THE BIPARTISAN BETRAYAL

By Mumia Abu-Jamal, M.A.

#494 Column Written 2/5/2001 All Rights Reserved  

"Party-spirit...which at best is but the madness of  many for the gain of a few." --Alexander Pope (1688-1744)

It is utterly impossible to view, listen to, or read  any segment of the corporate news machine without  hearing every newscaster, and every possible pundit,  giving up some rap about, yes, "bipartisanship."   Every major political figure in the U.S. is also  carefully schooled on how to include the word in every  possible 10-second sound bite.

It resounds like a bronze gong in a Buddhist temple,  vibrating and burrowing into consciousness,  overwhelming all other sounds, until we, the people,  find it laced neatly into our conversations with  friends, comrades, and loved ones.

The ubiquitous American media echo chamber effect has  millions thinking that "bipartisanship" is as natural  as, say, sunshine in an African summer, or rain in  spring.  In essence, it is an idea that is rarely  questioned.  Why not?

The very idea of bipartisanship stems from the  position that two parties must find a way to work  together.  You hear no one discussing tripartisanship,  or quadpartisanship, do you?  Isn't that odd?  Aren't  there more than two political parties in the U.S.?   Bipartisanship is, then, a political strategy designed  to channel all political activity through both  parties.

This strategy is, therefore, a strategy of exclusion,  for by limiting the range of acceptable debate to  those advanced by the two quite similar political  parties (which are both mere instrumentalities of  corporate power and wealth), the full chorus of  political opinion, from the left and right, are left  out of the realm.  Nor is this a negligible slice of  political life.

Consider the recent elections, where barely 50% of  eligible voters participated in the presidential poll.   As the race was razor thin, and the so-called "victor"  claimed between 200-to-950 votes to win, then that  "victor" can only truly claim to directly represent  the will of about 25% of the electorate!

Let's look at it from the opposite perspective: the  "victor" was either rejected or ignored (by not  voting) by about 75% of the American electorate!

This is a democracy of the absurd.

One need look no further than the Ashcroft  confirmation for the lofty post of U.S. Attorney- General.  Despite unprecedented opposition from  literally millions of constituents, senators voted  their party interest first and foremost.  Indeed,  senators from both parties voted for the nominee, with  some saying they did so "in the spirit of  bipartisanship."

Both parties are parties, not of the people, but of  the rulers.  It's time to organize to break this  political monopoly.

At the very core of this idea of bipartisanship is a  raging contradiction, for isn't politics really all  about divisions?  Don't people really have starkly  different political visions and objectives?  Don't  wealthy folks see the world differently from the poor?   Don't urbanites have different concerns than rural  folks?  Don't blacks have distinctly different  historical experiences than Whites?  Don't Latinos  have particular social and political interests (for  example, immigration, etc.) that differ from many  Anglos?

We can act as if no such differences exist, but they  do, and history has taught us that they only need the  barest opportunity to express such divergences.

Bipartisanship is only the latest illusion to prop up  the status quo, for the two big parties stay in power,  and the majority of Americans lose.

It is an illusion that no longer need delude us.

 

 


Text © copyright 2001 by Mumia Abu-Jamal.
All rights reserved.
Reprinted by permission of the author.
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