-Caveat Lector-

The Unelected Resident

<http://www.alivewired.com/2001/20010118/feature.html>

How George W. Bush stole the White House from America's voters

by Harvey Wasserman
1/18/01

It's official. The Banana Republicans now occupy the White House.
In direct, and predictable, contradiction to his campaign rhetoric of
accommodation and compromise, George "Shrub" Bush begins his illegitimate
regime like countless other coup figureheads, with cynicism and an iron hand.
How firmly will the forces of democracy oppose him? Remember that Bush was
allowed to take power precisely because the "New Democrats" lack the
strength or character to stand up to the hard right. Predictably, their
performance at the dawn of the Shrub years is already discouraging. Indeed,
if the nation and its natural environment are to survive at all, clear and
powerful resistance must come from where it always comes, the grassroots,
but with far more conviction than we've seen in many a decade.
The clearest sign of the Bush hard line comes with his chief law
enforcement officer.  Attorney General nominee John Ashcroft is a carbon
copy of countless martial strongmen installed in Third World countries by
the father of the new president and the national security apparatus Bush
Sr. once ran. The former Missouri Senator (who was beaten for re-election
by a dead man) is the creation of the corporations and fundamentalist
church groups that paid for his losing campaign, and for that of his new boss.
Ashcroft is pro-corporation (especially tobacco), pro-gun, pro-military,
pro-death penalty, pro-welfare for religious schools, and an ardent fan of
the Confederacy. He is anti-black, anti-choice, anti-feminist, anti-gay,
anti-speech, anti-poor, anti-green and anti-labor.
In short, he's a poster child for the Bush junta, a humorless gray cabal of
old economy types whose primary agenda will be to further the Reaganite
redistribution of wealth from the poor to the rich while raping the natural
planet along the way. They'll add billions in church and corporate welfare.
In the name of "liberty," they'll erase as many individual rights and
freedoms as their dominance of a bought Supreme Court can facilitate.
Star wars is only the most visible of the massive military and other scams
this militant right-wing crew intends to foist on the public in the coming
years, to the benefit of their corporate and fundamentalist sponsors. We
can also expect an escalated drug war, new jungle bloodshed in Central
America, heightened tensions with China and Russia, and a relentless
assault on the natural environment and basic freedoms of speech and the
press. All are sure to come.
The regime has been pre-bought by more than $350 million in contributions
made to the Bush campaign in a larger national "election" that cost some $3
billion, much of that paid to electronic media, whose opposition to
campaign finance reform is thus guaranteed.
Alongside Ashcroft is Gale Norton as Bush's Secretary of Interior nominee.
A fanatic "property rights" cultist, Norton says the public can't impose
environmental or other restrictions on private property owners. Thus she
opposes the Clean Air and Water Acts, the National Parks system and all
other communal attempts to preserve the natural environment and other life
support systems essential to our collective survival.
Norton's ideology got new swagger last week from the U.S. Supreme Court,
which used a "states' rights" argument to vastly weaken the Clean Water Act
in a case involving a landfill in northern Illinois. By the usual 5-4
margin, the right-wing majority said the federal government could not
overrule the states to save a body of water, even though that natural
entity is part of a larger national eco-system. For pure hypocrisy, the
Supreme Court ruling is hard to top. It's a reminder of who, exactly, is
taking control of the White House, and how.
      The Y2K electoral theft
History will recall that in the election of 2000, George W. Bush lost the
nationwide popular vote to Al Gore by some 539,947 votes, plus the
uncounted thousands in Florida. Not to mention another 2.6 million votes
that went to Green Party candidate Ralph Nader.
History will note that, in a dozen different ways, Bush almost certainly
lost the popular vote in Florida. Had Bush's brother not been governor
there, Gore would have won the state's electoral votes and the electoral
college. Had Bush's cousin not been perched at Fox News, and was the first
network election chief to call the state for Shrub, the other TV networks
might not have followed suit and instead covered the race properly on
election night.
History will further note that with its fraternal Republican Governor and a
Republican Secretary of State that was Bush's campaign chair, the state of
Florida waged a systematic and effective campaign to disenfranchise blacks
and Jews who were known to be supporting Gore by margins of four-, five-
and even nine-to-one.
Black citizens were removed from the voter rolls en masse by false charges
that they were felons, a move choreographed by a sophisticated computer
firm hired with state money to do just that. African-Americans were stopped
from reaching the polls by police who demanded various forms of impossible
identification.
African-Americans were booted from actual voting stations by phony
requirements reminiscent of the old poll taxes and other scams used by the
descendants of John Ashcroft's beloved Confederacy. Voting machines in
black and Jewish districts conveniently malfunctioned and made a mockery of
democracy.
Only the old Soviet Joe Stalin could aptly describe the Florida outcome:
"It doesn't matter who casts the votes, only who counts them."
To make sure those votes were counted for a Bush victory, the United States
Supreme Court stepped in. On a Saturday, the high court ruled that the
Florida recounts must stop. On the following Tuesday, it ruled there was no
time to resume the recount.
To justify its demand that George W. Bush win the election, the
conservative majority used a series of tortured and inconsistent arguments
that essentially imposed federal control on the state's electoral process.
The Supreme Court demanded, among other things, a uniform standard for
counting ballots when no such a doctrine has ever existed in federal law.
The court trashed the very states' rights philosophy so-called
conservatives have used for two centuries as a cover to oppose federal
guarantees of such inconvenient luxuries as civil rights, civil liberties,
voting rights and environmental protection. In short, the federal
imposition used to guarantee Bush's victory is in direct ideological
contradiction to the states' rights arguments the same justices used to
overturn the ecological protection of those waterways in Illinois.
Also lost in the shuffle were the Supreme Court Justices' own conflicts of
interest. Both Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor had long since made public their desire to retire from the bench,
along with their unwillingness to do so with a Democrat in the White House.
The wife of Justice Clarence Thomas and the sons of Justice Antonin Scalia
all had direct personal interests in a Bush victory based on jobs they held
at the time of the decision. Scalia also made known his desire to become
Chief Justice, which could only happen if Rehnquist resigned under a
Republican president, such as George W. Bush.
The electoral debacle of the year 2000 thus forever bankrupted any residual
credibility remaining to the
conservatives' arguments for states' rights. From now on, decisions such as
the Illinois wetlands destruction will be tagged with the footnote that the
court remained firm in its commitment to states' rights, except in cases
involving the election of a Republican president to the White House. Except
for his intellectual mediocrity and exceptional meanness of spirit, history
will remember Rehnquist only for his signature theft of the Y2K election,
and the permanent damage done to the Supreme Court's once-towering
credibility as an incorruptible institution of last resort.
      A Shrub in deed
How will history remember George W. Bush?
Liberal pundits expect a field day with Shrub's obvious lack of
intellectual and oratorical fire power. His
voluminous malapropisms already rival those of his father. Smug Democrats
assume his lack of charisma and bandwidth will automatically render him an
ineffective, one-term failure. Having inherited the family business,
whenever a really tough decision comes along, he'll call his father.
Poppy's cabinet is his personal missile shield.
But one need only remember Ronald Reagan to recall the danger of
underestimation. Liberals branded Reagan "an amiable dunce." But he was
neither. Ronnie's most decidedly un-amiable programs were brutal to the
poor, the environment, women, people of color, the people of Central
America. His lack of bookish intellect did not stop him from charming the
media and enough of the American public to enforce the most destructive
social agenda since Calvin Coolidge. Though his popularity ratings were far
below those of Bill Clinton, he managed to run up the biggest financial,
educational and ecological debt in national history and to imbue an entire
generation with a deep-rooted sense of materialistic cynicism.
In short, Reagan's rightist accomplishments were staggering.
Can Shrub repeat? Those who assume his deer-in-the-headlights demeanor
dooms him to failure might recall his debates with Al Gore, where the
obviously brighter but terminally arrogant Vice President flashed his
brittle core and lost an election that had been handed to him on a silver
platter.
In so doing, Gore revealed the real black hole of the coming era, the New
Democrats. The signal moment came last week, when, despite howls of rage
from the Congressional Black Caucus, not one of the 50 Senate Democrats
could muster the common decency to force a public debate over the most
obviously stolen American election since 1876.
Eight years ago, when a legitimately elected Bill Clinton assumed office,
Republican zealots waited nary a nanosecond to launch a full bore partisan
attack over everything from gays in the military to the new president's
persona. For two full terms, conservatives waged an unrelenting assault on
every particle of Clinton's moderate agenda, capping it off with a
full-blown impeachment over his endlessly entertaining love life.
Clinton obliged by fighting hard for nothing except NAFTA and a wildly
creative redefinition of what constitutes sex. The New Democratic agenda
was a corporate-funded moderate Republican charade dressed in baby boomer
blue-jeans.
Clinton-Gore proposed a feeble national health care plan, then tossed it at
the first sign of corporate opposition.
They dismantled the welfare system (for the poor, not the corporations) in
ways no Republican could have dared.
They compiled a truly horrendous record on civil liberties in general and
wiretapping in particular. They escalated the drug war, jacking the U.S.
prison population to a staggering two million while arguing to the U.S.
Supreme Court, in the administration's dying days, that state referenda for
medical marijuana should be overturned.
Clinton-Gore did greatly aid the environment by vetoing, for eight years
running, the nuclear power industry's attempt to flood the highways and
railways with high-level radioactive waste headed to Nevada. But they broke
their promise to shut the WTI toxic waste incinerator in East Liverpool,
which became a symbol for the administration's lack of green integrity and
nerve.
Perhaps the most telling moment came in the Shrub debates, when the Texas
oil man accused Gore of failing to implement an energy policy. The
accusation could hardly have been more hypocritical, except that it was
accurate. For eight years, right into the Gore campaign, the administration
talked a good game about fighting global warming and pushing renewable
energy sources over fossil fuels. But Clinton-Gore's tangible
accomplishments were marginal at best. They fudged on everything from auto
efficiency standards to government purchases of recycled paper to utility
deregulation to reactor safety. Clinton failed even to restore to the White
House roof the solar panels installed by Jimmy Carter then removed by Reagan.
In the waning moments of his regime, with political costs lowest and
exposure at its peak, Clinton indulged in a showy (but welcome) outburst of
conservationism. His high-profile creation of millions of acres of national
monuments, roadless wilderness and protected forests came like rain after
an interminable drought. But why at the end of his term, and not at the
beginning? And why did he flinch from using the National Monuments Act to
protect the Alaska Wildlife Refuge, soon to be pillaged by Shrub's
hate-nature oil assault team?
      Green salvation
Which brings us to the real reason the New Democrats leave the White House
with such an excruciatingly short list of tangible accomplishments: Money.
Bill Clinton's campaign genius has been to wed the hard realities of
corporate cash with the slick gloss of social commitments. When push came
to shove, he could always manage to ditch just enough of the social agenda
to keep him funded, but not too much to blow it with the public.
Al Gore's downfall was his inability to simultaneously dance to
contradictory tunes. He raised so many millions that when George W. Bush
astonishingly accused him of spending more on his campaign than the
Republicans, Gore simply sighed and groaned, but had no comeback. For all
his populist prattle, his soul was sold.
Because he couldn't double-dip like Clinton (and because he was too uptight
to let Elvis campaign for him) Gore will (gratefully) fade into history
along with Mike Dukakis and Walter Mondale. Clinton still runs the New
Democratic Party. His brilliant celebrity wife will dominate those 50
Senators, bide her time, learn the ropes, expand her base and, sooner or
later, her time will come. And the New Democrats will become ever more
besotted with corporate money and the illusions of social justice.
But they will not stand up to the Bush junta. There have already been
gutter fights over appointees like Linda Chavez and Gale Norton. But the
heavy lifting, as usual, will be left to those outside the mainstream, in
this case, those who supported Ralph Nader and the Green Party.
For years to come, the New Democrats will scapegoat Nader for the Y2K
debacle. They will point to Nader's 90,000 votes in Florida and thousands
more in New Hampshire as the deciding factor. They will ignore the fact, as
they did last week in the U.S. Senate, that Gore actually won both the
popular and the electoral vote.
And that Nader had nothing to do with Bill Clinton's dalliance with Monica
Lewinsky, or the spring crash of NASDAQ, or the untimely explosion of
warfare in the Middle East, or the failure of Clinton-Gore to carry their
own states of Tennessee and Arkansas (not to mention the perennial
Democratic stronghold of West Virginia), any one of which could have put
Gore in the White House.
Nor did Nader cause Gore's pathetic showings in three debates (from which
Nader was in fact physically removed), or Jeb Bush's theft of Florida, or
the Supreme Court's cynical intervention. The New Democrats will also
suppress the fact that even though Gore was a miserable candidate who ran a
miserable campaign, the election still had to be stolen by Bush, pure and
simple.
Not that Nader didn't try to meet Gore halfway. Nader met with the new
"green" VP in 1993, then offered to convene a national grassroots gathering
for him. In a conference call a week before the 2000 election, Nader told
me he wrote Gore a dozen times and called him three times in the lead-up to
last November. But Gore refused to meet him.
Nonetheless, it will be convenient for the New Democrats to point to every
Shrub transgression as something that would not have happened had Ralph
Nader not run for president. And then to do nothing about it.
Most important, the New Democrats will forget the moment that Al Gore had
the election wrapped up. At the Democratic National Convention in Los
Angeles, Gore stole Nader's thunder and ignited the activist constituency.
Gore gave the speech of his life, a straightforward populist call to
action, perfectly designed to bring the truly committed back into the
Democratic fold. In fact, Gore endorsed the agenda perfected over the past
35 years by none other than America's leading consumer activist.
Gore soared to a 15-point lead.
And then he wilted, as if his corporate sponsors panicked, and ripped up
his roots. Gore gracelessly helped bar Nader from the debates, then lost
them. Instead of co-opting the green agenda, Gore and his flunkies attacked
the messenger, as if their chief opponent was a 66-year-old bachelor flying
coach with his nephew, charging admission to his speeches.
"Only Al Gore can beat Al Gore," David Letterman said, because it was never
clear what he stood for, other than for Al Gore. Slick Willie could pull it
off. Stiff Al couldn't.
We can expect the New Democrats to fight the fringe battles over
appointments and the like. But the only Americans who'll reliably resist
the brunt of the Shrub assault are precisely those the New Democrats
trashed, along with those the Bush junta so methodically disenfranchised.
The thousands of young and aging activists who paid to hear Nader rant. The
2.6 million who voted for him. The millions more who grudgingly voted for
Gore but loathed his short-changed agenda and are ready to fight it out as
the corporate New Democrats aren't.
The same millions who expected a fair national hearing on how this election
was stolen, and were denied it by a spineless Senate.
After the early skirmishes, and except for the easy battles, the New
Democrats will roll over for the Bush junta.
Their money comes from the same corporations. They won't withstand a
focused, massively financed right-wing juggernaut intent on substituting
raw muscle for the lack of a popular mandate.
That's the way they do it in the Third World. Who will stop them here?

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