McCain-Palin campaign’s attacks on Obama: a whiff of fascism
By Bill Van Auken, Socialist Equality Party candidate for vice
president
10 October 2008
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Faced with dwindling poll numbers and an increasingly hostile
political environment created by the economy’s dizzying downward
spiral, the Republican campaign of John McCain and Sarah Palin has
responded with a virulently right-wing appeal directed to the most
politically backward layers in America.

Campaign rallies for the Republican presidential and vice-presidential
candidates have taken on an increasingly angry and even violent tone.

Virulent denunciations of Democratic presidential candidate Barack
Obama delivered by Palin at campaign rallies in Florida this week were
met with shouts from the crowd of “treason” and, in one case, “kill
him.”

At an event in New Mexico, McCain delivered a stock rhetorical line
aimed at invoking fears of the Democratic candidate: “Who is Barack
Obama?” Without missing a beat, a shout came back from the audience:
“terrorist.”

The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank reported from a campaign rally in
Clearwater, Florida in which the crowd, inspired by Palin’s attacks on
the media, turned on reporters shouting abuse and waving sticks.
“Others hurled obscenities at a camera crew,” Milbank recounted. “One
supporter shouted a racial epithet at an African-American sound
man ... and told him, ‘Sit down boy.’”

Last February, McCain felt compelled to disassociate himself from a
right-wing talk radio announcer who, in introducing the Republican
candidate, referred to his Democratic rival as “Barack Hussein Obama,”
with the accent on the middle name. Now the reference has become
routine at Republican rallies, feeding into a general theme of the
campaign that the Democratic senator from Illinois not only cannot be
trusted, but is a potential terrorist, and making a barely concealed
appeal to racism.

“Think how you’ll feel on November 5 if you wake up in the morning and
see the news that Barack Obama—that Barack Hussein Obama—is the
president-elect of the United States,” Lehigh County Republican Party
chairman Bill Platt declared in a warm-up speech for Sarah Palin in
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The remark was met with loud boos.

The atmosphere in these Republican events resembles more and more that
of a lynch mob. And the continuous attempts to paint Obama as a
“traitor” and “terrorist” have the potential of inciting real
violence, including attempts on the Democratic candidate’s life.

At the center of this extreme right-wing turn in the Republican
campaign strategy is a McCarthyite smear campaign linking Obama to
William Ayers, a former member of the 1960s-era Weather Underground
group, who today holds the title of “distinguished professor” of
education at the University of Illinois at Chicago and is a liberal
reformist.

The McCain campaign unveiled a 90-second Internet campaign ad that
rehashes the fact that Ayers hosted an event in his home when Obama
was running for state senator in 1995 and that the two subsequently
served together on the board of a non-profit organization.

Cutting back and forth between photos of Obama and Ayers, it concludes
with the narrator’s ominous sounding voice-over: “Obama’s friendship
with terrorist Ayers isn’t the issue. The issue is Barack Obama’s
judgment and candor. When Obama just says, ‘This is a guy who lives in
the neighborhood,’ Americans says, ‘Where’s the truth, Barack?’ Barack
Obama, too risky for America.”

McCain echoed the same witch-hunting theme virtually verbatim at a
campaign event in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Thursday: “Look, we don’t
care about an old washed-up terrorist and his wife, who still, at
least on Sept. 11, 2001, said he still wanted to bomb more. That’s not
the point here. The point is Senator Obama said he was just a guy in
the neighborhood. We know that’s just not true. We need to know the
full extent of the relationship because of whether Senator Obama is
telling the truth to the American people or not. That’s the question.”

This thoroughly reactionary campaign, based on half-truths and
innuendo, has been dutifully echoed by the mass media, with the New
York Times publishing a front-page article on the Obama-Ayers
connection last week, MSNBC running an investigative report on the
subject and Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News making it the overriding
political story each and every day.

Ayers—referred to by the McCain campaign as “terrorist Ayers,” as if
it were some military title—is, it deserves pointing out, a private
citizen with no connection to Obama’s presidential campaign. He was
never convicted of any crime nor charged with anyone’s death.

Yet, the clear aim of the Republican campaign is to link him—and by
association, Obama—to the terrorist attacks of September 11, thereby
painting the Democratic candidate as a traitor and unfit for office.

The Weather Underground, the group in which Ayers was a leading
figure, emerged out of the mass opposition to the Vietnam War that saw
millions of Americans take to the streets to demand an end to US
military slaughter.

The group expressed the frustration and disorientation of a section of
the protesters who, despairing of the possibility of winning the
American working class to the struggle against war and capitalism and
influenced by the retrograde theories of Maoism, turned to what they
saw as a more radical form of protest, involving isolated bombings.

During a period in which the US war machine was responsible for
killing over 3 million Vietnamese, the Weather Underground’s
activities cost a total of three lives, all of them members of the
group itself, who were killed in an accidental explosion.

Part of the McCain campaign’s focus on this issue is aimed at
demonizing the mass opposition that helped to force an end to the
Vietnam War and rehabilitating the war itself. Only in this context
can one understand the incongruous accusation by McCain—the former
fighter pilot shot down while bombing heavily populated areas of Hanoi—
that Obama is guilty of associating with someone involved in the
“bombing of innocent civilians.”

The inability of the Obama campaign to mount a direct and forceful
response to this diatribe is bound up with its essential acceptance of
this version of the Vietnam War, expressed in the Democratic
candidate’s continuous “honoring” of McCain’s military service. The
Democrats, no less than the Republicans, are determined to put behind
them the so-called “Vietnam syndrome,” a euphemism for the enduring
hostility of the American people to sacrificing the lives of its youth
in wars of aggression.

While essentially cowing in the face of the Republican smear campaign
over Ayers, the Democrats have done nothing to expose the real dangers
represented by the political forces to which their Republican rivals
are now making such a direct appeal.

The nature of these political layers emerges clearly in the
associations of their vice presidential candidate, Sarah Palin, who
was picked for her ability to “energize the base,” i.e., whip up the
Republican right.

Her husband was a member, and she at least a political sympathizer, of
the Alaska Independence Party (AIP), an outfit that called for the
secession of Alaska from the union and formed the Alaskan chapter of
the Constitution Party, an extreme right-wing organization advocating
Christian theocratic rule in America. Its founder, Joe Vogler, was
killed in 1993 in what was described by the media as a “plastic-
explosives sale gone bad.”

The politics of the AIP paralleled that of the right-wing militia
movement that gave rise to such elements as Timothy McVeigh and Terry
Nichols, the authors of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that claimed
the lives of 168 people.

Moreover, Palin’s central appeal is based on her hard-line anti-
abortion position, embraced by the Christian right and an anti-
abortion movement that has given rise to the largest share of
terrorist attacks carried out on American soil over the past two
decades, including murders of health care practitioners, bombings,
arsons, assaults and threats of violence.

Yet neither the Democratic Party nor the media has shown an
inclination to cast any light on these relations, much less subject
them to the kind of front-page treatment given to the four-decades-old
exploits of William Ayers and his tenuous connections to Obama.

The role of the Christian right and of semi-fascistic elements within
the Republican Party remains the great unmentionable in American
politics. They are accorded political protection and legitimacy
precisely for the role they play in diverting the anger and
frustration of sections of the population into reactionary channels
that serve to prop up the ruling establishment.

The right-wing campaign presently being waged by the Republican Party
has ominous implications. While it is highly questionable whether it
will shift votes from Obama to McCain, it is serving to mobilize the
most reactionary political forces and whip them to a fever pitch.

These forces will not go away after the November election. Given an
Obama victory at the polls, they will be utilized to place continuous
pressure on the incoming administration, driving it ever further
towards the right.

Moreover, under conditions in which the immense crisis of American
capitalism will inevitably produce explosive mass social struggles,
the political sentiments to which the Republicans are appealing today
will tomorrow form the ideological basis for fascistic movements aimed
against the working class.

The Democrats’ inability and unwillingness to answer the attacks
coming from the McCain-Palin campaign demonstrates the impossibility
of countering this threat from the right by voting for Obama. It
requires, above all, the political mobilization of the working class
through the building of an independent party fighting for its own
interests on the basis of a socialist program. This is the alternative
fought for solely by the Socialist Equality Party.

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