Why is American liberalism bankrupt? A history lesson for New York
Times columnist Bob Herbert
By Tom Eley
19 September 2008

New York Times columnist Bob Herbert’s September 9 column “Hold Your
Heads Up” is a lamentation of US liberalism’s cowardice.

Herbert, himself a liberal, is far from alone in noting the
submissiveness of liberalism in the face of the Republican right. The
current campaign of Barrack Obama for the presidency is a case study
in just such spinelessness and duplicity.

Herbert writes, “Liberals have been so cowed by the pummeling they’ve
taken from the right that they’ve tried to shed their own identity,
calling themselves everything but liberal and hoping to pass
conservative muster by presenting themselves as hyper-religious and
lifelong lovers of rifles, handguns, whatever.

“So there was Hillary Clinton, of all people, sponsoring legislation
to ban flag-burning; and Barack Obama, who once opposed the death
penalty, morphing into someone who not only supports it, but supports
it in cases that don’t even involve a homicide.”

The obvious question that arises from Herbert’s description of a
prostrate liberalism and supine Democratic Party—a question that tens
of millions the world over who hate the Bush administration are asking
themselves—is why. Why is US liberalism incapable of waging a struggle
against the right? Or, as Herbert rhetorically puts it, “Why liberals
don’t stand up to this garbage, I don’t know.”

But Herbert doesn’t tarry on this dilemma. Posing it, he throws up his
hands and changes the subject—to history. Addressing himself to fellow
liberals, he presents a version of history in which liberalism has
been the sole vehicle of social reform.

This reveals a serious misunderstanding of US history. Herbert omits
the most important elements of historical development: the role of
economic and social change and the centrality of the independent
struggles of the working class.

According to Herbert, liberals “from the mightiest presidents to the
most unheralded protesters and organizers” have been responsible for,
among other things, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, civil rights
and the end of segregation, always fighting tooth and nail against
conservatives. Where has this golden age of liberalism gone? Herbert
seems to ask.

In fact, it never existed. The limited reformist achievements that
Herbert outlines were not the result of liberalism, but of the mass
social struggles of the working class to which liberalism, under
certain historical conditions, adapted itself and made grudging
concessions.

>From its origins in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Europe
and the United States, liberalism was the ideology of the bourgeoisie.
Its early political legitimacy rested on its claim to speak for the
productive elements of the entire nation—in France this was called the
“Third Estate” of bourgeoisie, peasants and workers—aligned in social
revolution against feudal elements in society: the royalty, the clergy
and the landed gentry. Yet, in spite of its claims, from the beginning
liberalism expressed in politics and economy the aims of the
bourgeoisie. What this meant in practice was the domination of the
state by capitalism, the breaking down within the nation of feudal
barriers to the capitalist market, and the subjugation of the working
class.

As opposed to European nations, liberalism in the US over the course
of the 19th and the first half of the 20th century gradually took on a
social-reformist coloring. After the defeat of the South in the Civil
War, the liberal vision of the national market triumphed.

This was not precisely a “free market,” but the protection and
domination of the domestic market by US capitalism. But liberalism’s
political purchase on middle class elements—the small farmers,
shopkeepers and professionals—allowed it to simultaneously present
itself as the defender of democracy against the tyranny of the market,
a tendency that manifested itself in both the farmers’ Populist
movement of the 1890s and the Progressive movement of the early 20th
century, whose ranks were filled with middle-class professionals and
technical experts.

At the same time, liberalism reacted with hostility to the development
of the working class and its epic strikes, union movements and
struggles for socialism which unfolded from the 1870s through the
1930s, and which placed a serious challenge before the bourgeoisie and
a question mark over its political control. The liberal state’s
response of choice to this challenge from the working class was force:
the use of private guards, strike-breakers, police, militias and the
courts to crush strikes and imprison, terrorize or kill the leadership
of the working class. The class struggle in the US in this period was
among the most sanguinary in the world.

It must never be forgotten that it was the liberal icon, Woodrow
Wilson, who imprisoned the leader of US socialism, Eugene Debs, then
an elderly man, for opposing American entry into World War I. The
Wilson administration whipped up the first Red Scare in the aftermath
of the war, and was responsible for the imprisonment and deportation
of thousands of immigrant radicals.

But, utilizing its democratic elements, liberalism relied on the
carrot as well as the stick, advancing a limited reformist agenda—
increasingly through the political mechanism of the Democratic Party—
and relying upon middle class layers for its social constituency.

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, American capitalism faced a
mortal crisis. Workers waged massive unionization struggles and
strikes, very often led by socialists and communists. As an ideology,
socialism had significant influence on the thinking of workers,
intellectuals and artists. Given these conditions—the growing
organized strength of the working class, the threat posed by
socialism, the economic disaster wrought by the Great Depression—
Franklin Delano Roosevelt dragged the ruling class, kicking and
screaming, along a path of a quite limited reformism.

At the height of this crisis, the failure of liberalism was laid bare
by its own leading philosopher and intellectual, John Dewey, who
penned a series of lectures delineating its fatal contradiction—that
between the economic “liberty” of monopoly capitalists to exploit and
the liberty of the masses to live a full life. What Dewey described
was in essence the polarization of the Third Estate, or the shattering
of the bourgeoisie’s claims to speak for the nation.

Dewey recognized that “the tragic breakdown of democracy is due to the
fact that the identification of liberty with the maximum of
unrestrained individualistic action in the economic sphere, under the
institutions of capitalistic finance, is as fatal to the realization
of liberty for all as it is to the realization of equality.” Dewey
could think liberalism out of this dilemma, proposing a system of
public ownership, but he rejected the very existence of a class
struggle and was opposed to the independent movement of the working
class. His plans never got off the drawing board.

There is a colossal irony in Herbert’s column. He laments the
reactionary political climate before which Democratic politicians like
Obama and Clinton now grovel. However, this climate of reaction and
ignorance is the end result of a process that liberalism itself set
into motion with the anticommunist hysteria of the late 1940s and
early 1950s.

After the end of World War II, US liberalism turned against its allies
in the Stalinist Communist Party and began a purge of left elements in
government, organized labor, culture and academia.

This was not because liberalism had become disgusted with the crimes
of Stalin. On the contrary, during the blood purges of the late 1930s,
in which Stalin exterminated the entire revolutionary generation in
the Soviet Union, US liberalism—including its journalistic flagships
the Nation and the New Republic—defended Stalin and his show trials.

What had changed were the imperialist interests of the United States.
Liberalism and the Democratic Party broke their alliance with the
Communist Party and its fellow travelers because the Soviet Union was
now viewed as the primary obstacle to the unfettered projection of US
imperialism abroad. This shift caught Stalin and the Communist Party
in the US unawares. As a token of good faith, they carried on the
Popular Front-style class subordination of workers to the bourgeoisie
that had prevailed in the Roosevelt years, even as the earlier
political alignment came crashing down all around them.

President Harry Truman, another liberal icon, launched the Red Scare
in 1948 as a means of banishing domestic opposition to the program of
US imperialism abroad and taming the American working class, which
emerged in the immediate postwar period more combative than ever. A
substantial section of the liberal intelligentsia adapted itself to
the Red Scare and contributed its ideological labor to the project of
US imperialism, many of its ranks joining the American Committee for
Cultural Freedom, which was associated with the CIA-funded Congress of
Cultural Freedom. The role of these organizations was to provide
intellectual legitimacy to anticommunism, which had hitherto been
considered a marginal or reactionary outlook.

The enlistment of liberal intellectuals’ labor was not accidental. It
reflected their class position and the extraordinary wealth of US
capitalism, which was busy hiring intellectuals in the state
bureaucracies, saturating the universities with money, and founding
anticommunist “think tanks” and endowments.

The anticommunist campaign created a toxic cultural and intellectual
environment. It appealed to the worst instincts in the population—
backwardness, ignorance, religious superstition, hatred and fear.
Anticommunism soon became the secular religion of the US.

These reactionary characteristics of official political life have only
festered over the last 60 years. The end result can be witnessed in
the current presidential election, where Barack Obama and the liberal
elements of the news media cannot openly address the theo-fascistic
political outlook of Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential
candidate, for fear of inciting a whirlwind of condemnation.

As for the Civil Rights legislation of the 1950s and 1960s, which took
place in the context of the Cold War rivalry with the Soviet Union for
influence in the Third World, historical evidence has made it
abundantly clear that the liberal presidents of the period—Truman
(Dem.) Dwight Eisenhower (Rep.), John Kennedy (Dem.) and Lyndon
Johnson (Dem.)—only reluctantly acceded to certain demands of a
movement that was comprised largely of poor blacks in the South. The
civil rights reforms revolved primarily around the legal and quasi-
legal oppression of the black population in the South and left
untouched the question of social and economic equality that animated
the freedom movement.

Liberalism’s attempt to balance a limited reformism in the US with
imperialism abroad came to a bloody end in the Vietnam War and the
urban riots of the late 1960s during the Johnson administration. It
had fallen victim to the same contradiction that Dewey had studied in
the 1930s. It could not bridge the chasm between the monopolist
outlook of the moneyed elite—the project of imperialism—and the social
needs of the working class—the project of social reform.

Then, before the flames of 1968 had even been extinguished, the
economic decline of the US, which came to a head in the 1970s as a
result of the Vietnam War and the reemergence of America’s capitalist
rivals, eroded the basis of economic reform, which had been made
possible by the expansion of the productive forces from the 1940s to
the 1960s.

The collapse of liberal reformism and its intellectual bankruptcy,
which is on full display in the Herbert column, is the end result of
long historical processes. Liberalism was never a tendency that
advanced the needs of the working class. Rather, in the 20th century
it sought to forestall fundamental change through a limited reformist
agenda in order to better carry out the imperialist aims of US
capitalism. This balancing act proved impossible.
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