Monday, April 25, 2016

A great social process is being revealed by the US presidential race

This is a repost from Great Britain's SOCIALIST WORKER:



A great social process is being revealed by the US presidential race

by Charlie Kimber


Bernie Sanders is rising not in spite of his socialist label but because of it
Bernie Sanders is rising not in spite of his socialist label but because of it (Pic: Marc Nozell/Flickr)

Media coverage of the US presidential elections is dominated by talk of primaries, caucuses, and delegate numbers. But behind the complex details a great social process is being revealed.
The real story is not so much Republican Donald Trump as Bernie Sanders. It’s a story that should boost everyone on the left. Over seven million people have already voted for Sanders, who calls himself a socialist, to be the Democratic Party presidential candidate.


More people aged 18 to 29 have voted for Sanders than for Democratic establishment candidate Hillary Clinton and Trump combined.


Sanders defeated Clinton by 56 percent to 44 percent in the state of Wyoming last Saturday. It was his eighth win in the last nine Democratic contests.


For decades any widespread discussion of socialism in the US has been virtually impossible. Years of anti-Communism and red-baiting created an atmosphere in which candidates for office feared to be dubbed “liberal”, let alone socialist.


Now Sanders is rising not in spite of his socialist label but because of it. Three months ago dictionary publisher Merriam-Webster announced that “socialism” was the most looked-up word on its website on 2015.


Millions of people want change from a society where the wealthiest 1 percent soar away from the rest. A society where well paid secure jobs are scarce. Where police gun down people—especially black people—with impunity. And where no action is taken over climate change.


Sanders’ proposals are woefully inadequate to tackle the vast power of the corporations, the bankers, the military and the rest of the state machine.


But he does offer change. He packs tens of thousands into public meetings because he is such a contrast to Clinton.


Barack Obama’s slogan in the run-up to the 2008 election was “Yes we can”. Clinton’s slogan ought properly to be “No we can’t”.


She thinks we can’t have the things Bernie Sanders supports—such as free tuition in state-funded colleges or a health system like the NHS.


Possible


Yet millions agree with Sanders that all of this—and much more—is possible using the wealth at the top of society.


Class is returning to political debate. In the US it’s very rare to hear the media or a politician use the term “working class”—everyone says “middle class”. But now 57 percent of people aged 18 to 35 describe themselves as working class.


Sanders’ success is a partial reflection of movements. The last two years has seen the Black Lives Matter movement, strikes and campaigns such as the one by the Chicago Teachers Union, the climate change movement and the battle for a $15 an hour minimum wage.


US unions traditionally get behind the Democratic frontrunner, and the majority back Clinton in this election. But so far four national unions and over 80 union locals (branches or districts) have backed Sanders.


Sometimes workers have ignored their national leaderships to support Sanders. The US media and organising project Labor Notes says, “The Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) came out for Clinton in January. But a month later, Northern California UFCW Local 5, whose 28,000 members work in grocery and food processing, endorsed Sanders.”


Mike Henneberry is the local’s director of communications and politics. He said “For us, it was not a very difficult decision. Compare an individual who’s been supporting workers since he was mayor of Burlington with someone who’s been on the board of Walmart.”


Clinton is still ahead in the battle for the nomination, although the gap is narrowing. The New York primary on 19 April will be under intense scrutiny.


If Sanders wins, it will terrify the establishment and give even more energy to his campaign.


But the movement for change and socialism needs to break free from the Democratic Party. Its politics, hierarchies and practices make it one of the two main pro-capitalist and pro-imperialist parties. The mood coursing through the Sanders challenge needs to express itself through struggle and to find a political home that can really change the US.




Bernie Sanders

Senator Bernie Sanders is running for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination:




  1. We can combat voter suppression and increase turnout by ensuring that anyone who is of voting age is automatically registered to vote.




  • Freedom of speech, in my view, does not mean the freedom to buy the United States government.




  • You want to know something that is radical: You are living in the only major country that doesn't guarantee health care as a right.




  • Climate change is a global crisis. We've got to move in a bold way to transform our energy system. We have to do it yesterday.




  • My platform isn't radical. Radical is that based on a series of lies we invaded Iraq and hundreds of thousands of people died.




  • We have the moral obligation to leave a habitable planet for our kids and our grandchildren. We must put an end to our use of fossil fuels.











    Jill Stein

    Jill Stein was the 2012 Green Party presidential candidate.  She'd like to be the 2016 candidate.  (That race is ongoing.)   






  • The Seven Kingdoms need a to mobilize the economy immediately against the coming climate catastrophe.





  • Our campaign supports every one of these positions. ✌️ We can't say the same for many others.











  • Winter is coming to Westeros? Green Party has been saying we need to get serious about for decades.





  • Charles Koch likes the Clintons because they have served him well. Another sign the corporate parties have realigned into one.





  • But it happened. We have to ask ourselves why? Charles has quite a vested interest in this election ($1bn) Hillary.






  • Why does our country force young people who want an education to become indentured servants to Wall Street? Let's





  • I agree with Charles Koch about Trump & fascism. But didn’t find Koch’s father provided fuel for Hitler?





  • No surprise Charles Koch likes . The oligarchy parties are merging! Time for a party truly of the people.





  • "Upload: a 2-party system. The lesser of two dangers, illusion of choice. Red and blue, nothing to do, no voice." - 💜





  • Bankers get bailouts for ruining lives. Students get debt for trying to further theirs. Corporate politics must end this year.





  • In 2016, corporate campaign donations apparently even pay for "digital media specialists" that troll everyone online. For real, Hillary?





  • Democracy needs a moral compass. Do not be intimidated to vote against your values.





  • it stopped acting like corporate media that ignores alternative parties... and ✔️ my account, .





  • There's a generation rising that sees beyond just individual issues towards broad systemic change. Welcome to the fight for the greater good





  • Presidential used to be run by League of Women Voters. Now theyre run by the DNC/RNC.





  • Stop immediately. 🌏 Our sustainable future is in energy sources like solar ☀️& wind 💨.





  • We are facing a climate catastrophe--nothing less. Those in denial & those slowed by corporate money must not win. This is our only planet.











  • Making higher education free is not only the right thing to do, it just makes good economic sense. Join my call:
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