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As in every election we’re now being bombarded with
propaganda about how “your vote makes a difference” and associated
nonsense. According to the official version ordinary citizens control the
state by voting for candidates in elections. The President and other
politicians are supposedly servants of “the people” and the government an
instrument of the general populace. This version is a myth. It does not
matter who is elected because the way the system is set up all elected
representatives must do what big business and the state bureaucracy want,
not what “the people” want. Elected representatives are figureheads.
Politicians’ rhetoric may change depending on who is elected, but they all
have to implement the same policies given the same situation. Elections
are a scam whose function is to create the illusion that “the people”
control the government, not the elite, and to neutralize resistance
movements. All voting does is strengthen the state & ruling class, it is
not an effective means to change government policy.
If a party wins the elections but implements policies that go against the
interests of big business then profits will go down and businesses &
investors will withdraw their investments. This capital flight will cause
the economy to crash. If the ruling party does not change its policies to
appease big business then they'll lose the next elections due to the bad
economy. In practice most parties change their policies to appease the
corporate elite in order to avoid losing power.
This is not merely theoretical, it has happened repeatedly. It happened
in India a few months ago. The left, lead by the Congress party, won the
elections, leading to a coalition government with the Congress party and
the Communist party. This caused the stock market to crash because
investors feared a change in economic policy that would hurt their
profits. Sonia Ghandi, who was originally going to be the next Prime
Minister, chose not to take the position and the new government was forced
to adopt policies virtually identical to the previous government. Their
rhetoric is different, but policy is basically the same.
Usually the mere threat of capital flight is enough to keep potentially
recalcitrant politicians in line (although most politicians never even
consider policies that conflict with the corporate elite/state
bureaucracy). For example, Bill Clinton won election on a mildly liberal
reformist platform. Once in office he was forced to abandon his campaign
promises because if he continued them the bond market wouldn’t react well
and the economy would go down the tubes. Clinton’s famous statement to
his advisers upon realizing this was, "You mean to tell me that the
success of my program and my reelection hinges on the Federal Reserve and
a bunch of fucking bond traders?" He was thus forced to abandon his
program before it even started, instead implementing one virtually
identical to Republican proposals. He complained to his aides:
“I hope you're all aware we're all Eisenhower Republicans. We're
Eisenhower Republicans here, and we are fighting the Reagan Republicans.
We stand for lower deficits and free trade and the bond market. Isn't that
great?”
In theory the government might be able to combat this by nationalizing
industry but neither the Democrats nor Republicans (or most prominent
third parties) are willing to do this. Even if they were, the Supreme
Court would strike it down. If some way were found to get around this
then the CIA and/or Pentagon would overthrow the government in a coup (or
through less dramatic means). The CIA has overthrown many governments for
nationalizing industry, or even just implementing policies not
sufficiently favorable to US corporations, including Chile, Iran,
Guatemala, Brazil, Greece, the Congo and many others. Doing the same on
their home turf would be a piece of cake.
Once elected representatives are isolated from the general public but
surrounded by bureaucrats and other politicians. They therefore have a
tendency to see things from the perspective of politicians and
bureaucrats, rather than from the perspective of the general public from
which they are isolated, and are much more susceptible to pressure from
government bureaucracies.
Elected representatives’ dependency on the state bureaucracy for
information makes them very susceptible to manipulation by the
bureaucracies they are officially in charge of. For example, in the late
‘50s the CIA secured approval to launch an uprising in Indonesia by
feeding a series of increasingly alarmist reports to their superiors in
the National Security Council, who otherwise might have shot the proposed
uprising down. This shows how government agencies (especially secretive
ones) can pressure politicians and influence policy in preferred
directions. This is enhanced by the fact that individual politicians come
and go but the bureaucrats are permanent, which makes it easier for
bureaucrats to manipulate information and ensures that politicians have
less experience with such manipulation. Because the state bureaucracy is
permanent while politicians are transitory state bureaucracies tend to
accrue more power than elected representatives.
State bureaucracies can also manipulate the political process by leaking
damaging information about politicians they don’t like or by harassing
parties or movements they don’t like (such as COINTELPRO or the recent
harassment of anti-war activists by the FBI). This gives an advantage to
politicians favorable to the interests of the state bureaucracy.
State bureaucracies, especially the military and intelligence services,
have a considerable degree of autonomy from elected representatives and so
aren’t truly controlled by those representatives. When New Zealand
intelligence began secretly participating in Echelon, an international
electronic spying system, New Zealand’s Prime Minister didn’t even know
about it. Most of the CIA’s covert actions (including coups) were done
without Congressional approval and some, like CIA participation in Ghana’s
1966 coup, didn’t even have Presidential approval. Entire wars have been
fought in secret, including Russia 1918-1920, Laos 1965-1973 and Cambodia
1970-1975. When Congress cut off funding for the Contras (US-backed
terrorists in Nicaragua) in the mid-80s the CIA (and other parts of the
state bureaucracy) just kept doing it in secret, disregarding Congress’s
wishes.
The Pentagon can’t even produce auditable books and regularly “loses”
billions of dollars every year. Auditors for the Office of Management and
Budget found that “unsubstantiated balance adjustments” for financial year
2000 totaled 1.1 trillion dollars. In other words, elected politicians
(and especially congress) have no real control over Pentagon spending.
The whole process of Congressional hearings and budgetary oversight is
just an elaborate charade - they appropriate money and the Pentagon spends
it however it wants to. Plus there’s the “black budget” whose contents
are kept secret, allowing the national security establishment to
effectively do whatever they want with it.
All of this puts many state bureaucracies (especially the military and
intelligence services) beyond effective control of elected
representatives, let alone the general public. Their secrecy,
manipulation of budgets and complexity (there are too many bureaucrats for
representatives to effectively keep track of them all) gives government
bureaucracies a considerable degree of autonomy. They go off and do
whatever they want, either keeping things secret from elected politicians
or pressuring them into going along with it.
What a politician says to win an election and what he actually does in
office are two very different things; politicians regularly break their
promises. This is not just a fluke but the outcome of the way the system
is set up. Bush the second said he wouldn’t engage in “nation-building”
(taking other countries over) during the 2000 election campaign but has
done it several times. He also claimed to support a balanced budget, but
obviously abandoned that. Clinton advocated universal health care during
the 1992 election campaign but there were more people without health
insurance when he left office than when he took office. Bush the first
said, “read my lips - no new taxes!” while running for office but
raised taxes anyway. Reagan promised to shrink government but he
drastically expanded the military-industrial complex and ran up huge
deficits. Rather than shrinking government, he reoriented it to make it
more favorable to the rich.
Carter promised to make human rights the “soul of our foreign policy” but
funded genocide in East Timor and backed brutal dictators in Argentina,
South Korea, Chile, Brazil, Indonesia and elsewhere. During the 1964
elections leftists were encouraged by Democrats to vote for Johnson
because Goldwater, his Republican opponent, was a fanatical warmonger who
would escalate US involvement in Vietnam. Johnson won, and immediately
proceeded to escalate US involvement in Vietnam. FDR promised to maintain
a balanced budget and restrain government spending but did the exact
opposite. Wilson won reelection in 1916 on the slogan “he kept us out of
war” but then lied us into World War One. Hoover pledged to abolish
poverty in 1928 but instead saw it skyrocket.
In the 1974 Canadian elections the Liberals criticized Tory plans to
introduce wage and price controls but, shortly after winning office,
implemented wage and price controls. In 1993 the Liberals promised to
abolish the Goods and Service Tax but reneged on that after getting
power. The British Liberal party promised to cut military spending during
the 1906 elections but, after winning, went back on that promise in order
to wage an arms race with Germany. In 1945 the British Labor party
promised to set up a ministry of housing but abandoned it after winning
the election.
According to the official version when leftists get elected to office we
should always (or almost always) get leftist policies and vice versa when
rightists get elected to office but this is not the case. The German
Green party was originally pacifist and was founded on an anti-nuclear
power position. They gained power in a coalition government in the late
1990s but abandoned their program, effectively delaying the end of nuclear
power in Germany until the nuclear industry wants to end it and supporting
military intervention during the Kosovo war. Lula, the current president
of Brazil, originally ran on an anti-corporate and anti-IMF platform but
is now cooperating with the IMF (although his rhetoric, but not his
policies, are sometimes critical of it) and he’s just as favorable towards
corporate power as his predecessor.
The socialist/social democratic/labor parties in Europe were originally
revolutionary Marxist parties aiming to establish a communist society. As
they won elections and gained power they increasingly abandoned this goal
and became ordinary capitalist parties. At first they continued to mouth
Marxist rhetoric while pushing reformist policies, but eventually even
Marxist rhetoric was abandoned. Prior to world war one they declared
their opposition to any kind of inter-imperialist world war on the grounds
that workers should not kill each other in order to benefit their
capitalist masters. When world war one broke out all but two parties (the
Bolsheviks and US Socialist party – neither of whom had gained much power
through elections) abandoned this stance and supported their own
government in a wave of patriotic fervor. Today they’re pushing through
Reagan/Clinton-style deregulation and “free market reforms,” dismantling
the very welfare states they formerly advocated.
The most liberal American president in the last 30 years was Richard
Nixon, a Republican whose personal beliefs and rhetoric were quite
conservative. He created the environmental protection agency, established
diplomatic relations with China, (eventually) withdrew from Vietnam, ended
the draft, supported affirmative action, proposed a minimum income and
imposed price controls. Every president since Nixon – including Jimmy
Carter and Bill Clinton – has been more conservative.
In the US & UK Ronald Reagan & Margaret Thatcher implemented far right
policies that attacked the social safety net and benefited big business in
the name of the “free market.” During the same time period in Australia
and West Europe the supposedly left-wing parties (labor/social
democrats/socialists) held power and implemented the same “free market”
policies. Clinton & Blair from the supposedly left-wing parties (Democrat
& Labor) later defeated Reagan & Thatcher’s successors but once in office
continued the same “free market” policies as their predecessors.
This refutes all the nonsense about how “your vote makes a difference.”
Politicians are required to implement the same policies (what the elite
want) even if it conflicts with their campaign promises no matter who is
elected. Elected representatives are figureheads. That’s why there are
so many examples of people getting elected and then doing the opposite of
what they promised. Electing different people to power is not an
effective way to change policy. In practice, politicians differ only in
the lies they tell to get in power. Once in power their policies are the
same given the same situation, although the rhetoric and symbolism used to
justify those policies may change greatly.
Changes in policy direction are due to changes in the situation, not who
is elected to office. Most major changes in policy do not coincide with
new people getting in office; they coincide with changes in the
situation. When the Great Depression started the US government responded
with Keynesian state interventions in the economy designed to resuscitate
the economy and prevent growing population movements (caused by the
depression) from bringing about revolution. This actually began under
Hoover, who did more in this area than any previous President, even though
these policies are usually attributed to the next President, FDR.
In the mid-twentieth century welfare states expanded in most Western
societies as a way of preventing the then large revolutionary socialist
movements from overthrowing the government (welfare programs can make the
poor less likely to rebel since they are better off and because it makes
the state seem more benevolent). The welfare state was in the elites’
interests because it was a way to prevent revolution and decrease unrest,
which helped them gain and keep power & profit. The state bureaucracy
will sometimes nationalize a limited amount of industry under these
conditions, as a way of preventing revolution and also of keeping
capitalism going (selling unprofitable industries to the government can be
a useful way for businesses & investors to recoup loses during a
depression).
In the later twentieth century these revolutionary movements declined and
the welfare state was gradually dismantled. It was no longer in the
interests of the elite to maintain a welfare state because the threat of
unrest & revolution was no longer there to justify the costs. In the US
this started not under Reagan, as liberals usually claim, but in the later
part of Carter’s term with deregulation and other small attacks on the
welfare state. Carter also initiated other policies liberals blame Reagan
for, including support for the Contras, Pol Pot, Afghan Mujahadeen and
Saddam Hussein. This dismantling of the welfare state and general move to
the right has continued under every subsequent President regardless of
which party was in power.
In the US, during Nixon’s term, there were a number of growing left-wing
movements and spreading revolutionary ideology that threatened to
overthrow the government. Had he not done things like end the draft,
withdraw from Vietnam and implement other liberal reforms there was a real
possibility that socialist revolution would erupt and even if it didn’t
there would have been greater unrest which would likely outweigh the cost
of his reforms.
Although elections do not secure popular control over the state, they do
help secure state control over the populace. Voting is a ritual that
reinforces obedience to state authority. It creates the illusion that
“the people” control the state, thereby masking elite rule. That illusion
makes rebellion against the state less likely because it is seen as a
legitimate institution and as an instrument of popular rule rather than
the oligarchy it really is. This is why even totalitarian states like
Russia under Stalin had elections. Embedded within all electoral
campaigns is the myth that “the people” control the state through voting.
This is implied & assumed by all election campaigns because it if wasn’t
true then the campaign for that candidate would be pointless.
This is why governments and corporations today are generally supportive of
elections or at least do not question them. Government schools usually
promote the importance of voting, teaching the official view that citizens
control the state via elections, and some corporations (like MTV) even run
commercials encouraging people to vote. It is in the interests of
governments and corporations to promote voting because they serve to
legitimize the system and reduce unrest.
In addition, elections can help neutralize resistance movements by getting
disgruntled individuals to channel their efforts into the election,
instead of more effective means of resistance. Since electoral campaigns
are an ineffective means of changing policy, all the labor and resources
put into election campaigns are wasted. Potential rebellion is thus
diverted into a dead end where it will not hurt the system. Boycotting
elections doesn’t necessarily change things, but participating in
elections (and especially in election campaigns) changes things for the
worse by legitimizing the state and wasting resources. A vote for anyone
is a vote for capitalist “democracy” and to strengthen the state.
Some Democrats try to guilt leftists into voting for their candidate(s) by
arguing that oppressed peoples - the poor, people of color (POC) - vote
for their candidate and so you should therefore do the same. The most
obvious problem with this is that most oppressed people don’t vote.
You’re more likely to vote the richer and whiter you are. So by their
logic you shouldn’t be voting because most poor/POC don’t vote.
This argument is also based on a logical fallacy. Just because someone is
poor/non-white doesn’t mean everything they believe is correct. Most
believe in god and during periods in the past Leninism was quite popular
among sections of the poor/POC. It does not follow from this that either
idea is true. Just because oppression is wrong does not mean that
everything an oppressed person believes is true.
Some leftists argue that having Democrats in power is better because they
will be more responsive to leftist pressure than Republicans. This
argument was widely used in 1992 to justify voting for Bill Clinton but
the conservative policies implemented by his presidency, which were
basically a continuation of the first Bush’s policies, disprove this
argument. To continue believing it after Clinton is to stick your head in
the sand and ignore reality.
Influence actually goes the other way around: having a Democrat in office
makes the left more likely to believe the president’s lies and go along
with his policies than if a Republican were in office doing the same
thing. Clinton was able to gut welfare, something Reagan wanted to do but
couldn’t, because he was able to co-opt other Democrats into going along
with it. Had a Republican done the same many more would have opposed it.
When Clinton attacked Yugoslavia & bombed Iraq the response from the left
was quite small, but when Bush attacked Iraq the left formed a much larger
movement against it. Many leftists (erroneously) think that a Democrat is
preferable to a Republican and so are willing to give a Democrat the
benefit of the doubt, and therefore are more likely to believe their lies,
but will be much more skeptical of a Republican even if he does the same
thing.
In addition, electing a Democrat can ruin left-wing movements if they
support that candidate. Once in power that Democrat will have to do the
same thing a Republican would under the same circumstances. This can
cause leftists who supported the Democrats to become disillusioned and
drop out – allowing the right to advance even further.
Some claim that the year 2000 “election”/coup shows that “every vote
counts” but it actually shows the opposite. The Supreme Court decided who
became president, not the voters. Gore would be president today if you
went by what the voters wanted (and he would be doing the same thing Bush
is doing).
Actual power lies with big business and the state bureaucracy, elected
representatives must do what these institutions want. If they do not obey
these institutions pressure on them will mount and various disciplinary
mechanisms (such as capital flight) will come into play to force them to
do so. Ultimately they will be removed from office (through elections,
coups, or other means) if they continue to disobey these institutions.
The White House and Congress don’t really make the decisions, Wall Street
and the Pentagon do. Who wins the election makes no difference (with rare
exceptions) because all politicians must do what the elite want.
Elections are a scam whose function is to neutralize resistance movements
and dupe ordinary citizens into thinking they control the state.
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