Evasions, half-truths and lies
Bush demands passage of Wall Street bailout
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party

The Socialist Equality Party emphatically rejects President George
Bush’s call, in his televised speech Wednesday night, for a massive
bailout of Wall Street.

Bush’s 13-minute speech was a compendium of evasions, half-truths and
outright lies. While declaring that the United States is “in the midst
of a serious financial crisis” and demanding the immediate passage of
legislation that will hand over at least $700 billion to Wall Street
banks—by buying up their unsalable assets at inflated prices and
placing the burden for their losses on millions of working class
families—Bush offered no credible explanation of the cause of the
crisis. Nor did he explain how the proposed bailout of the bank will
be implemented, let alone how it will stave off economic disaster for
the working class.

His claim that the “rescue effort” will “help American consumers and
businesses get credit to meet their daily needs and create jobs” is
patently untrue. There is a consensus in the financial press,
especially outside the United States, that the bailout will accelerate
the descent of the American and world economy into the deepest
recession, if not depression, since the end of World War II.

“I know many Americans have questions tonight,” Bush stated. “How did
we reach this point in our economy? How will the solution I propose
work? And what does this mean for your financial future?”

“These are good questions,” he continued, “and they deserve clear
answers.”

But no such answers were provided by Bush. Instead, he offered a
bizarre narrative which presented the unfolding disaster as if it were
the result of inexplicable cosmic forces.

“Investment banks,” he stated, “found themselves saddled with large
amounts of assets they could not sell. They ran out of money needed to
meet their immediate obligations, and they faced imminent collapse.

“Other banks found themselves in severe financial trouble. These banks
began holding on to their money, and lending dried up, and the gears
of the American financial system began grinding to a halt.”

But amidst all the banalities and despite his own intentions, Bush’s
speech amounted to a devastating and unprecedented exposure and
indictment of the social, economic and political system in the United
States. Speaking before a national and international audience, he
admitted that the largest capitalist economy in the world stands on
the very brink of collapse.

“There has been a widespread loss of confidence,” Bush stated, “and
major sections of America’s financial system are at risk of shutting
down.”

He declared that if the bailout package was not supported by Congress,
“America could slip into a financial panic and a distressing scenario
would unfold.

“More banks could fail, including some in your community. The stock
market would drop even more, which would reduce the value of your
retirement account. The value of your home could plummet. Foreclosures
would rise dramatically.

“And if you own a business or a farm, you would find it harder and
more expensive to get credit. More businesses would close their doors,
and millions of Americans could lose their jobs.

“Even if you have a good credit history, it would be more difficult
for you to get the loans you need to buy a car or send your children
to college. And, ultimately, our country could experience a long and
painful recession.”

As for how this desperate situation had developed, Bush made some
perfunctory remarks about the housing crisis, followed by vague
references to bad decisions, irresponsible actions by a few unnamed
individuals, and excesses on Wall Street.

But he could not explain how the handover of more than $700 billion in
taxpayer money to the banks and investment firms will resolve the
crisis.

In fact, his bailout plan is a naked attempt by the most powerful
sections of the American ruling class to exploit a crisis of their own
making to further enrich themselves, while imposing the burden on the
working class of the United States and the entire world.

Bush concluded by assuring one and all that “democratic capitalism” is
the “best system the world has ever devised.” In reality, capitalism
stands exposed as an inherently unstable system riven by corruption,
in which the social interests of the masses of people are placed at
the mercy of economic parasites.

Perhaps the greatest falsehood in Bush’s speech was his assertion that
the handout to Wall Street is needed because “The market is not
functioning properly.” In reality, the market is functioning in
accordance with the laws of capitalism, where irrationality and
criminality in economic decision-making is rooted in the very nature
of the profit system.

As for the bailout plan proposed by Bush, it has been devised for one
central purpose—to protect the financial elite from the economic
losses resulting from the collapse of the mountain of debt they have
created in pursuit of super profits and gargantuan personal incomes.

In congressional hearings held this week, Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke were incapable of
providing any coherent explanation of how their bailout plan will do
anything other than provide a massive windfall for the banks, while
consigning millions of workers who face the loss of their homes and
livelihoods to their fate.

The naked class character of the bailout plan is underscored by the
bitter opposition of the banks to even the most minimal restraints on
executive pay and suggestions that they give up some stock in exchange
for their plundering of the public treasury.

With Bush’s speech, the pressure for quick congressional action to
pass the bailout plan will intensify. Throughout the week, the
Democratic Party leaders in both the House and Senate have accepted
the basic framework of the bailout. Their half-hearted and semi-
theatrical objections to various aspects of the plan have been little
more than cynical gestures to the massive popular opposition to the
bailout.

In his remarks Wednesday night, Senator Christopher Dodd, chairman of
the Senate Banking Committee, repeated what has become the mantra of
the Democrats, saying it was necessary to “think ahead” and not deal
with the causes of the crisis. As though a solution can be found to
the breakdown in the US and world economic system without considering
its causes.

Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Obama has given his full
support to the bailout, even going so far as to suggest he might keep
Paulson on as treasury secretary in an Obama administration. All of
his demagogy about “change” and a “new politics” has been exposed as
window dressing for a right-wing politician who is seeking to gain the
White House by assuring the media and the financial aristocracy that
he will ruthlessly defend the interests of finance capital.

These events have exposed both the failure of the capitalist system
and the fundamental class divisions that dominate American society.
They have revealed the two-party system to be nothing other than an
instrument of the financial aristocracy, and the existence, behind the
trappings of democracy, of a plutocracy—the rule of the rich.

The great question is: Who will pay for the crisis?

The Socialist Equality Party rejects the entire framework within which
the Bush administration and the Democratic Party propose to deal with
the financial disaster. However they quibble over minor details, they
all agree that the working class, the overwhelming majority of the
people, must bear the burden of the crisis.

The position of the SEP is that this crisis demonstrates the urgent
need for a fundamental change in both the political structure and
economic system of the United States.

The working class must be mobilized as an independent political force,
in opposition to the plutocracy that rules the United States through
the Democrats and Republicans, the two parties of the capitalist
class.

On this basis, it must advance a socialist solution to the capitalist
catastrophe.

The Socialist Equality Party calls for the nationalization of the
banks and big financial firms—without compensation to their former
owners—and their transformation into public utilities under the
democratic control of the working people. The great financial levers
of society must be freed from private ownership and utilized to
distribute and expand the productive forces to provide for the needs
of the people.

The billions of dollars in social wealth diverted into the private
accounts of speculators and bankers must be recovered, to be used for
the expansion of social programs that benefit the masses.

There must be a public accounting of the fraud and corruption that
have fueled the crisis, and those responsible must be held
accountable, including by means of criminal prosecution.

The books of the major banks, financial firms, insurance companies and
hedge funds must be opened to public examination, to lay bare illegal
and socially destructive activity.

The Socialist Equality Party advocates the creation of a workers’
government—a government of, by and for the working class—to carry out
emergency measures to resolve the crisis in the interests of working
people, including a halt to all foreclosures and repossession of
homes, the creation of millions of public works jobs, a ban on wage-
cutting and layoffs, and an enormous expansion in public services.

This program is being advanced in the 2008 elections by the
presidential and vice-presidential candidates of the SEP, Jerome White
and Bill Van Auken.

We call on all those who see the need for a socialist alternative to
support this campaign and join the Socialist Equality Party (http://
www.socialequality.com).


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