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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (37124)2/6/2004 1:57:26 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Kerry calls outsourcing firms traitors

economictimes.indiatimes.com

PTI[ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 06, 2004 09:32:04 AM ]

WASHINGTON : Outsourcing of hi-tech jobs to India , China , Russia , the Philippines , and elsewhere has become an issue which is being debated in the Democratic primaries and in the US Congress, with current Democratic frontrunner in the presidential race, Senator John Kerry, calling companies which outsource "Benedict Arnolds."

The name refers to an American "traitor" who defected from the ranks of American revolutionaries to join the British colonists.

Kerry was quoted by Contra Costa Times on the West Coast as denouncing the Bush Administration for "rewarding Benedict Arnold CEOs who move "profits and jobs overseas."

Kerry had also introduced a bill in November that would require call centre operators to disclose their physical locations to consumers with the aim of discouraging the practice.

Howard Dean, the former Vermont Governor who is fighting to continue in the Presidential race has told audiences that America needs a President "who doesn't think that big corporations who get tax cuts ought to be able to move their headquarters to Bermuda ."

Income can be transferred by American corporations to Bermuda without being subjected to higher American taxes.

The Contra Costa Times, which credited Bush for an economic recovery, however, questioned job growth, claiming only 1,000 jobs were created in December, a fraction of the 300,000 new jobs projected by the Bush Administration.

"As the temperature rises over disappointing job growth, the controversial practice of 'offshoring'..has worked its way into the rhetoric of the presidential campaign trail", it wrote.

Kerry's criticism has to be taken seriously, analysts note, because he is not only a front-runner currently in the Democratic Party but as polls also say he may beat Bush to the White House.

However, statistics on outsourcing are fuzzy, with different reports disagreeing over the exact number of jobs lost. A University of California-Berkeley report estimates 14 million US jobs at risk.

Congress has also got into the act. At a hearing this week, both Republican and Democratic Congressmen denounced outsourcing while a rider attached to the 2004 budget bars US Government contracts from being awarded to companies which outsource their work.

"I think the issue is going to be exaggerated and manipulated by both sides in the political debate," said Dean Davison, an analyst at the Meta Group, a technology research and advisory firm in Stanford Conneticut.

The Federal contract provision, added to the budget by Senator Craig Thomas, a Republican from Wyoming , raised a storm in New Delhi .

John Palatiello, a Washington-based lobbyist representing domestic companies bidding for privatisation contracts, said the Congressional ban would only affect certain services such as architectural design work, as the rest of the work is being done in the US .

He said the aim of the amendment, which expires on Sept. 30, the end of the financial year, was to prevent Federal unions from claiming their jobs were being sent overseas. India-born Rafiq Dossani, a consulting professor at Stanford University 's Asia/Pacific Research Centre, a proponent of the efficacy of outsourcing, however, was concerned about its political consequences.

"This," he said, "may be a problem in the minds of some politicians now, even before there has been sufficient analysis of what is going on. But I think over the next five years this is going to have a huge impact. The range of jobs that can be outsourced is mind-boggling."

Some US departments are reversing outsourcing. The Department of Labour has given a $3 million grant to Solano County on the West Coast to bring trainers from offshore to teach locals jobs which would normally have gone offshore.

The Bay Area Council has teamed up with the Bay Area Technology Education Collaborative (Bay TEC) to bring 759 workers with advanced-level skills to train information technology to local people.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (37124)2/6/2004 2:00:54 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Re: The Kerry win was not a vote for Kerry, so much as a vote against Bush from a solidly aligned electorate.

Nonsense, if the election results proved anything, it proved to the media moguls like Murdock, Redstone, Immelt and Eisner that they can twist public opinion any way they chose and that the public is a flaccid, vacuous and vapid reflection of what it was 60 years ago. The public today is so dimmed-down, empty-headed and easily misled that the corporate chieftains are laughing all the way to the bank.

Let's look at reality. From mid-November and into early December, Howard Dean was campaigning on a policy plank of reversing media concentration and monopoly in America. Bad move. The net result was that 80% of the media coverage on Dean became negative after December 1. And why? Because the billionaires who run our disgusting media felt that their opportunities to earn an extra few billion were being threatened by the truth.

So they started a vicious campaign which was completely unrelenting.

All because they need to destroy Howard Dean in order to retain their ranking on the Forbes 400 list.

Is this sick, or what?



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (37124)2/6/2004 2:10:41 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
The Democrats Sharpen the Focus

washingtonpost.com

By David S. Broder
Columnist
The Washington Post
Thursday, February 5, 2004

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- The Democratic presidential field has been narrowed to its serious center, a place where policy differences are minimal and the prospects of fielding a serious challenge to President Bush look best.

That is the meaning of the seven-state demolition derby on Tuesday, and it is likely to be reinforced this weekend when three more states -- Maine, Michigan and Washington -- join the parade.

Tuesday's voting finished off Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, who was at the opposite pole of the Democratic Party from Rep. Dick Gephardt of Missouri, a casualty of the Iowa caucuses. Gephardt represented most of the labor wing of the old Democratic coalition, cemented to his cause by his history of opposition to liberal trade agreements.

Lieberman was the candidate of the New Democrats, a former chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, a strong advocate of the very trade policies Gephardt denounced.

The most pro-labor and pro-business Democrats running are gone. Almost vanished -- shut out on Tuesday and sinking in the polls -- is former Vermont governor Howard Dean, the most outspoken and acerbic critic of the party's congressional establishment. Despite his embrace by former vice president Al Gore, Dean sounds increasingly like a scold, decrying the records and impugning the character of Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, the first choice of most Democratic voters.

Two other pretenders are of little consequence. Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio has never found a constituency for his peace platform. And the Rev. Al Sharpton, the florid civil rights activist from New York, could win only 10 percent of the votes in South Carolina, where African Americans made up 45 percent of the electorate. Black Democrats no less than white are passing up symbolism and seeking the candidate who can beat George Bush.

So it comes down to Kerry and his two mainstream challengers, Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, the big winner in South Carolina, and retired Gen. Wesley K. Clark, who edged Edwards for honors in Oklahoma.

The notable thing about these three is how much they agree on -- and how willing Democratic voters are to accept their credentials.

Exit polls noted, for example, that in Oklahoma, where Kerry received only 27 percent of the votes, 70 percent said they would be satisfied with him as the nominee.

As for the issues, the differences among them are minimal. Clark (and, to a lesser extent, Edwards) has faulted Kerry for accepting contributions from lobbyists. Edwards has pointed to his differences with Kerry on trade.

But you could take large chunks of the stump speech of any one of them, slip it onto a teleprompter and place it before any of the others, and he would read it as comfortably as if it were his own.

Clark calls for bringing "a higher standard of leadership" to the White House; Edwards vows to end inequality in education and health care; Kerry says he will do both. All three decry the record and the "misplaced priorities" of the Bush administration.

Where they differ most is in their biographies. Kerry is the political veteran, the man with a record in public office stretching back three decades. He is also the most patrician of the trio -- the son of a diplomat, a product of Yale and the husband of an heiress. Democrats often have nominated and elected such wealthy friends of the working class (think FDR and JFK), so there is plenty of tradition for Kerry to evoke -- and plenty of reverse snobbery for his opponents to exploit.

Edwards and Clark are much more self-made men, climbing out of modest family backgrounds thanks to education at public universities (West Point for Clark, North Carolina State for Edwards) and distinguishing themselves from thousands of others in their chosen fields of the military and the law by their braininess and their work ethic.

Politically, they face different tests. Kerry has run well in states where Democrats are expected to win or at least compete strongly in November -- Iowa, New Hampshire, Missouri, Delaware, New Mexico and Arizona among them. He has yet to demonstrate that he can expand the playing field. Tennessee and Virginia next Tuesday could allow him to do that.

The single victories by Edwards and Clark have come in states that lean Republican, South Carolina and Oklahoma. They can claim the potential to challenge Bush in his electoral base, but they need to show more support in the Democratic heartland. Michigan, Washington and Maine this weekend could do that for them, as could Wisconsin on the 17th.

But the main point is this: If the Democrats can't form a competitive ticket by combining two of these three, then they're not smart enough to deserve the White House.

davidbroder@washpost.com



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (37124)2/6/2004 2:14:02 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Plutocrats And Populists

____________________________________

By Harold Meyerson
Columnist
The Washington Post
Thursday, February 5, 2004
washingtonpost.com

ST. LOUIS -- John Kerry and John Edwards will be duking it out for a little while yet, which means there will be populist rhetoric aplenty on the campaign trail. "At the heart of this campaign," Kerry said at his Seattle victory rally on Tuesday night, "is a commitment to fairness for all, not privilege for the few." Speaking earlier that evening in South Carolina, Edwards decried, as he always does, the division of the nation into "two Americas," one that receives tax breaks and has access to doctors, the other that sees its wages stagnating and has to wait in emergency rooms to get medical care.




For some, this means that Democrats are again hearing ancestral voices prophesying class war. Joe Lieberman spoke for the populist-phobes when, campaigning last Sunday, he voiced his fear that "some of the other candidates . . . are drifting toward outdated class-warfare arguments."

It was Lieberman, of course, whose arguments Democratic voters judged to be outdated or worse, but the notion that populism is a hoary chestnut is still gospel at some centrist think tanks and editorial boards. Listen to them and you'd think the Democratic presidential candidates were echoing William Jennings Bryan's call for free silver.

But the Democrats' populism isn't a matter of genetics, of a nostalgic reversion to a century-old battle against the House of Morgan. It is, to the contrary, a specific response to immediate policies of the House of Bush. It is a counter to the administration's tilt toward drug companies and HMOs at the expense of consumers. It is a necessary corrective to the most plutocratic administration since at least the 1920s.

Given the choice between serving the national interest and favoring the rich, George W. Bush has opted incessantly, even obsessively, for the latter.

That is the main reason why he may well be unseated in November. If Bush tax policies are not class warfare, then the term has no meaning at all. Moreover, in the age of globalization, the interests of many U.S.-based corporations grow increasingly divergent from those of the American people.

It's not that these corporations have not resumed hiring, but much of that hiring takes place abroad. A new survey in the Financial Times of the 100 largest American companies notes that they paid 30.6 percent of their 2003 income in taxes, down from 33 percent in 2002 -- a change that the Times attributes to their increasing share of economic activity overseas. The administration's response to the challenge of "outsourcing" has been to slash taxes on investment, even as investment in corporations has less and less to do with creating jobs here at home.

What the Democrats' neo-populists are taking aim at isn't business as such, of course, but policies that reward outsourcing and do nothing to foster employment in the States. "This has nothing to do with class warfare," Kerry told supporters in St. Louis last week. "There are great companies and great CEOs throughout America, and I don't want us to be a Democratic Party that loves jobs and hates the people who create them."

Edwards hasn't felt the need to qualify his populism to this extent, and he is hoping that his differences with Kerry on the trade issue in particular will win him support from some industrial unions. Such support would almost surely be too little and too late to deprive Kerry of a victory in Saturday's Michigan caucuses, but it would be one way those unions could send a message to Kerry that they'd like him to pick Edwards as his running mate.

But the differences between Edwards and Kerry on trade are nowhere so great as Edwards suggests. Though he criticizes Kerry for voting for NAFTA, Edwards himself held no public office at the time. Both senators did support normalizing trade relations with China, however, when the legislation came before the Senate near the end of Bill Clinton's presidency.

The chief difference between Edwards and Kerry isn't on trade, or the fact that Edwards ran stronger on Tuesday in two states that Bush is sure to carry in November. It's that populism is Edwards's sole calling card -- one that wins him, but also limits his, support. Kerry, too, attacks the fundamental unfairness of economic life under Bush, but he also is bristling with a martial toughness and experience almost reminiscent of the original Southern Democratic populist, Andrew Jackson. In a word, Kerry is a two-fer while Edwards is a one-fer -- my most succinct explanation of why Kerry, not Edwards, will probably be the party's nominee.

And as to why I think Kerry could beat Bush this fall, I suppose it's because Kerry is a national capitalist, who favors a role for government in boosting the domestic economy, while Bush is a crony capitalist who wants only to privilege the privileged. It's not that Kerry and the Democrats are reverting to an ancient politics. It's that plutocracy breeds populism, and under Bush, plutocracy is what we got.

meyersonh@washpost.com



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (37124)2/6/2004 2:44:45 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
WORLD SOCIALISTS (a vastly more intelligent and compassionately conservative group compared to the lying radical scoundrels surrounding the slime-bucket George Bush) chime in on the US primaries:

[[Note, as opposed to my rant about how the media willfully and selfishly destroyed the campaign of Howard Dean, the only honest man in the race aside from Dennis Kucinich, this article ought to be the gold standard for the corrupted U.S. media, who only give us silly slogans and sibilant sycophancy in lieu of actual reporting.]]

wsws.org

US Democratic primary votes reveal growing popular hostility to Bush
By Patrick Martin
6 February 2004

Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts widened his lead in the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination February 3, winning five of the seven primaries and caucuses and the majority of the delegates at stake. Senator John Edwards won the South Carolina primary, while former general Wesley Clark won a tight three-way race in the Oklahoma primary.

Kerry won over 50 percent of the vote in Missouri, North Dakota and Delaware, and over 40 percent in Arizona and New Mexico. Democratic Party officeholders and big financial contributors have begun to swing behind his campaign, and on Friday he was slated to receive the endorsement of Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt, who abandoned his own presidential campaign after losing the Iowa caucuses January 19.

In terms of delegates won, however, the results of the third week of primaries were well short of conclusive. Kerry now has 261 delegates, just over 12 percent of the 2,162 required to win the Democratic nomination. Former Vermont governor Howard Dean follows with 121, then Edwards with 102, and Clark with 81.

Dean, the frontrunner nationally until mid-January, polled a derisory 9 percent and received no delegates in Missouri, the most populous state among those voting Tuesday. In South Carolina and Arizona, states with large black and Hispanic populations, the turnaround was even more dramatic. Dean topped the polls in both states a month ago. But on Tuesday he won 4 percent in South Carolina after spending $1 million on television ads, and 14 percent in Arizona, where he won three delegates at the cost of $1.4 million in TV ads.

Dean initially suggested that even without winning any states he would carry on his campaign through the March 2 “Super Tuesday” contests, which include California, New York, Ohio and four New England states. He was quickly called on the carpet by key supporters, including officials of the two major unions that have backed his campaign, AFSCME and SEIU, and announced that he would quit the race if he did not win the Wisconsin primary February 17.

Kerry’s two other major opponents, Clark and Edwards, were reduced to the status of Southern regional candidates, winning Oklahoma and South Carolina respectively, and moving on to campaign in Tennessee and Virginia, which vote February 10. Neither is expected to challenge Kerry effectively in such northern states as Michigan, Washington, Maine and Wisconsin.

There has been some effort by the media to build up Edwards as Kerry’s main rival in the wake of the South Carolina vote, Kerry’s only sizeable defeat, where Edwards won by 46 percent to 30 percent. Edwards, however, had predicted he would win delegates in each of the seven states voting Tuesday, and failed in four of the seven, falling short of the 15 percent threshold.

The most stridently pro-war candidate in the Democratic campaign, Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, quit the race Tuesday night after poor results. He polled less than five percent of the total votes cast in the seven states and did not win a single delegate. Lieberman’s right-wing campaign, pledging to continue the “third way” policies of Bill Clinton and enthusiastically backing the invasion and occupation of Iraq, won little support.

In Delaware, for example, Lieberman campaigned extensively, had the backing of the state’s senior Democratic politicians, and still won less than 11 percent of the vote. In Arizona, he was endorsed by the Arizona Republic, the state’s largest newspaper, but won only 7 percent, and no delegates.

The other Democratic candidates fared even worse. Reverend Al Sharpton, despite concentrating all his efforts in South Carolina, where half the Democratic primary voters are black, won only ten percent of the vote and not a single delegate. He trailed Edwards and Kerry by a wide margin even in the Sixth Congressional District, with the largest concentration of black voters. Dennis Kucinich won no more than one percent in any primary (although slightly higher in the caucuses), and no delegates.

Anger and illusions

Tuesday’s balloting continued the trend shown in Iowa and New Hampshire, with heavy turnouts in many of the states by voters deeply concerned over joblessness and economic insecurity, opposed to the US war in Iraq, and hostile to the Bush administration.

This opposition at present, however, takes the form of illusions that one or more of the Democratic candidates represents a genuine alternative to the policies of the Republican right.

The vote in South Carolina was a record for a Democratic primary, while the turnout in Arizona doubled the total of the 2000 primary. The most striking result was in Oklahoma, where 300,000 voted in the Democratic primary in a state where only 470,000 voted for Democrat Al Gore in the 2000 general election. Primary turnout is normally a fraction of the general election vote.

Exit polls confirmed the widespread anger at the Bush administration. The figures were so stark that the Washington Post—a fervent supporter of the war in Iraq—headlined its analysis of voting patterns: “Rising Anti-Bush Sentiment Driving Democrats to Polls.” The Post wrote: “The Democratic presidential contest went national yesterday, and what was true in Iowa and New Hampshire proved true coast to coast: Voters in these elections are deeply dissatisfied with President Bush, and defeating him in November is their prime issue, according to exit polls.”

In all five primary states—Delaware, South Carolina, Missouri, Oklahoma and Arizona—exit polls found that eight out of ten voters described the US economy as “not good” or “poor.” (The two caucus states, New Mexico and North Dakota, had no exit polling). Nearly 50 percent said their families were worse off financially than four years ago, before Bush took office.

More than half of Democratic voters in Delaware described themselves as “angry” at the Bush administration, with slightly lower figures in Arizona and Missouri. One-third of voters in Oklahoma and South Carolina said they were “angry,” while another 40-50 percent said they were “dissatisfied” with the Bush White House.

More than 80 percent of those voting in the Delaware Democratic primary opposed Bush’s decision to go to war with Iraq. The figure in South Carolina—home to many military bases—was nearly 75 percent opposed to the war, and over 80 percent among black voters. Two thirds of those voting in Arizona and Missouri opposed the war, and this figure was nearly 60 percent in Oklahoma.

Given that the states voting February 3 are largely rural and generally considered to be among the more politically conservative states, the exit poll numbers are all the more significant. (Bush carried five of the seven in 2000 and lost New Mexico by only a few hundred votes). Particularly significant is the opposition to the Iraq war in both South Carolina and Oklahoma, where more than 70 percent of the voters were from households with at least one active-duty soldier or veteran.

The February 3 primaries and caucuses coincided with the publication of several new national opinion polls on the presidential race, showing Kerry would defeat Bush by a comfortable 53-46 margin if the election were held now, with Edwards as well holding a narrower edge on Bush. The polls also showed a majority opposing the war and a dramatic decline in Bush’s approval rating, which fell below 50 percent.

The primary turnout, the exit poll results and the national opinion polls all belie the image of the Bush administration which has been systematically cultivated by the American media over the past three years, portraying Bush as a political colossus with widespread popular support and unchallenged standing on the fundamental issues of war and peace.

The initial weeks of the presidential campaign have begun to reveal the real state of popular opinion. Bush is an unelected president, regarded by a substantial fraction of the public, if not a majority, as illegitimate. Installed in office by the Supreme Court after losing the popular vote, Bush nonetheless behaves as though he had an overwhelming public mandate for his extreme-right policies. This pretense has been sustained by the cringing of the congressional Democrats and the adulation of the media, especially since the September 11 terrorist attacks.

A scion of the ruling elite

The perception that Kerry has the best chance to defeat Bush largely accounts for his rise in the polls, rather than his policies or personality, which hardly differentiate him from his main rivals, Edwards, Clark, and former Vermont governor Howard Dean. Many Democratic primary voters have cited Kerry’s record as a decorated Vietnam War veteran as a significant advantage against the expected Republican smear tactics in the fall. The Bush campaign will denounce critics of its policies in Iraq as unpatriotic, portraying them as supporters of Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.

Despite the illusions evident in the primary voting, Kerry is scarcely credible as the vehicle for opposition to the American political establishment. He is the son of a former US diplomat, raised in privileged circumstances, and married to one of the wealthiest women in America, Teresa Heinz Kerry, heir to a $600 million ketchup fortune. As some of his primary rivals have pointed out, Kerry has received more campaign contributions from large corporate interests, in the course of his 20-year career, than any other senator.

During a campaign swing in New Hampshire prior to that state’s primary, Kerry denied that his pseudo-populist attacks on special interests amounted to “class warfare.” According to an account in the Los Angeles Times, Kerry told his audience, “I’m a capitalist, and I believe in creating wealth. You can’t be a Democrat who loves jobs and hates the people who create them. What we have to do is recognize that there is an enlightened, good capitalism, and there’s a robber-baron capitalism. What George Bush has unleashed is a creed of greed that does a disservice to all people in business.”

Kerry represents a section of the ruling elite which is increasingly concerned that the recklessness of the policies of the Bush administration—both its sweeping overseas military commitments, and its staggering budget deficits at home—are creating the conditions for a social and political explosion in the United States. Kerry and his Democratic rivals are appealing to popular anger over the war in Iraq, the lack of good-paying jobs, the widening gulf between rich and poor, and the Bush administration’s attacks on democratic rights, but only to divert these sentiments into channels which do not threaten the profit system.

The replacement of Bush in the White House by a Democrat would not significantly change the conditions facing working people in the United States. In the aftermath of such a change of administrations, there will still be a war in Iraq, a $500 billion-plus budget deficit, a gargantuan US balance of payments deficit, a stagnant job market, and a deepening social crisis.

In foreign policy, Kerry, Dean, Edwards and Clark are all committed to continuing the US occupation of Iraq, whatever their criticisms of how Bush organized the invasion. More broadly, the Democrats like the Republicans uphold the essential strategic goal of the Bush administration: to maintain the unchallenged military supremacy of American imperialism over any potential threat. Thus the criticism by Kerry and Dean of Bush’s policies in Iraq has been coupled with pledges to be more aggressive in dealing with North Korea, Iran and China.

All four Democrats have pledged to Wall Street a more “responsible” fiscal policy, meaning that the working class will pay for Bush’s huge budget deficits, through cuts in social spending or increases in consumption and payroll taxes. Here Dean has taken the lead, criticizing his rivals for suggesting that it is possible to expand health care coverage without imposing the cost on working people.

None of these candidates represents any interruption in the steady shift to the right by the Democratic Party, a decades-long process which has seen the Democrats abandon all talk of redistribution of wealth or even of significant social reforms.

Working people in the United States are trapped in a political system in which both of the officially recognized parties are controlled by the moneyed elite—the top one or two percent of the population which controls the wealth and dictates the conditions of life of the vast majority.

War, social reaction and the assault on democratic rights are the products not of one or another politician or bourgeois party. They arise from an insoluble, historical crisis of the capitalist system itself.

It will be possible to conduct a serious struggle against imperialist war and defend jobs, living standards and democratic rights only when the working class breaks with the two-party system and begins to build an independent political party of its own based on a socialist program. The Socialist Equality Party is running in the 2004 presidential election to develop this understanding and lay the basis for an independent political mass movement of working people fighting for a revolutionary restructuring of society in the interests of the working class.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (37124)2/6/2004 11:14:25 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Creative Class War

washingtonmonthly.com