The Wall Street bailout and the threat of dictatorship
By Bill Van Auken, Socialist Equality Party vice presidential
candidate
2 October 2008

Recriminations have continued to reverberate internationally over the
vote in the US House of Representatives Monday to reject a $700
billion bailout package for the Wall Street banks.

Much of the opposition in the 228-to-205 vote to defeat the bailout
was attributed to representatives—Democratic and Republican alike—who
face tight races for their seats in November and fear being tarred by
their opponents as shills for Wall Street who handed over hundreds of
billions in taxpayers’ money to the CEOs and speculators who are
responsible for the crisis.

In this sense, the overwhelming hostility of ordinary working people
toward this massive transfer of public resources to the super-rich
found its expression, highly distorted as it was, in the measure’s
temporary demise.

What is the lesson drawn by much of the political establishment, as
reflected in media commentary? That the American government is too
susceptible to the will of the people to respond as required to the
demands of finance capital.

This is the theme sounded in a number of commentaries, some of them
penned by individuals with significant ties to ruling circles.

Representative of this ideological trend is a column in Wednesday’s
Washington Post by Michael Gerson, George W. Bush’s former chief
speechwriter and senior advisor, who is currently a senior fellow at
the Council on Foreign Relations. Entitled “Too Small for a Big
Crisis,” the piece portrays a dysfunctional Congress.

Gerson begins by characterizing the vote with a lurid historical
metaphor. “The Bastille of establishment opinion has been stormed and
taken, at least temporarily,” he writes. “But the revolution has
irresponsibility in its soul.”

He notes that the vote came despite the overarching unanimity within
the ruling elite in support of the bailout. “[S]eldom has America’s
governing elite been more united in response to a national challenge,”
he writes, with the administration, the leadership of both major
parties and both the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates
all supporting the bailout proposal.

After apportioning blame between “partisan” Democrats and Republicans
wedded to “ideological purity,” Gerson gets to the heart of his
concerns.

“Though some compromise may eventually be passed,” he declares, “it is
now clear that American political elites have lost the ability to
quickly respond to a national challenge by imposing their collective
will. What once seemed like politics as usual now seems more like the
crisis of the Articles of Confederation—a weak government populated by
small men. And this must be more frightening to a world dependent on
American stability than any bank failure.”

Gerson’s second historical analogy drawn from the age of the great
bourgeois revolutions is as potted as the first. The crisis of the
Articles of Confederation gave rise to the House of Representatives
and the US Constitution that created it. Neither was crafted with the
aim of allowing “political elites” to quickly impose their “collective
will.”

The Constitution’s Article 1 created Congress as the first branch of
the US government, meant to most closely reflect the will of the
people. This was true, in particular, of the House, with its members
subject to popular election every two years. Those who drafted the
Constitution envisioned the body as a bastion against tyranny,
endowing it with the power to oust presidents through impeachment and
the exclusive ability to initiate legislation raising revenues, thus
enabling it to exert decisive power over the national purse.

Of course, such principles and powers have been steadily eroded over
the course of many decades, with the consolidation of ever-greater
power in the hands of an imperial presidency. Over the last eight
years, this process has accelerated dramatically, with Congress
accepting the imposition of a president installed in office by means
of electoral fraud and the diktat of a Republican majority on the US
Supreme Court, then rubber-stamping a criminal war and collaborating
in sweeping attacks on basic democratic rights. Those who fill the
House seats are indeed “small” men and women, dominated by concerns
for their political careers and subservient to the big business
interests that control both major parties.

Yet, to the extent that these miserable politicians are still
influenced even in the most limited manner by mass sentiments that run
counter to the interests of America’s corporate and financial rulers,
the present set-up is deemed to have become intolerable.

“This is dangerous,” writes Thomas Friedman, the senior foreign policy
columnist for the New York Times, in a column published Wednesday. “We
have House members, many of whom I suspect can’t balance their own
checkbooks, rejecting a complex rescue package because some voters,
whom I fear also don’t understand, swamped them with phone calls. I
appreciate the popular anger against Wall Street, but you can’t deal
with this crisis this way.”

In short, the opposition of the majority of the American people cannot
be allowed to stand in the way of a “complex rescue package” designed
by “experts” like Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Goldman Sachs’s
former CEO, for the purpose of bailing out his colleagues on Wall
Street and rescuing the fat portfolios of individuals like Friedman.

George Will, the Washington Post’s pompous right-wing columnist, had a
few choice words of advice: “Congress should disconnect from a public
that cannot be blamed for being more furious about than comprehending
this opaque debacle.” So much for the “House of the People.”

Across the Atlantic, where furor reigned in financial circles over the
bailout’s defeat, media reaction was even more blunt. The Times of
London carried a prominent column entitled “Congress is the Best
Advert for Dictatorship.”

“The most flattering reading of the turmoil in Congress this week has
been that this is democracy in action,” wrote columnist Camilla
Cavendish Wednesday. “Personally, I have never felt more attracted to
benign dictatorship.”

This provocative language, drawing the logical conclusion of the anti-
democratic sentiments being expressed more widely, ultimately
expresses the objective ramifications of the economic and social
crisis that is eating away at US and world capitalism.

The crisis is being utilized to effect an ever more immense
concentration of economic power that is incompatible with political
democracy. Three banking behemoths—Citigroup, Bank of America and
JPMorgan Chase—are gobbling up their failing competitors and now
control fully a third of US bank deposits.

At the same time, the crisis is intensifying the social inequality
that pervades every aspect of life in America, a country where the top
1 percent has more wealth than the bottom 90 percent combined. Layoffs
and foreclosures are mounting, while workers are suffering sharp cuts
in real wages. It is under these conditions that the ruling elite is
attempting to ram through the greatest transfer of wealth to the
financial oligarchy in history.

These intense social antagonisms cannot be contained within America’s
existing political set-up. The furor over the vote in the House serves
as a warning that capitalism in crisis will inevitably move toward new
forms of rule capable of defending the economic dictatorship of
finance capital by means of an open political dictatorship against the
working class.

This threat cannot be confronted within the framework of the existing
two-party system. It demands an irrevocable break with the Democratic
Party and the organization of a new, independent political movement of
the working class fighting for the socialist reorganization of
society. This is the alternative advanced by the Socialist Equality
Party and its candidates in the US presidential election, Jerry White
for president and myself for vice president.

To find out more about the SEP campaign, visit www.socialequality.com
or contact us.




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