Don't Follow Sanders Back into the Democratic Party - Left Voice

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Don't Follow Sanders Back into the Democratic Party - Left Voice

Nathaniel Flakin, Otto Fors

Sanders is a carnival barker at the graveyard of social movements. He’s spent 
years cheerleading for Biden — wha...
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Don’t Follow Sanders Back into the Democratic Party
Sanders is a carnival barker at the graveyard of social movements. He’s spent 
years cheerleading for Biden — what good is his recent criticism?

The day after Kamala Harris lost to Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders put out a 
withering statement placing the blame for that loss squarely on the Democratic 
Party:


It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned 
working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them … 
While the Democratic leadership defends the status quo, the American people are 
angry and want change.


He asks if “the big money interests and well-paid consultants who control the 
Democratic Party” will ever “understand the pain and political alienation that 
tens of millions of Americans are experiencing.” He wonders if they will take 
on the “increasingly powerful Oligarchy,” concluding “Probably not.” He finally 
announces that “very serious discussions” will take place, and ends with an 
open-ended: “Stay tuned.”

This is the Bernie Sanders people remember from his 2016 and 2020 primary 
campaigns, who mobilized millions of young people disaffected by the misery 
wrought by decades of neoliberalism. His language will resonate with the 
millions of people who did not vote for Harris, and the millions more who cast 
a ballot while holding their noses, because she ran a campaign in defense of 
the status quo.

Yet does Sanders think we can just forget the last four years, and everything 
he said until the day after the election?

Sanders: Biden and the Democrats’ Most Enthusiastic Cheerleader

Just a few months ago, after Biden’s catastrophic performance at the 
presidential debate, Sanders published a full-throated endorsement of Biden, 
calling him “the most effective president in the modern history of our 
country.” Sanders called on Democrats to “stop the bickering and nit-picking” 
and rally behind their candidate. 

Was this just a momentary slip up in the final stretch of a campaign, when the 
Vermont senator was terrified by the prospect of a Trump presidency? Far from 
it: Sanders has been an integral part of the Biden administration, first as 
chair of the Senate Budget Committee, then as chair of the Health, Education, 
Labor, and Pensions Committee. Every time Biden and the Democrats threw workers 
and the oppressed under the bus, Sanders was there putting his leftist rubber 
stamp on Biden’s policies. He wrote no scathing rebukes when the Biden 
administration ran to Trump’s right on immigration, abandoned demands like a 
$15 minimum wage, ramped up fossil fuel production, and voted to break the 
railway strike. In fact, Sanders, with his reputation for saying it like it is, 
repeatedly lies about the president’s supposedly pro-labor record, claiming 
that “Biden wants to make it easier for workers to form unions.” 

But that’s not all: Sanders, along with other progressive Democrats like 
Alexandria Ocasio-Ortez, was a Biden dead-ender, standing with him even as more 
and more Democrats called on him to step down. When Biden finally left the 
stage, Sanders praised him as “the most pro-working class president in modern 
American history.”

When Kamala Harris replaced Biden on the ticket, she cozied up to billionaires 
and made clear that she lacked even Biden’s purely rhetorical commitment to the 
labor movement. Yet Sanders remained a loyal cheerleader.

In a delusional search for votes from “moderate” Republicans, Harris began 
campaigning with the anti-Trump Republican Liz Cheney. Her father Dick Cheney 
was the principal architect of the Iraq War, a cynical intriguer whose company 
was raking in billions from forever wars that killed millions of people. The 
Cheneys might be the most bloodthirsty war hawks in the rogue’s gallery of U.S. 
imperialism. And Sanders? He stood with the war hawk — “I applaud the Cheneys 
for their courage in defending democracy,” allowing Donald Trump, a first-rate 
imperialist, to present himself as an anti-war candidate.

The Democrats Have Never Been on Our Side

The Intercept has claimed that “Bernie would have won,” given his “credibility” 
from “spending decades consistently fighting doggedly for the working class.” 
This is, unfortunately, pure amnesia, as Sanders spent the last four years 
defending an administration attacking the working class. And he has been 
plainly dishonest. Was Biden a champion of the working class, as Sanders 
claimed just half a year ago? Or did the Democrats abandon workers, as Sanders 
says now?

The Democratic Party has always been a party of the bourgeoisie, and Sanders 
has been part of it for almost 50 years, even while formally an independent. 
Despite his left-wing credentials, he has a long track record of supporting 
almost every U.S. imperialist intervention, while voting for trillions of 
dollars for weapons. Sanders is nothing but a social democratic fig leaf for a 
capitalist political machine. He is a carnival barker at the entrance to the 
graveyard of social movements.

The tragedy of Sanders campaigns is that he indeed inspired millions of 
working-class and young people with progressive demands — and then led them 
into a party that could only betray them. We see Sanders channeling the 
movement for Palestine into working with the imperialist state as well. Across 
the country, leftists are rallying Democrats to support Sanders’s arms embargo 
measure — as if the institutions of the imperialist state could deliver an end 
to the genocide in Gaza. This is just a microcosm of Sanders’s role in the 
Democratic party, and how he works to keep outrage from developing into a 
serious challenge to the system. 

Given the astounding failure of the Democratic Party (it’s actually kind of 
impressive that they managed to convince millions of workers that Donald Trump 
was less hostile to working people!), huge swaths of people realize we need a 
political alternative. Unfortunately, many will follow Sanders’s advice, and 
continue to try to change a party run by billionaires.

It’s not that Democrats lost their connection to working-class voters — the 
Democrats have never been on our side. Even in the supposed glory days of FDR, 
the Democratic Party was trying to save capitalism. Sanders, as a more or less 
official democrat, is part of the problem — even if he founded his own party, 
it would be a party loyal to U.S. imperialism. Workers in the United States 
need our own party — one completely independent of billionaires, war hawks, and 
all their political hacks. 

Nathaniel Flakin and Otto Fors 








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