Sunday, 21 February 2016 00:00
By David Niose,
Truthout
[…]
A party beholden to corporate
power cannot simultaneously be the party of ordinary working people, and thus
we can see the Democrats' dilemma. Though the party distinguishes itself from
the GOP in some ways - Democrats are more liberal on social issues, for
example, and more inclined to defend programs like Medicare and Social Security
- there can be no question that corporate money has undue influence on both
major parties, not just the GOP. When Hillary Clinton was seen as the
inevitable 2016 Democratic nominee, there was no reason to believe this status
quo would be challenged. But the rise of Bernie Sanders changes everything.
The genius of the corporate
coup that has overtaken US democracy is not that it dominates the GOP - the
party that has long favored corporate power anyway - but that it has maneuvered
even the opposition party into submission as well. The brightest minds on Wall
Street are experts at hedging bets, and they play politics just as they play
finance. Such dynamics are key to understanding not only the role of the
Clinton candidacy in the eyes of corporate America, but the perceived threat
posed by the Sanders campaign with its persistent advocacy for people over
corporations.
Clinton, who once served
on the board of Walmart, the gold standard of predatory corporatism, is so
tight with corporate power that she's now making efforts to downplay her
relationships. CNBC reports that she is postponing fundraisers with Wall
Street executives, no doubt concerned that voters are awakening to the toxic
influence of corporations on politics and government. Already in the awkward
position of explaining six-figure checks from Wall Street firms for speaking
engagements and large charitable donations from major banks, Clinton
realizes that she must try to distance herself from her corporate benefactors.
And the fat cats fully
understand. "Don't expect folks on Wall Street to be offended that Clinton
is distancing herself from them," CNBC reports. "In fact, they see it as smart politics
and they understand that Wall Street banks are deeply unpopular."
Indeed, everyone knows the
game, and few are worried that Clinton - whose son-in-law is a former Goldman Sachs executive who now runs
a hedge fund - is any kind of threat to the power structure. This explains why
a leading banking executive called Clinton's tough talk about
Wall Street "theatrics" made necessary in response to the Sanders
campaign, adding that he predicts she'll be known as "Mrs. Wall Street" if elected.
These realities show that the
"rigged system" concerns of ordinary voters are not overblown. In a
stroke of strategic brilliance, corporate power has created a playing field
where even its perceived opponents are advancing its agenda. And the fiction is
propagated with impressive expertise, as moderate, corporate-friendly Democrats
are portrayed in the mainstream media as "flaming liberals." Even
though Barack Obama, for example, filled his administration with Wall Street
veterans and stalwarts after his election in 2008 - including Tim Geithner,
Michael Froman, Larry Summers and a host of others - he is frequently described
as a liberal not just by those on the right, but even in mainstream media.
"The smart way to keep
people passive and obedient," says noted activist and author Noam Chomsky, "is to strictly limit the spectrum of
acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum." As
far as the corporate establishment is concerned, its good friend Hillary
Clinton should define the liberal end of the "spectrum of acceptable
opinion," thus keeping the entire spectrum corporate-friendly. If she
wins, conservative commentators will react with alarm and relentlessly lash out
at her as a "dangerous liberal," but corporate overlords will sleep
well at night knowing everything is fine.
This is what has happened
during the centrist Obama administration, which bailed out Wall Street without
prosecuting even one executive responsible for bringing about the 2008 economic
collapse. It also happened in the centrist administration of Bill Clinton, who
was attacked by conservatives as an "extreme liberal" while doing
little to earn the designation. The Clinton administration, with vocal support
from the first lady, deregulated telecommunications and the financial sector,
pushed hard for passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement - a
tremendous gift to corporate interests and a major blow to the working class -
and passed legislation on crime and welfare that was anything but liberal.
Such is the role that
corporate America wants Hillary Clinton to play today. Defined as a liberal,
she is in fact a consummate establishment Democrat: a hawkish corporate
apologist who happens to be pro-choice. Yes, she is to the left of the GOP
candidates - she doesn't deny climate change, wants to preserve Obamacare and
won't entertain outlandish ideas like privatizing Social Security - but she's
still well within the bounds of acceptability to the US corporate oligarchy
that does not want fundamental, systemic change.
[…]
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