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Why the Occupy Wall Street Movement Scares the Democratic Party

MARK VORPAHL FOR BUZZFLASH AT TRUTHOUT

Fueled by a long simmering anger over the economic crisis, the continuing enrichment of a tiny corporate elite who brought this crisis on, and the lack of any political voice for the great majority of people, the Occupy Wall Street Movement has spread to hundreds of cities across the nation, mobilizing hundreds of thousands in an undeniable display of strength. The growing involvement of unions in these developments both testifies to how broad this discontent is and its potential power to mobilize and organize millions. The 99 percent have had enough, and growing numbers are now taking to the streets to make an impact.

We are witnessing the birth of a social movement that has the potential to win economic justice. Having only recently exploded onto the scene, there are many directions this movement may take. The only certainty is that, since the conditions that fueled it are not going away any time soon, it is, at the very least, a harbinger of larger struggles to come.

Some have argued that the Occupy Wall Street Movement has a relationship to the Democratic Party similar to the Tea Party's relationship to the Republicans. This is wrong on several counts. The Tea Party and its message was cooked up, funded, and molded by corporate interests such as the Koch brothers. It attempted to mobilize people by tapping into their fears of where the country is going while dressing up a corporate political agenda in populist rags. There was never a doubt that this would eventually strengthen the far right in the Republican Party who quickly identified with the Tea Party's cause.

Relations stand very differently between the Occupy Wall Street Movement and the Democratic Party. This movement has no big Wall Street interests channeling funds into their organizing activities. By targeting economic inequality and injustice brought on by Wall Street's rule, the movement has placed itself in direct opposition to the largest financial contributors to and policy makers of the Democratic Party. While Democratic Party politicians may mouth support for some of the issues that have united the movement, any measures they can effectively promote will not come close to adequately addressing working peoples real needs.

To understand why that is the case requires that one follow the money. All the community organizations and unions combined cannot come close to matching the wealth of the corporate elite. The Democratic Party is a machine that has been built and is maintained by funds from their deep pockets. If any Democratic politicians seriously do try to support measures that address workers' needs that the Occupy Wall Street Movement is putting on the table, it will be at odds with the Democratic Party's purpose. Of course, Democratic politicians will continue to voice support for issues raised by the Occupy Wall Street Movement, such as taxing the rich, but they only do this during election campaigns or when they know that there is no chance of passing any relevant bills.

In an attempt at damage control, President Obama recently acknowledged that the Occupy Wall Street Movement "...expresses the frustrations the American people feel..." However, he still used the press conference to justify his massive bank bailouts. This is typical of President Obama, betraying his occasional populist posturing with policies that enrich the top 1 percent at the expense of everyone else.

President Obama's recent support for a 5.6 percent tax on millionaires and the American Jobs Act will be spun as examples of his attempts to address the anger that gave birth to the Occupy Wall Street Movement. However, such claims cannot withstand serious scrutiny. The 5.6 percent millionaires' tax is a paltry amount when compared to the overall enrichment the corporate elite has enjoyed under Obama's administration. With American companies sitting on $2 trillion in cash rather than investing in job creation, Obama's tax the rich gesture is peanuts. Much of the $447 billion slated for the American Jobs Act is in the form of corporate tax give-aways, and a large amount of its funding will come from cuts to Medicare and Medicaid. At best it will result in the creation of 2 million jobs while there are 24 million unemployed and underemployed.

But aside from its paltry status, Obama's millionaire tax increase will only fool those who have not had time to pay close attention. If Obama were serious, he would have introduced this measure when the Democrats controlled both houses of Congress. By waiting until the Republicans control the House to raise this proposal, when it has no chance of passing, Obama is revealing that he is simply playing politics and campaigning for the next election; he is parroting popular measures without having to worry about alienating his wealthy supporters since they all know the proposal is dead in the water.

Given all this, President Obama's prediction that the Occupy Wall Street's frustration will "express itself politically in 2012" appears to be wishful thinking when it comes to a flood of support into the voting booths. Many of the participants in this movement were enthusiastic supporters of candidate Obama in 2008. The bitterness of their disappointment cannot be forgotten and it is unlikely that they will embrace him again.

The Occupy Wall Street Movement needs to remain independent of both Wall Street parties and corporate cash. While many participants, especially the unions, will endorse Democratic candidates in 2012, this movement should not allow itself to give into the habit of endorsing "the lesser evil" and restricting its activities and demands according to what corporate candidates say is possible. It must continue to speak to the experience and needs of working people with mass united action rather than be diverted by knocking on doors for the Democrats. The history of social movements in this country shows that getting caught up in the Democratic Party leads to paralysis, entropy, and even the death of hope of bringing about significant change.

As the Occupy Wall Street expands to include unions and greater numbers of unorganized workers, it will be necessary to find specific concrete demands that the majority of working class people are ready to unite and mobilize around at this time. Demands focusing on government funded job creation, taxing the rich, no cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, and ending the wars are a likely good start, because all of them have huge support, according to the polls.

If the Occupy Wall Street Movement is to grow, it will also have to transform itself. In the process of bringing in greater numbers, firming up greater unity with unions, and organizing larger actions, it will have to perfect its democratic practices, develop organizational structures on a national and local level, as well as put forward a leadership structure that is transparent and completely accountable to the general membership. In the process of evolving into a democratic movement, it will be possible to create an alternative to the parties of Wall Street and corporate America, that is, a Labor Party that fights on behalf of the vast majority.

While such an outcome may not be likely at this time for the participants of the Occupy Wall Street Movement, the logical course of its struggle may compel it to move in this direction. If so, it will be the product of a process that has the power to fundamentally change the political and economic structure of this nation.

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Mark Vorpahl is a union steward, social jus7tice activist, and writer for Workers Action. He may be reached at portland@workerscompass.org.

 




Just Give Me Some Truth

"In an attempt at damage control, President Obama recently acknowledged that the Occupy Wall Street Movement "...expresses the frustrations the American people feel..." However, he still used the press conference to justify his massive bank bailouts. This is typical of President Obama, betraying his occasional populist posturing with policies that enrich the top 1 percent at the expense of everyone else."

This is an absurd statement by the author and is typical of Progressive media. This is the big myth that is peddled daily on the Left. One might remind Mr. Vorpahl, that without the TARP, there would be no economy enriching anyone, and the 99% would be a helluva lot worse off than they are today.

Does anybody recall that the initial gripe of the "Baggers" was what the media has termed the "bank bailouts"? What strange bedfellows politics makes when an apparent progressive commentator apes a Right Wing, corporate funded, so called grass-roots political movement. Of course, the "Baggers" are mostly charter members of the 99% but citizens of their ilk have voted against their own economic interests for years. So perhaps winding up in bed together is not all that strange, except the "Baggers" seem to be unwilling partners.

Lefties have long ago come to the conclusion that portraying the only cause of the Great Recession as Wall Street's greed, furthers their own agenda. It is a simple story to tell and provides a convenient target for the animus of the disaffected. It doesn't seem to matter to Progressives that the truth is much more complicated.

Are Progressives now Anarchists, or are they willing to work within the system to effectuate change? Or, does the Movement wish to tear down the existing framework and start over from scratch? Or, do the Ninety Niners wanna go the third party route? To many that have spent a lifetime working hard and playing by the rules and yes, achieving a degree of financial security, these questions seem reasonable to ask.

Anarchists?

That is your question. What are you even talking about when you cite the TARP bill that was put together by former Bush Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and signed by George W. Bush in late 2008? Barack Obama was not even a player in passing the TARP bill since he wasn't president then. Now that the fat cats have been bailed out they are sitting on $3 trillion which Republicans say they don't want to invest because of "uncertainty and volatility."

Yet, it is Barack Obama who is being accused of bailing out the big bankers and financial institutions by the odious, subversive Republicans who have not passed a single piece of legislation creating one single job since they have taken over with their lopsided control of the House in November 2010.

You miss the larger issue that it is livable wage jobs the 99% are protesting over and a decades-long outsourcing of jobs to other countries where labor is cheap and health and retirement benefits are paltry to none.

If you are so happy with accepting what you call the "existing framework" then you and your "righties" have a much bigger problem. The existing framework has rotted itself out.

While TPers squawk over "Taxed Enough Already" they don't acknowledge that taxes today are at their lowest in 15 years and federal revenue at its lowest as a percentage of the economy in 60 years.

Yet, rightie after rightie wants to lower capital gains taxes to zero, lower corporate income taxes to zero and dismantle every workplace health and safety regulation on the books, even going so far as to eliminate the EPA entirely.

Take a good look at some of the House bills that are sure to pass if your rapacious Republicans take over every lever of government in 2012. Specifically, read Texas Republican Louie Gohmert's H.R. 2911 and you'll see exactly what the 99ers are protesting.

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/?&Db=d112&querybd=@BANDNOT%28@FIELD%28FLD003+@1%2801801%29%29+@FIELD%28FLD008+%28m%29%29%29#

When you speak of "starting over from scratch" I think that's exactly what the corporate greedheads are aiming for. For them, what they want is a reset of wages back to the early 1900's while leaving intact their current whopping salaries, bonuses and golden parachutes and the real Ponzi schemes like credit default swaps, derivatives, etc.

Have you read Herman Cain's 9-9-9 cockamamie plan? He specifically wants to eliminate all payroll taxes that fund Social Security and Medicare. That's the truth you might want to look at before you start calling progressives anarchists.

The OWS movement isn't just about greed on Wall Street. It is about the gradual and deliberate lowering and erosion of the standard of living in America.

R U a TPer?

Republicans are always coming up with ways to sneak in candidates who pretend to be Democrats, libertarians, liberals or faux movements like the Tea Party for the sole purpose of undermining elections and subverting democracy.

You may call me a "dupe" all you want but I suspect that you are nothing more than a Trojan Horse hoping "Green" will bleed votes from Barack Obama and put even more Republicans in control of our government in 2012.

You may say you are green but I've voted in enough elections to know that a third party isn't even close to becoming a viable alternative to either the Democrats or Republicans.

Check some facts like Florida in 2000 for example. George W. Bush "won" with about 350 votes. Ralph Nader received around 97,000 in Florida. Thanks Ralph Nader -- for 8 years of disaster that we are paying dearly for 10 years later.

If you're so green then I suggest you take your message to Brazil and other equatorial countries where rainforests are being destroyed by the thousands of acres each day. There is no way a Green party or Barack Obama can regrow a forest overnight that the Republican arsonists spent 8 years in burning down. It may even be too late.

Bend Over and Take Another Licking

One thing for sure, with this sort of whining over Barack Obama you can look forward to Republicans running the table in 2012.

"Many of the participants in this movement were enthusiastic supporters of candidate Obama in 2008. The bitterness of their disappointment cannot be forgotten and it is unlikely that they will embrace him again."

O.K., so abandon Barack Obama and the Democrats and sit by while another Ralph Nader pulls in just enough votes to put a doofus like George W. Bush (maybe worse if Perry gets in) in the White House plus the likelihood that Republicans will run the table and capture the U.S. Senate to augment an already lopsided Republican House majority.

But, once Republicans are solidly entrenched in every branch of government you can bet they won't sitting on their laurels and settle for only 4 years of total control. Republicans, in case some haven't noticed, are already light years ahead of Democrat when it comes to messaging and propaganda.

I posted an article here on December 18, 2010 in which I stated the obvious -- that the Tea Party, far from being a grassroots movement, was simply more of the same subterfuge and deceit coming from the Republican Party which rode the wave of discontent and anger to a whopping victory in the House and gains in the Senate. That victory essentially hands the reins of power to the Republicans who can stop any progress regardless of whether it comes from the White House or the U.S. Senate.
http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/12107

Only a resounding victory by Democrats in 2012 will bring any hope of securing protection for the millions of jobless Americans and stop the Republican juggernaut that seeks to privatize every agency in the federal government and gut every social safety net for millions of destitute Americans.

Won't get fooled again

"One thing for sure, with this sort of whining over Barack Obama you can look forward to Republicans running the table in 2012."

THAT'S the "logic" that keeps people voting for the Democrats that pass "free-trade" agreements that outsource American jobs, trash the Constitution, and give away everything to the rich, while scheming to cut Social Security.

The Obama Administration has backed virtually every Republican plan, and DUPES like you CONTINUE to back them! Do you feel better that Obama implemented government murder of American citizens without due process, than if McCain had done it??

Do you feel better it's Obama giving billions of OUR TAX DOLLARS a week to the wealthy defense-industry owners, than if McCain was doing it??

"Only a resounding victory by Democrats in 2012 will bring any hope of securing protection for the millions of jobless Americans..."

Yeah, the Democrats HAD their resounding victory in 2010, and did NOTHING with it! But the suckers continue to vote for them.

The Democrats must have competition from the left to go against their corporate paymasters. You saw this in 2010!

You're a sucker continuing to play a rigged game!

VOTE GREEN!

VOTE GREEN!

You're a little late! This is backtracking from Buzzflash's stubborn support for Obama and the Democratic Party. Where was an article like this before you detected the change in the political wind?

"In the process of evolving into a democratic movement, it will be possible to create an alternative to the parties of Wall Street and corporate America, that is, a Labor Party that fights on behalf of the vast majority."

Wrong again -- There already IS a party that represents CITIZENS' interests: The Green Party! Why are you pretending they don't exist?

The Green Party doesn't accept corporate money, and has been calling for pulling out of the "free-trade" agreements like NAFTA, that export American jobs.

The Green Party has been calling for single-payer health care.

The Green Party has been calling for pulling out of the insane wars that are bankrupting us.

The Green Party has been calling for protecting the environment.

It's taken a decade, but the Green Party has gotten on the ballot in virtually every state. Obstruction by the duopoly has made it hard, but it was accomplished with a lot of work AND NO CORPORATE MONEY!

Want to start a "Labor Party"? Got 10 years to wait? (Answer the second question first.)

A mere 5% of the vote will get the Green Party matching Federal funds, and will make it harder for the corporate Commission on Presidential Debates to censor them. It will also send a strong message to the corporate parties that we're FED UP with the corruption that rigs the game against citizens.

There are Greens running at every level from local, to state, to Federal. Over 100 Greens have won their elections at the local level, and currently hold office: http://www.gp.org/elections/officeholders/index.php

The Ten Key Values (http://www.gp.org/tenkey.shtml ) are designed to promote a more healthy, just, and peaceful society, and are shared by Green-Party members and Green-Party politicians.

These Ten Key Values are also shared by the Green Parties in virtually every other country, making the Green Party uniquely positioned for the international coordination needed to stand up to the multinational corporations.

Want REAL change? VOTE GREEN!