Source: New Politics
The rituals of the political left are as predictable as they are puzzling. Itās an election year, so we leftists have a sworn duty to reignite, for the 10,000th time, the debate about ālesser-evil voting.ā Glenn Greenwald recently made some comments on the matter, as did Noam Chomsky, and Bruce Levine weighed in in a Counterpunch column on June 19th, and other corners of the facebooking, tweeting, youtubing, altogether self-flogging left have delved into the dull topic, so I canāt resist inserting my two cents too. In accord with my self-identification as #1 Fan of the Great Man, I want to defend the Chomskyan point of view.
I wonāt summarize everything Greenwald, Chomsky, and Levine (who links to the relevant videos) say. What I want to do is just to implore those on the left to heed the suffocating nausea in their gut when, say, watching some such performance as Trumpās in Tulsa on June 20th, and vote against the Infant Beast on November 3. Please. For the sake of the climate that Trump is passionate about destroying, and the children he is passionate about torturing, the immigrants he is passionate about excluding (including ālegalā immigrants whom Obama and Biden never persecuted), the working class he is passionate about punishing, the public lands he is passionate about privatizing, the elementary decency he is passionate about violatingāfor the sake of all that is still worth salvaging in this broken world of ours, please vote against him. Vote to oust him. Which, by inescapable logic, means vote for Biden.
Are the two political parties the same? No. Are they even approximately the same? No. Theyāre growing farther and farther apart, thanks to, on the one hand, the neofascism of the right, and on the other hand, the ādemocratic socialistā insurgency that has already elected leftists to Congress. The political center cannot hold; the momentum is on the right and the left, and the left has begun to drag even the most debased corporatists (Pelosi, Schumer, et al.) at least symbolically in its direction. Hence the ludicrous sight of capitalist minions draped in kente cloth kneeling on the floor of the Capitol. Hence Bidenās relatively progressive policy platform. Hence the progressive bills the House passed in 2019, even before the left-populist wave became as visible as it has been in 2020.
The Democratic Party belongs to business, but there are different sectors of business. Just read Thomas Ferguson. There is āliberalā business and there is fascist business. Liberal business funded Franklin Roosevelt even after he had signed the Wagner and Social Security Acts in 1935 (in fact, it helped write them)ātwo legislative achievements that leftists have celebrated ever since. Liberal business supported the Great Society. If you look at history, every law that has significantly benefited the population wasāof necessityāsupported by some segment of the business community. Otherwise it wouldnāt have gotten anywhere. It would be nice if we didnāt need assistance or at least acquiescence from the liberal side of the ruling class in order to enact desperately needed reforms, but weāre not remotely close to that point yet.
Biden is an obscenity, but he isnāt a neofascist. That consideration alone should be decisive. Heās done terrible things (so has Sanders, by the way), but the political context is changing. The Democrats of the 2020s will not be the Democrats of the 1990s. They wonāt be socialists either (except in rare cases), but we have to live in the real world. We have to oust the aspiring fascists before we can make really constructive changes. At the absolute least, we have to prevent things from getting drastically worseāwhich they will if Trump is reelected, and if Republicans hold the Senate.
What about Greenwaldās argument that regularly voting for Democrats causes you to lose any leverage you might have over them? It is a powerful argument, and it is a major reason the Democratic Party has been able to virtually ignore organized labor for decades. But, again, in a time of a newly energized left, there are other ways to pressure politicians than by not voting for them on election day. For one thing, you can try to remove them in the primaries. Or you canāhereās an ideaāprotest in the streets. (I wonder if that might have some successā¦) Or you can mob their offices or picket their homes or vandalize their neighborhoods or strike workplaces or flood their offices with phone calls or air negative advertisements or hire more lobbyists, etc. In the coming era of social crisis, the left will not lack for means of pressuring elected representatives.
What about the argument one always hears that lesser-evil voting has enabled the rightward drift of the Democratic Party over the last generation? First of all, a few hundred thousand or more votes here and there for a third party wouldnāt have changed that, wouldnāt have accomplished anything except electing Republicansāas it sometimes did (I find it bewildering that Ralph Nader can sleep at night). Which itself contributed to the rightward drift of politics. So there goes that argument. The overwhelming cause of Democratsā ārightward driftā hasnāt been lesser evilism but the business communityās massive mobilization since the 1970s against liberal policies. Hundreds of billions of dollarsā worth of propaganda, of institution-building and -dismantling, of investment in armies of lobbyists, has moved the whole political system to the right. You think a little non-lesser-evil voting (among the tiny minority of conscious leftists) would have changed all that?
Here are just a few of the almost certain consequences of a Trump re-election: the judiciary will become ultra-reactionary for at least a generation; global warming and ecological destruction will accelerate, and may pass a point of no return; nationalism will triumph and the immigration system will be remade such that its sole purpose is to destroy as many lives as possible; higher education will become even more expensive and people will remain debilitated by debt their entire lives; in general, every social policy will veer into the domain of hyper-misanthropy. If you live in a swing state and you donāt vote for Biden, even if you donāt want any of these things to happen, you are increasing their likelihood.
I know itās appalling to contemplate submitting a ballot on which youāve indicated support for a sexist, racist, imperialistic, business-loving fiend like Biden. But if you want to live in a world of moral purity, take a one-way trip on the SpaceX Starship.
Bruce Levine, using a common talking point on the left, decries āfear-based decision-making.ā Lesser-evil voting is fear-based decision-making. Horror of horrors. Personally, I think fear is rational when weāre faced with aspiring neofascism and the end of civilization in three generations. I freely admit Iām afraid of what Trump and the Republicans might do in the next four years. But I also have hope: I hope a leftist insurgency can pressure the Biden administration to make things better for a lot of people, and even to lay the groundwork for substantive action on global warming. As Chomsky is fond of saying, one canāt predict the specifics of what the future will bring. Institutions change and are susceptible to popular pressure.
Levineās praise of the āintegrityā of Briahna Joy Gray, among others, for denouncing Biden after Sanders had endorsed him is misplaced. Nothing is easier than to denounce someone like Biden. Look how easy it is: I revile Joe Biden. See? That was easy. It requires more courage to buck the tide of popular opinion (on the left) and plead with people to vote for someone as unappealing as that corrupt old corporatist. There is no loss of āintegrityā in doing so, if one of your principles is that you care about the predictable consequences of your actions.
Chomskyās position is vastly more reasonable than Greenwaldās.
āGene Debs, Ralph Nader, and Briahna Joy Gray,ā Levine writes, āwerenāt ready to grovel in the dust, and those of us who have any energy should consider expending it supporting courageous people like them, as well as maintaining our own integrity and helping one another from becoming too broken to fight.ā What on earth is he talking about? Is it āgroveling in the dustā to spend a few minutes voting for Biden and other Democrats on November 3? Does doing so make one too broken to fight? Maybe thatās not what he meant. But I donāt see why it arouses so much cognitive dissonance in so many people when you say: fight like hell all the time but vote to keep out the neofascists. Thereās nothing remotely inconsistent in that imperative.
There are, at long last, so many newly awakened leftists in this country that in the aggregate they can have a tangible effect on the elections. I hope theyāre able to swallow their understandable revulsion for Bidenāand other corporate Democratsāand vote to kick out the fascists, making possible progressive legislation in the future.
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2 Comments
These “awakened leftists” have nowhere to go. Does it really have to be tweedle dum or tweedle dee? No it doesn’t. The corporate Democrats will end up, once again, doing nothing for progressives after election except say thank you for voting against your conscience.
This is the same policy that has got us to where we are now. Nothing will change if we keep doing the same thing.