Race, class and the politics
of the Obama
campaign
WSWS
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/mar2008/obam-m20.shtml
By Patrick
Martin
20 March 2008
The widely publicized speech
Tuesday by Barack Obama on race relations in the United States was
another exercise in walking the political tightrope for the
Democratic candidate in his closely contested struggle with Hillary
Clinton for the party’s presidential nomination.
Obama made the speech after
two weeks of attacks on the views of his long-time minister, Rev.
Jeremiah Wright, pastor of his home church in Chicago, Trinity
United Church of Christ. Some of the more incendiary portions of
Wright’s sermons have been distributed on You Tube by those seeking
to boost either Clinton or the presumptive Republican presidential
candidate, John McCain.
Wright, who adheres to an
Afro-centric version of theology, has denounced US foreign policy in
strident terms, including Washington’s decades-long support for the
racist apartheid regime in South Africa and Israeli oppression of
the Palestinian people. He said that the 9/11 terrorist attacks were
a case of “America’s chickens coming home to roost,” referring to US
policies in the Middle East and the deep and broad resentment they
have engendered in the region (something that no serious observer
could dispute), and even suggested that the AIDS virus was concocted
by the US government as a weapon against non-whites (a widely
circulated urban legend.)
In the course of his
37-minute speech, Obama was addressing multiple audiences. He sought
to reassure the Democratic Party establishment and sections of the
US corporate elite by distancing himself from the Wright’s views,
without spelling them out in detail. The only specific foreign
policy issue that he referred to was Wright’s criticism of Israel.
Obama condemned as
“profoundly distorted ... a view that sees the conflicts in the
Middle East as rooted primarily in the actions of stalwart allies
like Israel, instead of emanating from the perverse and hateful
ideologies of radical Islam.” This was an effort by the candidate to
assuage hostility from the Zionist lobby, sections of which continue
to circulate bogus claims that Obama is a Muslim.
But Obama declined to engage
in what the expectant media termed a “Sister Souljah”
moment—referring to the example set by Bill Clinton in his 1992
presidential campaign, when he publicly rebuked the rap artist in
front of a black audience because of lyrics that advocated violence
against whites.
While criticizing Wright’s
political views, Obama spoke warmly of him as a person and a pastor,
and went out of his way to declare that he would not disavow him. “I
can no more disown him than I can disown the black community,” he
said, clearly sensing that a public break with Wright, one of the
most prominent black ministers in the United States, would alienate
much of his political base.
Obama sought instead to
widen the framework of the discussion from for-or-against Wright by
addressing the broader question of racial antagonisms in the United
States, and voicing, in very carefully hedged and limited language,
the immense social and economic grievances that have accumulated in
America.
Here, it should be clear,
Obama was speaking not as a representative of the working class—a
term he largely avoids in all his speeches—but as a bourgeois
politician who seeks to win electoral support from working people,
while demonstrating to the ruling elite that he can be relied on to
keep the masses in check and prevent any fundamental challenge to
the existing social order.
This class position was
demonstrated both in what Obama chose to say and what he did not or
could not say. The resulting speech was among the most “left”
sounding of his campaign addresses, while at the same time offering
nothing in the way of policies or program to meet the needs of
working people.
Obama explained the
radical-sounding political statements of Rev. Wright as the
expression of longstanding black anger over racial discrimination
and social injustice. But he added, “In fact, a similar anger exists
within segments of the white community. Most working- and
middle-class white Americans don’t feel that they have been
particularly privileged by their race.
“Their experience is the
immigrant experience—as far as they’re concerned, no one’s handed
them anything, they’ve built it from scratch. They’ve worked hard
all their lives, many times only to see their jobs shipped overseas
or their pension dumped after a lifetime of labor. They are anxious
about their futures, and feel their dreams slipping away; in an era
of stagnant wages and global competition, opportunity comes to be
seen as a zero sum game, in which your dreams come at my expense.
“So when they are told to
bus their children to a school across town; when they hear that an
African American is getting an advantage in landing a good job or a
spot in a good college because of an injustice that they themselves
never committed; when they’re told that their fears about crime in
urban neighborhoods are somehow prejudiced, resentment builds over
time.”
Obama argued that the
Republican Party under Ronald Reagan had exploited such resentments
for electoral purposes. “Just as black anger often proved
counterproductive,” he said, “so have these white resentments
distracted attention from the real culprits of the middle class
squeeze—a corporate culture rife with inside dealing, questionable
accounting practices, and short-term greed; a Washington dominated
by lobbyists and special interests; economic policies that favor the
few over the many.”
This certainly describes an
important aspect of US political history, but there is a fundamental
distortion. The ability of the Republican Party to exploit (and
foment) racial antagonisms was entirely dependent on the collapse of
the trade unions and the sharp swing to the right by the Democratic
Party, which abandoned any connection with economic policies based
on income redistribution and the lessening of social inequality, in
favor of an increasing focus on identity politics, based on race,
gender and sexual orientation.
This fixation on race and
gender has played a major role in fueling increasingly bitter
conflicts between the Clinton and Obama campaigns, as they vie to
nominate either the first woman or the first African-American to be
the presidential candidate of one of the two officially recognized
bourgeois parties.
Obama appealed to fellow
African-Americans to unite “our particular grievances—for better
health care, and better schools, and better jobs—to the larger
aspirations of all Americans—the white woman struggling to break the
glass ceiling, the white man who’s been laid off, the immigrant
trying to feed his family.”
As opposed to the politics
of racial polarization, he concluded, “This time we want to talk
about the fact that the real problem is not that someone who doesn’t
look like you might take your job; it’s that the corporation you
work for will ship it overseas for nothing more than a profit.”
To the most right-wing
defenders of the profit system, even this timid lifting of the lid
on social problems in America was reprehensible. The Wall Street
Journal, in its editorial on Obama’s speech, denounced the
suggestion that “all Americans are victims, racial and otherwise,”
and attacked the Illinois senator’s anti-corporate rhetoric. “Mr.
Obama’s villains, in other words, are the standard-issue populist
straw men of Wall Street and the GOP,” the newspaper wrote.
An ultra-right commentator
on the Real Clear Politics web site put it more bluntly: “His main
theme is this: we have to set aside racial grievances and agree to a
racial truce—so that we can unite across racial lines and work
together to achieve socialism.... Obama is arguing for a retreat
from the racial collectivism of the New Left back to the Marxist
economic collectivism of the Old Left. His theme, in short, is:
workers of the world unite.”
This is, of course,
hysterical nonsense. The worshipper of Ayn Rand identifies any
discussion of the socioeconomic divide in America as the equivalent
of a red flag—precisely because those divisions have become so acute
that they have an explosive charge.
In terms of policy, however,
Senator Obama, for all his claims of heading a popular movement, is
a conventional bourgeois politician. For that reason, he was careful
never to identify the grievances of the masses as systemic—as the
product of an unjust and unequal social order. Instead, in the
passage quoted above, he placed the blame on various excesses, greed
and the like, rather than on the nature of the capitalist system
itself.
Liberal pundits unreservedly
hailed the speech. “Wow,” was the headline chosen by David Corn,
formerly Washington bureau chief for the Nation, now with
Mother Jones. The editorial page of the New York Times
hailed “Mr. Obama’s Profile in Courage.” The Washington Post,
relatively liberal on domestic issues while vociferously pro-war,
celebrated Obama’s “Moment of Truth.”
Los Angeles Times
columnist Tim Rutten went so far as to compare Obama to Abraham
Lincoln, another “lanky Illinois lawyer turned politician [who] gave
a speech that changed the way Americans talked about the great
racial issues of their day.”
It should be pointed out
that in contrast to Lincoln, who declared forthrightly, “A house
divided against itself cannot stand,” there is nothing of such
principled intransigence in Obama’s address. He touches on social
polarization, avoids the question of its fundamental roots in the
economic order, and then modestly presents himself as the antidote.
This is, in a sense, the
whole basis of the Obama campaign. He offers himself to the American
ruling elite as a president who could, because of his political
rhetoric and his multi-racial background, revive at least
temporarily the credibility of American imperialism at home and
abroad.
In his domestic policies,
there is absolutely nothing Obama proposes that would threaten the
interests of the corporate elite. A few heads might roll, among the
mortgage-securities sharks or Iraq war profiteers, but that will
only be to provide the illusion of change.
In his foreign policy, as
the candidate reiterated in another speech the following day, an
Obama administration would represent a change in the tactics to be
employed in the Middle East and Central Asia, but not the strategic
goals. It would be unshakably committed to the defense of the
interests of American imperialism in that oil-rich region and
throughout the world.
The theme sounded by all the
liberal commentators praising Obama’s speech was that to directly
address the subject of race relations in the United States was an
act of considerable political courage. The unstated thesis of such
praise is the belief—near-unanimous among liberal
opinion-makers—that the vast majority of white working people are
racially prejudiced.
The truth is, however, that
the “third rail” of American capitalist politics is not race, but
class. What unites blacks and lower-income whites and immigrants is
not that they are discriminated against or disrespected or
victimized in some nebulous way. What unites them is that they are
all part of the same class, the working class, whose labor produces
all the wealth of society, which is expropriated from them by
another class, the owners of capital.
This elementary Marxist
proposition is the starting point of a scientific understanding, not
only of the 2008 elections, but of the world political situation.
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