-Caveat Lector-

The Empire Has No Clothes

The Globe & Mail, December 15, 2000

America has been the world's democratic role model until this election
stripped our illusions and revealed the naked lust for power that
passes for politics

by Todd Gitlin

Canadians may reasonably wonder whether Americans have gone smash out of
their minds. In recent weeks the same question has been frequently posed by
chad-addled Americans themselves, as they struggled to invoke the sense of
downright weirdness that poured over the land. Some high- (or low-) lights:
The selfsame scion of a blueblood political family who insisted that he
"trusted the people" and not "Washington" delegated as his power-
brokers his father's former secretary of defence, his father's former
secretary of state and campaign manager, and, as his future chief of
staff, Washington's top auto-company lobbyist and servant of the globe-
is-not-warming brigade.
A tribune of "progressivism" declared that a government headed by
two men from big oil companies who are unconvinced the globe is
warming would be no different than a government headed by a
man who had tried, and failed, as Vice-President to impose an energy tax
against the unremitting opposition of oil companies and their hired
representatives in the Republican Congress.
Misled and bewildered, unable to get the on-site help guaranteed
under the law, Palm Beach County Jews cast thousands of ballots for the
most anti-Semitic presidential candidate of the century.
To cap it all, fervent defenders of states' rights appealed not once, but
twice, to the U.S. Supreme Court in far-off Washington, where
steadfast self-proclaimed proponents of judicial restraint shut down
Florida's hand vote-count, a count that had been ordered by
Florida's own Supreme Court, claiming that this legal exercise in
democratic procedure was perpetrating "irreparable harm."
Conservatives lauded the Rehnquist Five for daring to stand up for equal
protection of the law to shut down a partial recount when it was the Bush
camp that had steadfastly resisted a full state-wide version.  "Rarely,"
wrote Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, dissenting (and conspicuously not taking
the traditional trouble to do so "respectfully"), "has this Court rejected
outright an interpretation of state law by a state high court."
This rarity was the measure of what was at stake. Power was at stake. It
was, it always was, as simple as that.
The comedy is not that the country took so long to produce a
president-elect, but that the establishment's post facto rituals of
reassurance will, for a time, persuade some Americans, while to others
these rituals are laughably transparent.
What matters is a tragedy: The Supreme Court judged George W.  Bush's risk
of "irreparable harm" more significant than voters' risk of not getting
their ballots counted. Five justices declared that time had run out for
democratic procedure, after the Bush team did everything they could to run
out the clock, appealing to the federal courts, stopping the vote every
time they could, blasting Mr. Gore for availing himself of legal rights to
protest and contest the results, whereupon the justices were shocked,
shocked to discover that there was no time to count all the votes.
"The majority effectively orders the disenfranchisement of an unknown
number of voters . . .," wrote Justice Ginsburg. There is the nub of the
matter: disenfranchisement. This is the real drama: The rest is smoke and
mirrors.
One achievement of the recent passion play is the revelation (not nearly
well enough reported) of evidence of violations of law and democratic
practice on a tremendous scale in Florida and elsewhere before, on, and
after election day. Before election day, many Florida voters' names were
purged"cleansed" is the nice word used by the Republican-run company hired
by the State of Florida, with Katherine Harris, Bush delegate, presiding
over frequently false claims that they were felons and thus ineligible to vote.
On election day, many eligible Florida voters found their names missing
from the registration rolls. African-American precincts were saddled with
obsolete voting and list-checking machines, while white districts had
state-of-the-art laptops to smooth their way. This was segregation by
technology. Some were stopped on the way to the polls on pretexts all too
familiar from the long history of racial oppression in the South. Haitian
Americans, promised Creole translators, did not get them.  Later, in Miami,
a vote count in progress was shut down by a "bourgeois riot" the term of
choice in the Wall Street Journal, including prominently Republican
officials who jetted down from the North. Now the bourgeois rioters take
power behind a screen of bipartisanship.
Repeatedly during the endless campaign we were told that fat and happy
Americans were indifferent to these candidates whom prosperity drove
helplessly toward the centre, so that rival brands Gore and Bush were
forced to differentiate themselves at the margin, showing off their
respective woofers and tweeters in the form of rival prescription-drug
plans and the like.
But the core partisans understood that the campaign was not the coded dumb
show the candidates were performing. Hard-core conservatives, especially in
the reconstituted Confederacy that is the base of their base, well
understood that Dubya was their guy. The press forgot, but they did not,
that Bush Jr. was the good ole boy who dropped in at Bob Jones University
and the fella who supported South Carolina's right to fly the Confederate flag.
Behind the masquerade, there is a muted war going on. It is the latest
episode of the social-cultural civil war of the Sixties. It is, indeed, "a
war for the soul of America," in the 1992 words of one of its most
passionate exponents and unwitting recipient of thousands of Jewish votes
in Palm Beach County. It is back in earnest and with a vengeance.
On one side, Mr. Gore is Bill Clinton with the polish peeled away.  (No
wonder he acts wooden.) Mr. Clinton is the walking, talking personification
of everything conservatives hated about the Sixties: the smart-talking,
Ivy-Leaguing, draft-dodging, non-inhaling, person-of-colour-loving,
gay-embracing, Hillary-marrying, sumbitch who not only got the girls, he
had the gall to win.
And on the other side, in the person of the easy-schmoozing, empty suit
George W. Bush, a candidate sufficiently rightish to gladden their hearts,
and sufficiently raffish to make the Republicans look like the Party of
Fun, but at the same time sufficiently mealy-mouthed to win, their very own
Bill Clinton.
They had been hungry for a long time, and at long last they were about to
sup. The cup was on its way to the lip. Then look what happened.
No wonder they pulled out the stops, the states-righters in the Supreme
Court riding in at the last minute, a naked cavalry, shedding their robes
of judiciousness to intervene against, a vote count. The Court divided on a
question of principle. What could be more fundamental for a democracy than
the right to vote and to see one's vote count? For five justices, order,
Republican order. For four, the right to vote.
What a civics lesson! We had become rather casual about civics, with
roughly half the voting-age population apparently indifferent to the
exercise of the franchise. But the issue is bedrock. Not so long ago, the
country trembled because the civil-rights movement properly recognized that
the right to vote is a foundation of democratic self-government. Within the
lifetime of the next president of the United States, people took their
lives into their hands for trying to vote, in Florida, too.
Bipartisan wishfulness will coat the nation's airwaves, and it remains to
be seen whether activists on both sides succeed in returning to the classic
political divide between right and left, the question of who decides. For
decades, such lip service was paid to the sacredness of the vote while
institutions were indifferent. While electoral shoddiness and corruption
were widespread, no one cared much. Incumbents remained incumbent and the
big elections weren't so close. The word "disenfranchisement" seemed to
have passed into the graveyard of textbooks.
Now, with abundant evidence of vote-tallying malfeasance on a hitherto
undreamed-of scale belatedly surfacing, we shall see whether partisanship
crystallizes around the essential issue: Whose democracy is this, if
anyone's? The rejuvenated NAACP is organizing statewide hearings on
extending the franchise -- 35 years after the Voting Rights Act was
supposed to settle the matter. Politicians will resist, maneuver, co-opt.
Who knows, dormant populations may come to political life.
In any event, the conflict deserves to be stark, far starker than Mr.
Bush or Mr. Gore wish to make it. Those who extended executive and judicial
hands to stop the count chose the convenience of bureaucrats and
politicians over the rights of the people. The question now is whether, at
this clarifying moment, America will get the partisanship it deserves.
----
Todd Gitlin, professor of culture, journalism and sociology at New York
University, is the author of Sacrifice: A Novel, The Sixties: Years of
Hope, Days of Rage and other books.

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