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Attacks against Sanders intensify ahead of South Carolina primary

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Patrick Martin
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Biden's campaign has made little secret that he must win the South Carolina primary on Saturday or face financial and political collapse. Given that position, Biden devoted every intervention in the debate to wooing older black voters, who comprise the main Democratic voting bloc in South Carolina. Sanders leads among black voters in South Carolina younger than 45, but older voters, particularly those over 65, are expected to support Biden.

This explains Biden's effort to mention President Barack Obama in nearly every comment, as well as his choosing to focus his attack on Sanders on the issue of gun violence, citing Sanders' votes against restrictive gun legislation some 30 years ago. Biden referred to the 2015 mass shooting by a white supremacist at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, that killed nine African Americans.

Biden also targeted Steyer, who has dumped $20 million into advertising in South Carolina and risen to third in state polls. The former vice president attacked the billionaire for investing in a company operating private prisons in which young black men had been "hog-tied" and otherwise abused.

Significantly, Biden received little criticism from his "moderate" rivals. All of them want Biden to win South Carolina, because the alternative, a Sanders victory, would make his nomination far more likely. On Wednesday, the morning after the debate, Representative Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, the House Minority Whip and a longtime leader of the Congressional Black Caucus, publicly endorsed Biden -- one more effort by the party establishment to forestall a knockout blow by the Sanders campaign.

The fourth "moderate," Senator Amy Klobuchar, focused her attack on Sanders on the cost of his proposed reforms, such as "Medicare for All" and free college tuition, claiming, "The math does not add up." She also cited the thinly veiled attack on Sanders a few months ago by former President Obama, claiming that Sanders was ignoring "where the voters of this country are."

Two of the Democrats on the stage in Charleston sought to appeal to Sanders' supporters more directly. Steyer said that "Sanders' analysis is right," in relation to the defects of an untrammeled private sector, but that his proposed remedies were wrong. "We all know, unchecked capitalism has failed," Steyer said. "The answer is not for the government to take over the private sector, though. The answer is for us to break the corporate stranglehold on our government and have the government work for the people again."

How the "corporate stranglehold" could be broken while leaving corporate power intact, he did not explain. Nor did he address the contradiction of a billionaire private equity investor presenting his own campaign as the vehicle for such an "anti-corporate" effort. Instead, he boasted of his efforts to support the impeachment of Trump, the only mention of that debacle on the Charleston stage.

Steyer has deliberately cultivated a corrupt layer of the black upper-middle class, hiring dozens of black Democratic Party operatives and state legislators to act as his political representatives in South Carolina, and touting his efforts, through his investment fund, to promote minority-owned businesses.

Senator Elizabeth Warren presented herself as an ideological ally of Sanders, but one who would be a more effective advocate of similar policies. Her approach to Sanders was so conciliatory that she seemed to be auditioning to become his running mate. She then reverted to her role in the Las Vegas debate, targeting Bloomberg and citing his role as a Republican campaign donor, a sexist boss, and a law-and-order mayor of New York City.

Sanders, given center stage as the leader in delegates and poll numbers, sought to demonstrate that his policies were not "radical," as claimed by his right-wing opponents, citing the example of state-financed health care systems in Western Europe. He combined this with some "left" talk on foreign policy issues, denouncing Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu as a "reactionary racist" and declaring that "it might be a good idea to be honest about American foreign policy, and that includes the fact that America has overthrown governments all over the world."

These gestures cannot disguise the fundamental fallacy of the Sanders campaign: the claim that he can carry out a "political revolution" under the auspices of the Democratic Party, a party of big business and American imperialism, symbolized by the presence on the debate stage of two billionaires, a naval intelligence agent, Barack Obama's vice president, and Klobuchar, dubbed the "favorite Democrat" of Senate Republicans.

The role of Sanders is to trap leftward-moving sections of working people and young people within the straitjacket of the Democratic Party and the two-party system, thus blocking any challenge to American capitalism.

Large sections of the American population are far to the left of all of the candidates, including Sanders, a political fact that strikes terror in the Democratic Party establishment. They are frightened not that Sanders' modest reform policies will alienate working people, but that they might open the door to far more radical demands that directly threaten the profit system and the global operations of American imperialism.

That explains the apparent contradiction in the party establishment hysteria over Sanders: The more he runs up his vote totals and demonstrates popular support, the more they scream he is unelectable.

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Patrick Martin writes for the World Socialist Website (wsws.org), a forum for socialist ideas & analysis & published by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI).
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