I'll
Follow Kucinich to Kerry, Sorry Ralph
By
David Swanson
If
Kerry is a "flip-flopper" because he won't end the war (or the
"Patriot Act" or NAFTA or private health insurance) even as he
speaks against these horrors, what do we have to call Kucinich, who
insists on ending these things even as he endorses Kerry?
And what can we expect Dennis to say on Wednesday when he
delivers a Kerry-approved speech to the Democratic National Convention?
Will he speak against the war, as he told "Democracy
Now"'s Amy Goodman he would?
I
expect in fact that Dennis will not need to tie himself in knots or
reverse any positions. Understanding
this helps me to accomplish something I find extremely difficult –
sympathizing with John Kerry.
A
year ago I would not have lifted a finger to help Kerry's campaign.
I did, however, quit my job to become Kucinich's press secretary,
a position I quit in February. I
was attracted to Kucinich's campaign by a platform that does not at
first seem to have much overlap with Kerry's.
Our biggest plank was a plan to end the occupation in 90 days.
The two positions that Dennis stressed most frequently after that
one were creating single-payer health care and withdrawing from NAFTA
and the WTO. Some other key
proposals not supported by Kerry were repealing the "Patriot
Act", creating free preschool and college, guaranteeing full Social
Security benefits at age 65, substantially reforming our tax laws to
lower most Americans' taxes, developing a WPA-type jobs program,
creating a department of peace, and cutting the Pentagon's budget.
On
every one of these points, Kerry has a position distant from Kucinich's
but also – and more importantly at this stage – distant from Bush's.
Kerry favors rebuilding alliances with other countries and
abandoning the doctrine of "preemption."
Kerry does not support the use of torture and has not begun
hinting at which country he'd like to attack next.
Kerry has a plan that at least for the short term would provide
many more Americans with health coverage, rather than fewer.
Kerry proposes to improve rather than worsen our trade laws, to
restrict rather than expand the rights violations permitted under the
"Patriot Act," and to fund public education far more
substantially than Bush while opposing vouchers.
Kerry wants to give free college in exchange for two years of
national service, to protect Social Security from privatization, to
repeal Bush's tax cuts on the super rich, to invest in infrastructure,
and to refrain from further increasing the bloated military budget while
redirecting portions of it to the needs of soldiers and veterans rather
than non-functioning weapons systems.
Then
there are the issues on which Kucinich and Kerry come close to agreeing:
women's rights, workers' rights, environmental protections.
In each case, Kerry's positions are much closer to Kucinich's
than to Bush's. Kucinich
committed to not nominating any Supreme Court justice who would not
promise to uphold Roe v. Wade. Kerry
is very likely to follow through on that promise without ever stating
it. Kucinich would join the
Kyoto
climate change treaty. Kerry
might, which is much more than can be said for Bush.
Kerry would devote at least a Carter-sized effort to conversion
to renewable energy, and he would – as he accurately puts it –
"repeal the Bush environmental onslaught."
Kucinich would expand workers' rights by repealing the
Taft-Hartley Act, but Kerry, in stark contrast to Bush, would work to
protect the right to organize and support the use of card-check.
Kerry is a cosponsor of the Employee Free Choice Act.
Kerry's
positions are light years ahead of Bush's on immigrants' rights,
veterans' rights, and gun control.
While he won't support same-sex marriage, he will support civil
unions. And one can picture
him eventually coming all the way around on that issue under pressure,
as one cannot with Bush. Kerry
sees affordable housing as a problem to be addressed.
Bush does not. Kerry
would reduce the use of the death penalty, not expand it.
And on and on. The
choice between Bush and Kerry is like night and day.
And
I believe that Dennis will be able to say so.
I even believe he'll be able to say so with his usual passion.
He is likely, as usual, to generate tremendous applause and to go
unmentioned in most of Thursday's media.
It's the story of his campaign.
And that applause will not come because convention delegates are
out of touch with the mainstream. Don't
believe the hype! These are
Kerry's delegates. These
are typical Democrats who in many cases voted for the candidate they
were told had "electability" and "momentum".
Applauding is not yet controlled by those factors to the extent
that voting is.
The
few media outlets that do cover Kucinich's speech will likely accuse him
of contradicting himself. To
some extent he may be doing so. To
some extend Kerry has been doing so ever since he discovered that
illegal wars and attacks on the Bill of Rights are not popular.
But, as Walt Whitman would have pointed out, what counts as a
contradiction is not black and white.
Do
I contradict myself? Very
well, but at least I am lessening the chances of world destruction
during the next four years.
How
can I justify not supporting Nader?
His positions are more to my liking and in my opinion more likely
to win wide support. But
those positions are only likely to win an election if backed by a major
party – which is why I supported Kucinich in the first place.
If you backed Kucinich in the primaries and now insist on backing
Nader in a state that's fairly certainly decided, I won't argue with you
too much. But please
consider the need to devote our energies to turning out votes in swing
states for Kerry in order to be rid of Bush.
I
do think of it as voting against Bush rather than for Kerry.
The endless convention speeches bragging about Kerry's exploits
in a war that killed countless Vietnamese almost bring me to tears.
Kerry's stubborn refusal to oppose the
Iraq
war, even at the serious risk of losing the election, strikes me as
perverse. And yet, I will
dance and sing when Kerry defeats Bush and the Supreme Court steps aside
to let the results stick. Think
what a Supreme Court we'll have for the next generation if Kerry loses
or has the election stolen.
We'll
have to get through a Kerry-Bush debate or two between now and November
-- and a few months of media. It
won't be pretty. On the
Charlie Rose Show Monday night, the host asked Newsweek's editor in
charge of Democratic convention coverage what five questions he would be
trying to answer in
Boston
. When he'd responded, Rose
had the decency to point out that four of the five questions were about
Bush.
The
media, having already given more than enough fair and balanced coverage
to substantial issues, are not just focused on the convention and who
may be upstaging whom. They
are also busy hyping an internet animation, a remake of "This Land
is Your Land" on a site called JibJab.
The animation, just like most news talk shows, ridicules politics
and seems aimed at lowering voter turnout. The animation repeats various
media-generated myths: for example, suggesting that Bush comes from a
less affluent background than Kerry. In fact, it's not clear what this
animation does that's different, except in style, from what Ted Koppel
or Bill O'Reilly does. The media are enthralled with this thing.
Here's
what the New York Times says:
"It
was not supposed to be that way, but the tone of political discourse on
the Web is often intensely partisan. After all, the Internet can be a
medium of infinite narrowness, where the like-minded can visit the same
Web sites, blogs and mailing lists, confirming their shared beliefs and
prejudices. But in a refreshing break with form, one of the big new hits
on the Web is a silly, two-minute satire of the current
Republican-Democrat bun fight, starring President Bush and Senator John
Kerry as animated cutout figures."
Get
it? Partisanship is bad. Disparaging both sides evenly, whether the
facts merit it or not, is good. Is it a wonder we "elect" a
fascistic freak and half the country still may not vote while others
will waste their votes on hopeless candidates? Seriously,
how does JibJab's song differ in approach from that newspaper in
Appleton, Wisc., requesting pro-Bush letters from its readers in order
to create "balance" with all the anti-Bush mail that keeps
pouring in?
Silly
me. I should have thought that political engagement by democratic
citizens, i.e. partisanship, was exactly what this country was running
dangerously low on. I
should have thought the high level of energy coming out of the
convention, despite the fact that it's completely scripted, was a
hopeful sign for our democracy.
David
Swanson's website is http://www.davidswanson.org