How Bad Is He?
by Geov Parrish
For most progressives, this presidential election is not a choice
between Al Gore and George W. Bush. It is a choice between Gore and Nader,
or Gore and some other third party candidate, or Gore and not voting.
Bush, like an inescapable force of nature, is simply assumed to be awful.
The question--and it's a question that may well determine Washington
state's electoral votes--then becomes: how bad is Gore? Is he redeemable
enough that it's worth voting for him to prevent Bush from becoming
president, or is he another one of those forces of nature that litter our
corporatocracy?
For the answers, don't turn to the campaigns, where both the
candidates and media are eager to play up the meager differences between
the two men. Turn instead to Gore's substantial record, as son of
privilege, congressman, senator, and vice president. It is consistent and
unrelenting in its effort to move the Democratic Party into the corporate
boardrooms of America. Here's a sample:
War on Drugs: A marijuana smoker in his early years, Gore now
pushes hard for the policies that have imprisoned a record two million
people in America-- more than the entire population of the state of West
Virginia. He supported introduction of the federal death penalty for over
60 crimes, mostly drug dealing offenses, and calls for eliminating federal
habeus corpus.
Military Attacks: Sen. Gore was one of the few Democratic Senators
to lobby long and hard, during the contentious debate preceding it, in
favor of the Gulf War. He also supported "intervention" in Grenada, Libya,
Panama, Somalia, Haiti, Sudan, and Yugoslavia. He is an ardent supporter
of militarism in any situation where the United States claims a
"humanitarian" motive. As senator, Gore was a key proponent of development
of the MX missile; now, he supports $60 billion for Star Wars (the
ludicrously renamed "National Missile Defense").
Civil Rights: Gore's "Reinventing Government" initiatives of 1993
and 1994 were a successful, and thinly disguised, attack on minority
protections in the civil service. In 1980, he supported a bill by Rep. Bob
Dornan of California that preserved tax-exempt status for schools that
barred black students.
Supreme Court: Before Anita Hill went public, Gore was a strong
supporter of the Supreme Court nomination of Clarence Thomas, enthusing,
"I believe there is no question of Judge Thomas' competence...he possesses
a quick and incisive intellect. He speaks and writes with precision,
power, and persuasiveness..." Sen. Gore also voted to approve the most
reactionary member of the Supreme Court, a corporate lawyer named Antonin
Scalia.
Abortion: Gore opposed abortion rights for most of his
congressional career, speaking of "a fetus' right to life." He supported
the Hyde Amendment banning federal funding for abortions for poor women,
and even at one point opposed a provision allowing exceptions in the case
of rape. He voted for an unsuccessful House measure that defined a fetus
as a person from the moment of conception, and denied federal funding to
any hospital or clinic that provided an abortion.
Gay Rights: Gore also voted in 1980 for an amendment prohibiting
the Legal Services Corporation from assisting people discriminated against
because of their (real or perceived) sexual orientation. In August 1986 he
voted for a Jesse Helms amendment forcing the District of Columbia to
overturn a law prohibiting insurance companies from discriminating against
HIV+ applicants.
A year later, he voted to prohibit HIV+ immigrants from settling
in the U.S. At the behest of pharmaceutical corporations, he has led
efforts to prevent South Africa from introducing affordable generic HIV
drugs.
Free Trade: The Democratic Party platform this year touts Gore's
role in brokering "more than 200 trade agreements, including NAFTA and
GATT [WTO]," and calls for fast track authority to sidestep future
congressional opposition to such disasters.
Welfare Reform: The same Gore-crafted platform crows over the
dismantling of the federal welfare program and vows to crack down on "food
stamp fraud," long a bugaboo of the far right. Gore successfully lobbied
Bill Clinton, over the unanimous objections of Clinton's entire Cabinet,
to sign the harshest possible welfare reform bill.
Environment: Gore has long-standing financial interests, now
totaling $500,000 in stock, in Occidental Petroleum, which is threatening
the very existence of the U'Wa tribe in Colombia. In a scam reminiscent of
the Teapot Dome, Occidental was the lucky beneficiary of a 1996 Gore plan
to sell off a strategic military oil reserve outside Bakersfield. His
energ plan calls mostly for tax breaks for energy companies. Gore also
signed off on strip mining adjacent to one of the most popular state parks
in his home state of Tennessee. As vice president, he has led U.S. efforts
to stonewall international agreements on ozone levels and global warming,
and calls for "protecting the environment without trapping businesses in a
tangle of red tape"--code for abolishing inconveniences like the
Endangered Species Act.
Labor: During the Carter presidency, Gore provided one of the key
votes that sank a bill aimed at expanding unions' rights to picket during
a strike.
During Bill Clinton's 1992 and 1996 presidential campaigns,
liberals argued that sure, Clinton sounded conservative, but once elected
he would do the right thing. He almost never did, of course, but in 2000
liberals are focusing on how bad, or how stupid, George W. Bush is. They
aren't even trying to make a Clintonesque apology for Gore. There is no
chance that he'll do the right thing. He never has.
On all of these issues--with the exception of military
intervention, where he is actually less of a hawk--Bush is just as bad.
But when a President Bush acts on such issues, there is opposition. When
Gore does it, politicians and pundits proclaim a national consensus, and
dissenters are shunted aside. With this formula, the Clinton/Gore
administration achieved in its eight years countless destructive policies
that Reagan and Bush Sr. advocated but could not push through. Gore is
more conservative than Clinton, and more effective than Bush. His
administration will be a nightmare.
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