I admit: It’s all speculation.
On April 4th, I wrote on Facebook: “My prediction: the next
President of the United States will be someone who is not yet in the race.
(e.g., Possible alternative Dem ticket: Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren.) How
crazy am I?”
This wasn’t just a wild guess. It was based on a few considered
convictions.
The first major conviction is that Bernie Sanders was not going to be
Democratic nominee.
To begin with, the Democratic Party, an institution dedicated to
plutocratic class rule and imperialism, would not allow Bernie Sanders to be
their nominee. The plutocracy will not permit Bernie Sanders to be the CEO of American
and world capitalism, let alone the Commander-in-Chief of the American empire.
Furthermore, Bernie Sanders does not want to play either of those roles.
He entered the race, as his advisors acknowledged to the New York Times, “to spread his political message about a
rigged America rather than do whatever it took to win the nomination,“ and
he has repeatedly pledged to support whomever the Democrats nominate.
Whatever unexpected and undeniable success his campaign has had, it’s a
“political revolution” that will be limited to exerting pressure on the Democratic
Party and its eventual nominee. One can complain that it’s been blocked by electoral
hijinks or by the anti-democratic superdelegates, but those sores have been
festering for a long time in the party Bernie chose to run in. At this point,
if Hillary comes to the convention with one more pledged delegate and more
popular votes than Bernie—which she will—she will win fair and democratically
square—and any attempt by him to use superdelegates against her would
contradict his own erstwhile complaints about them. At any rate, those
supredelegates were put in place expressly to prevent anyone like him from
becoming the nominee, and are not going to be persuaded, even by wonderful
arguments based on electoral logic, to forsake their duty. Which of these folks is
going to switch to Bernie because polls show he’d do better against Trump in
the general?
Bernie’s not going to turn the superdelegates, and he knows it. He has never been, and is still not, a threat
to win the nomination, and the Democratic Party knows it. Stlll, Bernie has run
harder, and been undeniably more successful than anyone expected. He’s been a stubborn obstacle to Hillary’s
expected coronation, and this has had some real effects. It has even forced
Hillary to making positive noises about “Medicare-for-some.” More importantly,
it has exposed her deep political weaknesses, stemming from her commitment to
establishment politics as well as her unlikeability. Bernie has won a string of
impressive victories, and is showing persistent strength among key
demographics. He may prevent Hillary from going to the convention with enough
pledged delegates to win without superdelegate votes, and that would be a
significant political insult to Hillary. But she’ll get those votes and get
over it.
The Sanders campaign will not stop Hillary, and knows it. It is now
focused on getting some progressive platform concessions. Because we can all remember the many times a
President has said: "OMG, I can't do that. It contradicts what's in the
platform."
With Hillary as the nominee, supported by Bernie, the Democratic Party
will once again have the heavily favored candidate of Wall Street, the neocons,
and the media, and all will be right with the world. Of course, this will do
some damage to the Democratic Party. It will alienate Bernie’s supporters, some
fraction of whom will refuse to vote for Hillary. But not enough to deprive her
of a November victory, or to prise a single cold finger of the ruling class’s
hand from its grip on the Party and the country. It’s become clear that there’s
a crisis of legitimacy for Hillary, and for the electoral duopoly as a whole,
but the plutocracy will be content with having eight more years to prolong the
problem.
But what if, for some other reason, Hillary can’t win? What’s the
Democratic Party plan B?
Hint: It’s not Bernie.
There are a couple of wild cards in play that could knock Hillary out.
One is her health. I’ve thought for a
few years that she was showing some weakness. This has certainly not been
visible during the campaign, so it remains a purely speculative concern.
The other, however, is very real: Her email server.
Despite the attempt of liberal commenters (and Bernie Sanders) to insist
“There's nothing to see here. Move along,” it is inexcusable, and prima facie illegal, for a Secretary of State to keep state
documents concerning sensitive diplomatic and national security matters on a
private server in her bathroom. We now know this included
information that was classified “Above Top Secret/SAP” (Special Access Programs). SAPs are the “crown jewels” of
the intelligence community, Area 51-type secrets. Apparently, a Romanian guy
who calls himself “Guccifer” hacked her
server (“and it was pretty easy”), and the Russians hacked
him.
So the Russians now have about 20,000 of her emails, presumably containing all
the American state secrets they were able to collect from HIllaryNet, which
they are deciding whether and when to release. Clearly, from the U.S.
government’s point of view, Hillary created a serious security problem, and
from her campaign’s point of view, a looming threat.
Also relevant to those who profess interest in open and accountable
governance, is the fact that her powder-room PC violated federal rules designed “to make and preserve records to be readily
available when needed, such as for congressional inquiries or FOIA requests.” Pardon
me for thinking, especially since her lawyers have already deleted 30,000 of
them, that hiding documents from public scrutiny might have been precisely the
point.
But it doesn’t make any difference what I think. It’s what the FBI
thinks that matters. In that regard, we should take notice that the FBI has
extradited Guccifer, and is now interrogating Hillary’s close aides. Yesterday
Cheryl Mills, who was Clinton’s Chief of Staff as Secretary of State, walked
out of an FBI interview, according to the Washington Post, “after being
asked about emails.” And today (May 11th), I got a message from a
friend of mine, who’s been a close supporter of Hillary for a long time, saying
that the FBI interviews with her staff are not going well, and it’s “disturbing.”
Seeds of doubt? Is it a coincidence that that the Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren pairing gets national press the day after Hillary’s Chief of Staff walks out of an FBI interrogation?
Don’t get me wrong. I, of course, think that Obama will do his best to
steer the FBI investigation away from incriminating Hillary, who is too cherished
an establishment fish to fry.
Unless, that is, the head of the FBI, James Comey, or a quorum of his
senior agents, refuses to toe the line. Yesterday, Comey rejected Hillary’s attempt
to downplay the FBI investigation as a “routine inquiry.” Comey is also the guy
who, as Acting Attorney General in 2004, refused the order of his boss, John
Ashcroft, to re-authorize a surveillance program Comey thought was illegal.
Or unless the Russians, who seem to have a soft spot for the Donald, release
something fatally damaging. Would it not destroy her campaign if they just showed
that they were able to get the documents from her server?
Or unless it becomes clear that Trump has, and will use, seriously
damaging information from the FBI and/or SVR.
Or unless….
Turns out there are a number of possible scenarios in which the email
card, played against Hillary’s other weak cards—her increasingly obvious
unlikeability, her rejection by youth and white workers, her inability to force
Bernie out on schedule at all—will force her to fold.
Whatever anybody says in public, it’s inconceivable that Hillary, and the
DNC/Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, are not worrying—at least thinking—about this in some juice-filled room. And for the latter, that means preparing—at least
considering—a plan B.
Well, it’s obvious, isn’t it? Bernie Sanders, who has won all the elections
and delegates and stuff, becomes, by acclamation, the presidential nominee of
the Democratic Party.
Unless, that is, the plutocrats, corporations, bankers, lobbyists,
militarists, Zionists, et. al., who actually
run the Democratic Party, say: “Over our dead bodies!” (If only.) Which they
will. If Hillary is forced out, Bernie
will then, for the first time, be a threat, and there will be a response unlike
anything we’ve seen so far. I hope Bernie and his supporters understand that the
Democratic Party and the powers behind it will do anything—at least as much as
the Republicans did against Trump—to stop Bernie Sanders from getting the
nomination.
What’s a tragically torn party to do? At this point, Bernie would
probably be able to take the nomination if he insisted. He would have a ton of
pledged delegates, and a good chance at cobbling together a majority from all
the others now floating free. On the other hand, he is still unacceptable.
Bernie and the party will have reached the dog-who-caught-the-car moment
I imagined in a previous post, except a lot
further down the road, with Bernie wielding a lot more political capital. The
party establishment will not be able to frontally attack, or summarily dismiss
him, but they can still warn him that he faces the McGovern effect in the
general election: listless party support, while the ruling class money and media
suddenly realize their lesser
evil—Donald Trump—isn’t so bad, after all.
If Bernie takes the nomination, it will tear the party apart, Indeed,
for him to succeed any further, he will have to accept and embrace that civil
war he has created in the party, and seize and thoroughly radicalize the entire
party apparatus.
I still do not think Bernie wants to, or can, do that. I also recognize
that he has fought harder and longer than I (or he, at the outset) thought, and
shows no outward sign that he would shy from taking the nomination if he could
get it. At this point, with the enthusiasm he has generated, if he were to
accede to anyone else, he would risk destroying his own political credibility, while
still tearing the party apart. And he and the party know this.
Unless, perhaps, the party could come up with a ticket that Bernie and a
large portion of his followers could persuade themselves embodies his
progressive political message. There is, of course, only one other person in
the Democratic Party who could make that happen, whose progressive populist cred
rivals that of Bernie Sanders—and that is Elizabeth Warren.
If the party establishment lost Hillary Clinton, and wanted to propose
an alternative to Bernie Sanders, it would have to include Elizabeth Warren. She
hits many of the same buttons as Bernie: the pernicious influence of money in
politics, the scandal of student debt, he need to rein in big banks, etc. She
would combine a strong dose of educated economic progressivism—highlighted in
the present context by her viralized, devastating, critique of Hillary’s fealty
to Wall Street on Bill Moyers—with the feminist
identity-politics appeal that Hillary plays to. A woman who claims to have created “the
intellectual foundation” for Occupy Wall Street! What more could Democratic
progressives ask for?
Of course, with Warren carrying such credentials a public image—a
“fevered Marxist,” according to Trump supporter, Jeffrey Lord—the party would have
to soothe establishment anxiety by pairing her, as VP, with an establishment-friendly
but likeable guy with a stabilizing hand: Biden-Warren, that’s the ticket! Joe
Biden (Al Gore could be an alternate) is an uninspiring but reliable hand on
the tiller, but he’s an Obama favorite and loyalist. Position Warren as the passionate Joan of Arc
who will help a united party slay the Donald, and as the inevitable,
progressive face of the Democratic Party’s future, and you’ve got a package
that starts to look saleable.
Still not enough, though. You would have to include a very nice prize before
Bernie would buy that box of Cracker Jacks. Bernie has gone a long way, and his
accrued political capital demands a real and immediate payoff. There would have
to be a firm, public, irreversible promise of something significant—an
undeniable concession such as
single-payer healthcare for all or forgiveness of student loans, that would
allow Bernie and his supporters to say they made a real difference. Now you’d
have a package that they might buy.
They would, I’m afraid, be getting
a snake in the box. Outside of the
fevered minds of the most dull-witted conservatives, Elizabeth Warren is not
only no “Marxist,” she is no Bernie Sanders. Try Hillary-Lite. Yes, she would push for some substantive reforms,
but on an “intellectual foundation” oriented toward rationalizing capitalism.
As more perspicacious conservatives like ChristopherCaldwell see, she’s a “closet conservative.” Hillary Clinton broke with the Republicans
in college; Elizabeth Warren was a Republican into her forties. Why? Because
“It worried me whether or not the government played too activist a role.” Indeed,
when asked whether she voted
for arch-conservative Ronald Reagan, who shared the same worry, she refused to
answer. So we know the answer.
Warren still thinks “There
should be some Republicans and some Democrats,” with Republicans “providing
some healthy opposition.” The consistent principle of her quest it to look for “people
who best supported markets.” I’m not
sure about Occupy Wall Street, but that’s Elizabeth Warren’s “intellectual
foundation.” It’s in the Clintonite Democratic Party that she found a home for
promoting that, and herself, politically.
Elizabeth Warren’s other important qualification is her full-on embrace
of imperialism and Zionism. As Dave Swanson says, She’s “perfectly fine
with the wars but wants the bankers to help pay for them.”
Then again, this is consistent with a strain of “left” populism that’s
OK with ignoring—until they become refugees—those millions of people in
societies destroyed by American and its allies and proxies throughout the
Middle East—a “progressivism” that doesn’t want to think too much about the
ongoing wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria, or about the ongoing aggression
and apartheid imposed on millions of Palestinians, or about “kill lists.” We
don’t have to talk about all that nasty, complicated stuff, if shutting up gets
us a $15 minimum wage. Progressive Except Imperialism. Not nasty old white-man
Republican imperialism, of course; shiny new equal-opportunity, single-payer
imperialism.
Wait: Progressive populist domestic policies, rationalizing without
overturning capitalism, benign indifference at best to American
exceptionalism…maybe a bit like Bernie, after all. Hillary-lite, Bernie-heavy.
Bottom line: Bernie would have achieved, in less than a year, some major
reform that had eluded progressive forces for decades. As it did in response to
every successful reform effort, the ruling class would have paid a price. It
will be a price the plutocracy considered necessary for keeping its deadly grip
on the American political process, thereby preserving its options for
recovering any loss, and then some, down the road.
Whatever. Unlikely to happen. Just a “What if?”
It’s almost certain that Hillary Clinton will be the nominee of the
Democratic Party and the next President of the United States. But if,
perchance, she gets derailed by a deus ex
machina like the FBI, you can bet that the Democratic Party will have a
Plan B, and it won’t be Bernie Sanders. It will be an attempt to stop Bernie Sanders. Perhaps it is just
a coincidence that a Joe Biden-Elizabeth Warren ticket gets mentioned in the
national press the day after Hillary’s Chief of Staff walks out of an FBI
interrogation. Or is someone floating a balloon?
Would Bernie ever bite? Maybe
not, but if the day comes, it’s some dish like this that the Democratic Party
will try to serve.
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