How Kerry Can Win
by Rep. Bernie Sanders
In These Times magazine,
May 2004
The great political crisis in our country
is the extent to which millions of Americans vote against their
own economic interests. We can understand why CEOs and millionaires
will vote for Bush and contribute to his campaign. But why would
someone who makes $8 an hour, lacks adequate health insurance
and is unable to send his or her kid to college vote for a president
who so clearly represents the interests of the rich and the super-rich?
Why would, according to polls, a majority
of white working-class citizens support someone who works against
their best interests-taking away overtime pay, encouraging companies
to move jobs abroad, working to privatize Social Security and
Medicare, and cutting benefits for veterans? The future of this
country depends upon whether that question is adequately answered
and addressed.
At the root of this problem is a Democratic
Party that has been, for at least 30 years, wishy-washy on economic
issues facing working families. Having received large campaign
contributions from the wealthy and the powerful, many Democrats
have refused to stand up to the corporate interests waging vicious
class warfare. While many Democrats have focused on such important
issues as women's and gay rights, the environment, civil liberties
and war and peace, the needs of working families have not received
adequate attention. The result is that a majority of lower-income
Americans no longer votes, and of those who do, many don't see
a clear difference between the two major parties.
With Republicans having almost nothing
of substance to say about economic or healthcare issues, they
will attempt to make gay marriage, opposition to the war, flag
burning, affirmative action, the Pledge of Allegiance, prayer
in schools, abortion and guns the major issues of the campaign.
If they are successful, and they will have a corporate media to
help them, George Bush will be reelected.
Are you one of the 2.8 million people
who lost a manufacturing job in the last three years? Are you
angry and frustrated that you can't find a job that pays a living
wage? Fight back! Vote for someone who supports a constitutional
amendment to ban gay marriage.
Are you one of the 43 million Americans
with no health insurance who hesitates to go to the doctor when
you get sick? Fight back! Vote for a candidate who wants to make
it impossible for a woman to have an abortion.
Are you one of the 25 percent of seniors
unable to afford the medicine your doctor prescribes because of
outrageously priced prescription drugs? Fight back! Vote for someone
who wants to eliminate the separation of church and state.
Republicans are working feverishly to
divide men from women, straights from gays, whites from black,
native born from immigrant, and urban inhabitants from those who
live in rural America. President Bush ran for election in 2000
as a "uniter not a divider" The truth is the Republican
Party is doing everything it can to develop hot-button issues
that will divide us as never before.
What is the antidote? John Kerry and every
candidate running for office has to make it clear that he/she
stands with the middle class and working families against corporate
America and the big-moneyed interests selling us out.
Some of the issues that must come front
and center:
We must revise our trade policies that
have cost us millions of decent manufacturing jobs, and we must
address the horrendous possibility that the outsourcing of good-paying
information technology jobs will cost us millions more.
We must raise the minimum wage to a living
wage so that no one who works 40 hours a week lives in poverty.
We must change our unfair labor laws so workers who want to join
unions are able to do so. We must put millions back to work rebuilding
our deteriorating physical and human infrastructure-roads, bridges,
mass transportation, schools, childcare facilities and community
health centers. We can pay for this real economic stimulus by
rescinding Bush's tax cuts for the rich and the tens of billions
we currently spend on corporate welfare.
We must join the rest of the industrialized
world and provide a national healthcare program guaranteeing access
to all. A single-payer approach can provide care to all that doesn't
cost more than we presently spend.
Standing strong on economic issues is
not only good public policy; it is good politics. The middle class
of this country is shrinking, poverty is increasing, and the gap
between the rich and poor is widening. Americans want candidates
prepared to fight for them against powerful special interests.
If Kerry can make that case, he's the next president. If not,
welcome George Bush back for another disastrous four years.
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