28 September 2016
Monday night’s debate between Hillary
Clinton and Donald Trump plumbed new depths in the degradation of American
politics. A billionaire and a multi-millionaire, both widely hated, traded
false promises, platitudes, attack lines and reactionary bromides without
seriously addressing any of the pressing issues facing the American people.
On social policy, Trump combined
calls for trade war with a program of sweeping corporate tax cuts and the
elimination of all regulations on business, at one point boasting of his own
evasion of federal income taxes. Responding to Clinton’s criticism that he
benefited personally from the housing market collapse, he declared, “That’s called
business.”
Clinton, who has the closest ties to
Wall Street, said the financial crisis of 2008 was the product of “tax policies
that slashed taxes on the wealthy, failed to invest in the middle class, took
their eyes off Wall Street.” She evidently hoped that no one would pick up on
the fact that her husband’s administration and the Democratic Party as a whole
played a central role in this process.
But the heart of the debate, as far
as the ruling class is concerned, lay in foreign and military policy, where
Clinton has focused the majority of her attacks on Trump, presenting herself as
a more ruthless and militaristic future commander-in-chief.
Clinton continued the war-mongering
diatribes against Russia that have dominated her campaign since the run-up to
the Democratic National Convention in July, along with her attacks on Trump
from the right, branding him a stooge of Russian President Vladimir Putin. She
repeated the claim, never substantiated, that Putin was responsible for hacking
the email of the Democratic National Committee.
In response to alleged cyber attacks
by “Russia, China, Iran or anybody else,” she declared, “We are not going to
sit idly by… and we’re going to have to make it clear that we don’t want to use
the kinds of tools that we have. We don’t want to engage in a different kind of
warfare. But we will defend the citizens of this country. And the Russians need
to understand that.”
This language echoes her remark at a
September 7 forum on national security policy in New York City, where she
declared that a Clinton administration would treat cyber attacks as acts of war
and respond with military force.
Besides suggesting war with
Russia—possessor of the world’s second largest stockpile of nuclear
weapons—Clinton called for stepped-up US military operations in the Middle
East, including intensified air strikes on ISIS and the wider use of drone
missile assassinations, targeting, in particular, ISIS leader Abu Baker
al-Baghdadi. Such state killings should become “one of our organizing principles,”
Clinton concluded.
Trump was typically bombastic in his
threats of military action in the Middle East, but less explicit about war
against more formidable targets such as Russia and China. But the logic of his
“Fortress America” appeals to economic nationalism and trade war, and his
identification of Mexico, China and other countries as US enemies, leads
inexorably to the same program of global military aggression.
Moderator Lester Holt of NBC News did
not ask Clinton how many millions of lives she was prepared to sacrifice in a
potential war with Russia. However, indicative of discussions going on behind
the scenes, he did ask the candidates’ opinions on reports that Obama
“considered changing the nation’s longstanding policy on first use” of nuclear
weapons. This was a reference to articles revealing that Obama had considered
adopting an explicit no-first-use nuclear policy, a proposal he ultimately
discarded after it came under attack from within his own administration.
Trump first said that he would “not
do first strike,” before adding, “I can’t take anything off the table.” Clinton
pointedly did not reply to the question.
In the aftermath of the debate, the
media and most of the political establishment declared Clinton the “winner.”
This is because she is seen as the more reliable instrument of US imperialism’s
aggressive global policy, involving a vast escalation of military violence
after the election.
Clinton is seeking to mobilize behind
this policy privileged, pro-war sections of the upper-middle class who support
the Democratic Party on the basis of identity politics. This was the essential
significance of her pointed reference (in relation to police violence) to
“systemic racism” in the United States.
The 2016 election campaign was
dominated for many months by explosive popular disaffection with the whole
political and corporate establishment. But it has concluded in a contest
between two candidates who personify that establishment—one a billionaire from
the criminal world of real-estate swindling, the other the consensus choice of
the military-intelligence apparatus and Wall Street.
This outcome has an objective
character. The two-party system is a political monopoly of the capitalist
class. Both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party are political
instruments of big business. The claims of Bernie Sanders and his pseudo-left apologists
that it is possible to reform or pressure the Democrats—and even carry out a
“political revolution” through it—have proven to be lies.
With six weeks to go until Election
Day, it is more clear than ever that whoever wins, the people of the United States
and the entire world confront immense dangers, including the threat of a
military conflict involving nuclear powers such as Russia and China. The
greatest danger, however, is the gulf that exists between the advanced state of
the war plans of the ruling class and the level of popular consciousness.
Everything must be done to alert workers and young people to what is being
planned and build a political leadership to oppose war and the capitalist
system that produces it.
The working class must prepare itself
politically for the struggles to come. This is the essential significance of
the Socialist Equality Party’s election campaign and its candidates, Jerry
White for president and Niles Niemuth for vice president. We urge workers and
young people to support our campaign and attend the November 5th conference on
“Socialism vs. Capitalism and War,” being held in Detroit.
Patrick Martin
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