives should be well
aware that they're going to disagree on a range of issues with every
individual who has a chance at being in the White House two years
from now. Our choice is not between Howard Dean and
the-even-better-candidate-who-has-a-shot-at-winning-the-Democratic-nomination-and-defeating-George-Bush;
that other candidate doesn't exist. Neither Kucinich nor Al Sharpton
nor Carol Moseley Braun nor any Green will be President.
Progressives should incorporate these realities into their electoral
strategy, however disappointing they may be.
In a
recent column, Norman Solomon criticizes "liberal Democrats
[who] routinely sacrifice principles and idealism in the name of
electoral strategy," and then argues that Greens are practicing
the reverse strategy - "principled idealism" without a
coherent electoral strategy. But in the same column he remarks,
"Few present-day Green Party leaders seem willing to urge that
Greens forego the blandishments of a presidential campaign. The
increased attention - including media coverage - for the party is
too compelling to pass up." If this latter analysis is
accurate, the impetus to run a Green presidential candidate has come
not from principled idealism but a rather inconsiderate
self-indulgence.
In any case, the role of ideals in the voting booth is hazy.
Voting Green isn't necessarily the most effective way to achieve
Green policies. More importantly, supporting and voting for
Democratic candidates is in no way a personal affirmation of the
Democratic Party platform. It is, in part, a recognition of
Duverger's Law - one of the few reliable "laws" in the
social sciences - which states that American-style, winner-take-all,
plurality voting systems produce political structures intractably
dominated by two parties. Moreover, it is a recognition that the
Democratic Party is simply one network among many (albeit an
incredibly powerful one) through which those seeking fundamental
political change in the United States can act. Progressives ought to
engage the Democratic Party in the same way that we engage any
powerful institution; we should creatively test the limits of reform
and attempt to produce change that will assist us in our own wider
struggles.
The goal of progressives in the coming months, then, should be to
continue what we're doing now - organizing, developing alternative
social, economic, and environmental programs, and working to raise
the national profile of our allies in the public sphere - while
supporting Howard Dean and helping him win the primary and general
elections. We have to keep close in mind what our country and our
world will look like if George W. Bush's administration captures
another term and can carry out its agenda without being restrained
by reelection considerations. In what will likely be the most
divisive and bitterly contested presidential election in decades,
let's not use our precious energy and resources on candidates with
no chance of defeating Bush. Rather, let's make sure to elect a
candidate who, like Dean, at least supports publicly financed
elections, instant run-off voting, and a constitutional amendment
declaring that political contributions are not free speech, so that
we directly strike at the structural stultification of our electoral
system that forces us to limit our choices in the first place.
Why, of the establishment candidates, should progressives choose
Dean? His platform is as good or better than those of Dick Gephardt
and John Kerry, the only other two candidates with a hope at gaining
the Democratic nod. Vastly more important, however, is the fact that
Dean's web-focused campaign has the potential to revolutionize the
way American politics operates, and progressives ought to be taking
note.
Unfortunately, most left-leaning commentators have written about
Dean as though their responsibility were to lead the
well-intentioned but misguided progressive flock away from his
campaign, implicitly and sometimes explicitly asserting that
supporters have jumped on Dean's bandwagon without seriously
considering his record. Antiwar.com's Anthony Gancarski questioned
whether "Dean supporters are following their candidate blindly,
without knowledge of the full spectrum of his positions."
Potential Green presidential candidate Carol Miller told NBC News
that she feels "sorry for those people [Dean's supporters] when
they learn who the real Howard Dean is."
Putting aside the presumptuousness of such sentiments, they're
also wildly ironic: the overwhelming majority of claims that Dean is
a far-left candidate come from conservatives who are clearly
attempting to marginalize one of the two prominent Democratic
candidates. Almost without exception, right-wing commentaries on
Dean compare his campaign to McGovern's and brand Dean as an
"extreme leftist" whose support is built predominantly on
activists' antiwar sentiment. Rush Limbaugh recently warned his
listeners about a shift he perceived in mainstream reports on Dean:
"Have you noticed how some in the press are starting to say
Howard Dean is not that liberal? Keep a sharp eye out for that,
because the left knows that being a far left, progressive liberal is
a killer, so they're going to try to paint the picture of Dean as a
moderate." Surprisingly enough, one of the few prominent
progressives to make a substantive link between Dean and Kucinich
was Ralph Nader, who noted that Bush "is very vulnerable but
not if you campaign the way the major candidates - except for Dean
and Kucinich - are campaigning."
There is, in fact, good reason to believe that progressive
supporters of Dean are well aware of his record, and are choosing to
support him despite its flaws. As American Prospect senior editor
Garance Franke-Ruta points out, "the most important part of the
Dean message is that it makes [supporters] feel that they have the
power to control their own destiny. ... This sense of renewed
personal power and hope seemed more important to most posters [to
Dean's weblog] than any specific policies that Dean supports or does
not support, and few on the threads agreed wholeheartedly with the
former governor on all his positions. Most recognized that he is a
centrist who is fiscally conservative and socially liberal."
Critically, Dean's progressive supporters share a visceral
passion to purge the White House of George Bush and his dangerous
administration. They seem to agree with Bernard Weiner of the Crisis
Papers, who admits that "from a long-term historical
perspective, the Democrats and Republicans look and behave virtually
alike. But in the real world, where most people live, there is just
enough of a difference to justify a vote for a reasonable Democratic
candidate for President. One's sense of personal 'purity' might be
slightly compromised by voting for the Democratic candidate and thus
helping to perpetuate a system that is not as uncorrupted as we
would all like. But I don't think we can afford that self-involved
luxury in 2004; this election decision is simply too vital, a matter
of life and death for so many around the world."
This all said, the weaknesses in Dean's platform must be
accounted for and seriously assessed.
Dealing With Dean's Downsides
++ Military Spending: Dean has rightfully aroused anger and
skepticism from progressives with his claims that he will not reduce
military spending. It appears, however, that these statements are a
political dodge of sorts to avoid media characterizations of Dean as
the "antiwar candidate" and "weak on national
security." Dean has told audiences that he would not reduce
military spending but rather "redirect" it toward the
development and implementation of renewable energy technology (an
issue he ties to defense), homeland security measures to fund local
first responders, inspect container ships and protect nuclear sites
(a move that Alexander Cockburn himself recently called on Bush to
make), and the purchase of old nuclear materials in Russia.
++ Military/Foreign Policy: Dean has called Bush's policy of
renewed nuclear weapons development "insane" and opposes
every significant component of "Star Wars" missile
defense, declaring that any missile defense programs he would
support will at least remain in compliance with the 1972
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. Dean also supports (with provisions,
in some cases) the comprehensive nuclear test ban, the Law of the
Sea Treaty, the Biological Warfare Convention Protocol and the
International Criminal Court (a website for the United Nations
Association of the United States lists Dean as an "outspoken
supporter" of the ICC). Dean supports signing the 1997 Landmine
Treaty and believes that a similar treaty should be used to ban
cluster bombs.
Norman Solomon mistakenly took
Dean to task because "at his official campaign kickoff,
Dean gave a 26-minute speech and didn't mention Iraq at all. It was
a remarkable performance from someone who has spent much of the last
year pitching himself as some kind of antiwar candidate."
Despite the strength of this rebuke, Solomon failed to mention that
Dean's speech contained nine paragraphs dealing with foreign policy,
and that far from avoiding Iraq, Dean used the Iraq invasion to
address a broader theme. Among other things, Dean declared:
"Since the time of Thomas Paine and John Adams, our founders
implored that we were not to be the new Rome. We are not to conquer
and suppress other nations to submit to our will. ... We must rejoin
the world community. America is far stronger as the moral and
military leader of the world than we will ever be by relying solely
on military power. ... [T]here is a fundamental difference between
the defense of our nation and the doctrine of preemptive war
espoused by this administration. The President's group of
narrow-minded ideological advisors are undermining our nation's
greatness in the world. They have embraced a form of unilateralism
that is even more dangerous than isolationism. ... [T]hey would
present our face to the world as a dominant power prepared to push
aside any nation with which we do not agree." Since the speech,
Dean has consistently spoken out on Iraq and many of the occupation
policies. He has called on Bush administration officials to resign
for misleading the American public, and continues to criticize those
Democrats who voted for the Iraq resolution. He received significant
critical press after saying that "the ends don't justify the
means," when asked about the deaths of Saddam Hussein's sons.
On Dean's official website, one can find commentaries by campaign
staffers like Ezra Klein condemning Bush's policies that force
young, poor Americans to "fight and die in wars of
choice."
++ Israel/Palestine: As Mid East analysts Ahmed Nassef and Stephen
Zunes have pointed out, Dean's positions regarding the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict are very disappointing for those who
seek a just and sustainable peace in the region. Unfortunately,
they're also standard amongst the Democratic presidential hopefuls.
All nine candidates essentially tow the same line: they support a
vague "two-state solution," the removal of settlements
(without details as to how many or when), and the cessation of
terrorism, and they concede that further details will have to be
worked out by the relevant parties. JTA, a Jewish news service,
recently had a piece focusing on a hawkish Democratic fundraiser
named Peter Buttenwieser, who notes that the "litmus test for
me is a candidate has to be good on Israel. ... But all of these
candidates are good on Israel." This pattern is hardly new.
Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair wrote that Paul Wellstone,
"in common with ninety-eight other senators, [has been] craven
on Israel." Even Kucinich chose not to join nearly two dozen
fellow representatives in voting against a strongly worded May 2003
House resolution that "supported Israel's incursions into
Palestinian territories, and apparently endorsed as justifiable the
brutality and bloodshed the Israeli Army inflicted on the unarmed
civilians there," according to prominent English-language daily
Arab News.
++ Trade: Dean has pledged to renegotiate current trade
agreements (including NAFTA) and oppose new trade agreements that do
not require the enforcement of internationally recognized workers'
rights and environmental standards. He will also "oppose any
further rounds of the World Trade Organization agreements that do
not make substantial progress on incorporating" these rights
and standards. When asked about policy toward Africa and the
Caribbean Basin at the NAACP Presidential Forum, Dean voiced his
support for debt forgiveness and remarked that "we need to get
the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank off the backs of
these countries. ... [T]he conditions that are attached mean that
the whole country depends on a free market system in order to get
food to the poorest people in that country. It doesn't make any
sense at all. ... [N]ow that we're imposing a Western economic model
on African countries, we find there's famine. What a big surprise.
We need to work cooperatively with African governments instead of
telling them what to do." Dean was awarded the inaugural Paul
Wellstone Award by the AFL-CIO in January 2003 for "Exceptional
Support of Workers' Freedom to Form Unions," and maintained a
100% rating with the AFL-CIO's Committee on Political Education
while serving as a state representative. He is also a vocal
proponent of workplace democratization, in which employees own the
majority of a firm's stock.
++ Death Penalty: John Kerry opposes capital punishment, while
Dean favors it for individuals who commit acts of terrorism or who
murder young children or police officers. One wonders, though,
whether Kerry's position is really preferable. He told NBC's Tim
Russert that he opposes the death penalty "because I'm for a
worse punishment. I think it is worse to take somebody and put them
in a small cell for the rest of their life, deprived of their
freedom, never to be paroled. Now, I think that's tougher. ... I
don't think that - you know, dying is scary for a while, but in the
end, the punishment is gone," and he couples his opposition
with desires for harder prison service commitments so we don't have
"some cushy situation where they live off the fat of the land
in prison." Either way, it should be noted that Dean did not
"suddenly [abandon] his perfectly acceptable reasons for
opposing the death penalty ... to express his support for the
machinery of death - a transparent bid for votes in the primary
elections in southern states like South Carolina," as Alan
Maass of the International Socialist Review writes. It is widely
recognized that Dean's opinions on the death penalty began changing
in 1994 after the Polly Klaas murder, and statements by Dean
throughout his terms as Governor reflect this change in thinking.
Dean strongly supports the Innocence Protection Act and has said
that he will establish a Presidential commission to "analyze
the causes of wrongful convictions around the country and recommend
additional reforms at the federal and state level."
++ Gun Legislation: The "A" rating that Dean has
received from the NRA is chilling, but it has to be taken in
context. As Lance Bukoff points out, "the NRA rating system is
actually rather 'passive' in its assessment of politicians. Put
simply but accurately, an 'A' rating is 'earned' by not voting for
or promoting any laws which would restrict gun ownership. Dean
observes that Vermont is not NYC or LA or Philadelphia. Vermont is a
state where gun violence does not occur in any way significant
enough [in 2002, Vermont had five homicides] to warrant restrictive
gun control laws, unless you take the deer's point of view, of
course. So he says Vermont does not need them, and he did not sign
any, and he did not promote any as a governor, and as a consequence
he gets an 'A' rating from the NRA, but not because he shares a duck
blind with NRA members. He goes further. He says he supports the
Brady bill, he supports the assault gun ban, and he supports closing
the gun show sale loopholes. And he also tells voters in states like
New York, 'We don't need gun control laws in Vermont, but you
probably do, and if that's the case you should make them.'"
++ Medicinal Marijuana: Dean's reputation as a hard-headed
skeptic of medicinal marijuana belies his actual position, which is
more nuanced (if a bit neurotic, presumably because of his
experience as a doctor). Dean doesn't "believe the war on drugs
is a criminal matter; it's a public health matter. I think to throw
users in jail is silly." He recently told the Liberal Oasis
that his "opposition to medical marijuana is based on science,
not based on ideology. More specifically, I don’t think we should
single out a particular drug for approval through political means
when we approve other drugs through scientific means. When I'm
President, I will require the FDA to evaluate marijuana with a
double blind study with the same kinds of scientific protocols that
every other drug goes through. I'm certainly willing to abide by
what the FDA says." After resisting a medicinal marijuana bill
that had made its way through the Vermont legislature for the
reasons stated above, Dean eventually did sign a bill in June 2002
that established a task force "to investigate and assess
options for legal protections which will allow seriously ill
Vermonters to use medical marijuana without facing criminal
prosecution under Vermont law." The Marijuana Policy Project
said the bill set "the wheels in motion for solid patient
protection."
++ The Environment: Dean's Vermont "has one of the most
progressive environmental programmes in America" according to
the London Times. As former Vermont radio and television talk show
host Jeff Kaufman points out, "During his decade in office,
Governor Dean helped protect more land from development than all
previous governors combined; ... he administered a 'best practices'
agriculture plan that preserves land and water quality; he helped
form the nation's first statewide energy efficiency utility
(preventing more than one million tons of greenhouse gas emissions
since 2000); and he championed a commuter rail system to lower
traffic congestion and pollution while diminishing urban sprawl (in
its last report on sprawl, the Sierra Club ranked Vermont as the
second best state in America for land use planning)." Vermont
also followed California's lead in establishing regulations on
greenhouse gas emissions that go beyond standards set in the Kyoto
Protocol. According to the New York Times, Dean "is calling for
the auto industry to build cars that get 40 miles per gallon by 2015
and for 20 percent of the nation's electricity to come from
renewable sources by 2020. ... [A]s president he would close the
loophole that exempts sport utility vehicles from gas-mileage
standards, ... make the Environmental Protection Agency cabinet
level and work to re-establish the Clinton administration rules
limiting roads in national forests." Even when Dean was judged
less favorably on environmental issues, the executive director of
the Vermont Natural Resources Council Elizabeth Courtney recognizes
that pressing economic circumstances impacted his decisions
("in the early 90s the rest of the country seemed to be pulling
out of the recession and Vermont seemed to be languishing in
it") and acknowledges Dean's general qualities as governor:
"fresh candor and intelligence. You always know where Howard
Dean stands. He is candid and honest in his communications with
Vermonters, and he is appreciated for that. He's also very bright,
and he has a clear sense of his direction." The San Francisco
Chronicle reported that "[executive director of the Sierra Club
Carl] Pope said that although the Sierra Club had some disagreements
with Dean's land-use policies, Dean did 'fabulous things in
Vermont.'"
++ Fiscal Conservatism: It now seems that Dean's hardline fiscal
policies have paid some dividends. While virtually every state in
the nation cuts funding for vital social services, Vermont ended the
fiscal year with a $10.4 million General Fund surplus. For this
accomplishment, Stephen Klein, chief fiscal officer for the current
Vermont legislature, says that "Dean gets a large amount of
credit." But Dean isn't as fiscally conservative as was
suggested by Paul Wellstone's former press secretary Jim Farrell.
Farrell argued in The Nation that Dean "targeted for
elimination the public financing provision of the state's campaign
finance law," cut education spending, and proposed "deep
cuts in Medicaid." These claims are all true, but Farrell
leaves out critical details. Dean, who is a strong supporter of
publicly financed campaigns, used the money from the public
financing fund to help balance Vermont's budget only after a federal
court judge ruled that the spending limits provision in the campaign
finance law was unconstitutional, meaning that the fund would sit
untouched. Facing large state deficits, Dean proposed cuts in the
amount of state funds to education because "dramatic increases
in property values" already had produced an education fund that
was "flush to overflowing with money," according to the
Associated Press. The proposal to cut Medicaid was hardly serious;
it was made as a threat to force Vermont's legislature to pass a
75-cent tax on tobacco products that Dean desired (the tax revenues
actually went to fund Medicaid), a move supported by Vermont's PIRG
and all of the state's major medical associations. Also, Dean does
not support raising the retirement age to 68 or 70.
++ Human Rights: Dean not only signed the first bill in the
United States recognizing civil unions for same-sex couples, but did
it six months before his gubernatorial election when it was opposed
by two-thirds of Vermont's population. According to the National Gay
and Lesbian Task Force, Dean differs from top-ranked Kucinich and
Braun only on the issue of gay marriage, and is unique among
top-tier Democrats in supporting federally-enforced equal rights
legislation and GLBT-supportive education policies (Kerry and
Gephardt only support state-based civil union legislation and both
voted for "an amendment to the Improving America’s Schools
Act prohibiting federal funds 'for instructional materials,
instruction, counseling, or other services on school grounds, from
being used for the promotion of homosexuality as a positive
lifestyle alternative'").
Dean, who sat on the board of Planned Parenthood of Northern New
England for five years, is perhaps the strongest Democratic
candidate in regard to abortion rights. The New Republic's coverage
of a presidential forum on abortion rights mentioned that "Dean
took partial-birth abortion, NARAL's most controversial and
difficult-to-defend position, and made it the centerpiece of his
speech, insisting that the term itself was an artifice manufactured
by the right. 'This is an issue about nothing,' he proclaimed to the
most boisterous applause of the evening." Dean strongly opposes
parental notification and implemented a program in Vermont that
provides specialized child care, health services and home visitation
to all families, regardless of income. He wants to sign the UN's
1979 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women and ratify the 1989 UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child.
Apart from his platform and its flaws, however, Dean should be
commended by progressives for accomplishing what social justice
movements so often work toward and only rarely achieve - his
campaign is creatively utilizing the internet to facilitate
large-scale independent organizing, and drawing significant numbers
of new and disillusioned voters into the political process, getting
many of them to contribute their time and energy away from the
computer screen.
Dean's campaign has developed an infrastructure to support
grassroots activism unmatched by any in American history. The
uniquely interactive nature of the campaign "creates, embraces,
enhances, validates, and rewards intimacy," as one supporter
wrote on the campaign's weblog. Dean has dropped in on threads and
message boards at unofficial websites set up by supporters and
fielded any questions that were asked of him. Author David
Weinberger, commenting on Dean's guest-blogging at Stanford law
professor Larry Lessig's website, asked, "Has any presidential
candidate ever in history been dropped into a free-for-all quite
like this? Could it be any more different than Bush's scripted press
conferences and tailored, crotch-enhancing photo opps? Democracy
just got a little real-er." Even some establishment
commentators recognize the fundamental reforms being rushed in by
Dean's campaign. Dick Morris, hardly cheering on such changes,
recently argued that the "larger message of the Dean candidacy
is that the era of TV-dominated politics is coming to a close after
30 years. ... [T]he inevitable replacement of television with the
Internet as the fundamental tool of political communication is
destined to accelerate. The true answer to campaign-finance reform,
the Internet will open a real possibility of a transfer of power to
the people."
Dean has also demonstrated an impressive ability to draw
supporters from diverse backgrounds. From the
politically-marginalized to the politically-uninitiated, from
registered independents (who have set up personal websites to help
bring new independents into the fold) to McCain and Perot supporters
upset with Bush's accelerated neo-imperialism and cultural
conservatism (who have a website of their own), Dean's message is
resonating widely. According to the progressive youth mag Wiretap,
every campaign's "youth outreach efforts were routine and
shallow" except for Dean's, which is far larger and designed so
that youth "are not just a passive audience for campaign
speeches, but enlisted as community organizers" addressing
issues beyond Dean's campaign, like Bush's attack on the Teach for
America program. In polls, Dean frequently leads his fellow
Democrats by wide margins amongst independent voters and men, who
are typically more likely to vote conservative. This information is
fantastic for folks who support Dean but wonder about his
electability. It's also great news for progressives in general, who
should be clamoring to draw such a politically-diverse group of
individuals into left-leaning web-based political activism. The
internet is the progressives' optimal playing field: decentralized,
free of the constraints of the mass media, perfect for alternative
information dissemination and mass organizing. Individuals who are
drawn to Dean's blogs and mailing lists can be introduced to the
various and sundry sites providing news, op-eds, and activism
opportunities for progressives.
"Patience and fortitude conquer all things," wrote
Ralph Waldo Emerson. In pressing times, progressives have
demonstrated great fortitude by committing themselves to
institutions and social movements that addressed injustices
theretofore neglected. Howard Dean is no holy grail, but amidst a
trend in our country toward widespread political ignorance and a
sort of corporatized proto-fascist nationalism, perhaps it is our
patience that is needed now. What we have in Dean is a man who can
articulate liberal positions intelligently, passionately, and
commandingly, and who has the grassroots/netroots support and an
appeal to diverse constituencies that will allow him to defeat
George Bush. Let's join Dean's campaign, get on his e-mail lists,
and spread the word.
Nico Pitney is a student activist based in southern
California. E-mail nico@pitney.com
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