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Workers World Party commentary
Obama—A new political situation
By
Larry Holmes
Published Nov 6, 2008 11:05 PM
There is a new political situation in the U.S. and in the world. Even though
Barack Obama’s sweeping electoral victory was not entirely unexpected,
now that it has happened—the reality of it—the way in which it
demonstrated to the world that something big has changed about the working
class in the U.S., is so stunning that many still find it hard to believe.
The long history of racism in the U.S. seemed to preclude for the foreseeable
future the election of an African-American president. The meltdown on Wall
Street and the gravest capitalist crisis in 75 years beat back the bigotry that
could have stopped Obama’s victory.
A record-breaking turnout on the part of African-American and Latin@ voters,
and a tidal wave of young voters—including tens of millions of white
workers from Virginia and North Carolina, Indiana, Ohio and
Pennsylvania—cemented the multinational electoral coalition that made
history.
Of course, the capitalist ruling class of the U.S. is still firmly in charge.
The loyalty of the two ruling class political parties, including the
president-elect, to U.S. imperialism is still intact.
True, much of the U.S. ruling class had concluded that Obama might be the
radical makeover that their government needed to deal with the crisis ahead.
But that fact cannot negate the role or the feelings of the masses in this
phenomenon.
In the African-American communities from Chicago to Harlem to the still
Katrina-devastated New Orleans there is elation over the outcome of this
election, even a feeling of liberation from a measure of the racism born out of
slavery, then cultivated into an unofficial second-class status, enforced by
terror at the hands of the police, prisons or the KKK.
Indeed hundreds of thousands of people everywhere, for the most part
spontaneously, took to the streets after Obama was declared the winner and the
first African-American president of a country built on African slave labor.
And the celebrating was by no means exclusive to the African-American
community. Everywhere, both within and beyond the borders of the U.S., people
of every race and nationality poured into the streets crying, yelling and
embracing strangers as if a long terrible, reactionary, life-stifling
occupation, exemplified by the Bush regime, had finally come to an end.
Will this election restore people’s faith in the U.S capitalist system
and government at the very time that exposing the system and government is so
critical to forging the mass struggle against capitalism? Perhaps for a little
while, but it won’t last long.
In the coming days and months, the mass suffering brought on by the deepening
of the worldwide capitalist economic crises, and the reality of the continuing
U.S. wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, will betray the truth of what has
or has not changed as a result of the presidential elections.
The inevitable revelation of how much change the incoming U.S. government
represents, and how the mass of working and oppressed people in the U.S. and
everywhere react to that revelation, will to a large degree provide the content
of the world struggle against U.S. imperialism over the next period.
In lieu of that revelation, something has already changed. Only time will tell
how deep and meaningful that change is. The people by the tens of millions have
awakened and they have desperate expectations. The people want the U.S.
capitalist government to end its wars abroad, stop layoffs and home
foreclosures, provide healthcare and education.
Will the new government end the wars? Or will it withdraw troops from Iraq only
to send them to Afghanistan?
Will the new Democratic Party government, with an even larger majority in
Congress, bail out the workers who are losing their homes and jobs? Will it
take the side of labor against capital?
One of the issues that is likely to come before the new Democratic government
is a long-standing, simple, proposed law that would require a majority of
workers at a workplace to sign union cards in order to get union recognition.
The labor movement has been waiting for this law to pass. Will it be
signed?
The people want the government to come to their rescue instead of Wall
Street’s. It’s a dangerous thing to wake people up and arouse their
expectations.
Now that the people are awake they may organize and fight for what they want
and need. More than anything else, it is this potential that portends a new
political situation in the U.S. and the world.
The feeling on the streets of cities large and small across the U.S. on
election night was that now, anything is possible, and it is.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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