|
Available
for Media Interviews:
IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
| The MaximsNews Global Pundit
Ian Williams
|

|
A
TALE OF TWO POLITIES
Why George W. Bush Is Really Our King
|
|
The
MaximsNews Global Pundit is also a journalist,
U.N. Correspondent for The Nation and the past
president of the United Nations Correspondents
Association. IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com Reprinted
with permission from The
Washington Spectator.
UNITED NATIONS - 14 November 2005 / www.MaximsNews.com/ The
stately arrival of Prince Charles and his most
recent spouse at the White House in early November,
shortly after the unstately departure of Vice
President Cheney's aide Lewis Libby from the same
place, and one hopes, shortly before presidential
adviser Karl Rove gets the bum's rush as well, was a
thought-provoking event.
Americans
tend to assume that they have the finest democracy
in the world—just as they assume that they have
the best health care. It often takes an outside
perspective to show up the eminently falsifiable
nature of these suppositions, but it is always an
uphill struggle.
To
celebrate the royal visit, I was invited onto the
Fox News channel to tut-tut on TV about the
anachronistic nature of England's Windsor
line.
But
alas, since Fox thinks that irony is what they used
to make in Pittsburgh, my tongue-in-cheek defense
of constitutional monarchy fell somewhat flat.
I had
forgotten that the untitled Rupert Murdoch, who owns
Fox, is a republican as well as a Republican. But I
notice that he did not exactly exclude his male
heirs from the management of News Corp.
When the
people at Fox asked me if the monarchy represented
privilege, of course I said I could agree in
principle, but I pointed out that in the
constitutional monarchies of Scandinavia, the Low
Countries and Britain, poor people have far more
access to health care and education than in the
current Georgian America.
In fact, in every
measurable way these societies are more egalitarian
than the United States.
For all
his eccentricities, Charles is a convinced
environmentalist, who supports the Kyoto Protocol,
while George thinks global warming, like evolution
(and indeed probably gravity as well) is just a
theory, despite the hurricanes that batter hardest
at the states that gave him the presidency.
With
that in mind, I told Fox that the hereditary
principle is indeed a dubious way to fill jobs, but
that even if the prince were eccentric or barking
mad, the world would be safe when he becomes Charles
III, even if he only makes it because he's his
mother's son.
However, I cautioned, it made one hell
of a difference to the world that George W., with
more than a few psychological question marks of his
own, had become George II just because he was the
fruit of his father's loins.
After all, no rational
person would believe that the spoiled legacy brat
who deserted from the Air National Guard and sank
business after business would ever have succeeded in
politics without strong dynastic backing.
AN
18TH-CENTURY ANTIQUE — In fact, when the
putative Charles III shook hands with George II of
the Bush dynasty, he was meeting someone who has
pretty much all the powers of Charles's ancestor,
the Hanoverian George III.
An equestrian statue of
King George was erected in 1770 by the colonists of
New York, grateful for the repeal of the Stamp Act,
and was toppled in ingratitude by the same people
after a public reading of the newly written
Declaration of Independence, just six years later.
Essentially
unchanged since then, the American political system
has escaped the reforms of the British and other
democracies.
While the powers of the European
monarchs have become more and more diluted with each
passing year until the kings and queens have all the
significance of a team mascot for their nations, the
presidential office has retained all those
quasi-monarchical powers of centuries past.
As a
Hanoverian monarch subject to election every four
years, the American president appoints civil
servants, ambassadors, and the whole Cabinet, on the
same basis as the patronage system of
eighteenth-century England.
The Cabinet members he
chooses need not have any independent political
standing whatsoever. Indeed, as we saw with the
heads of the Homeland Security and FEMA, not much in
the way of professional standing is required either.
Having
such an intensely political personage as the head of
state confuses issues. The American media and even
the political classes show far more deference to the
president of the United States than their British
counterparts do to the queen of England and her
numerous offspring.
In fact, most people in the UK
tend to ignore the monarchy except as a continuing
royal reality show. I have heard Americans say,
"I must support my president," but never
heard anyone in Britain say, "I must support my
prime minister."
When the
U.S. separated from Britain, the institution of
prime minister was in its infancy, and so it was not
too surprising that the rebellious colonists
overlooked the office in their Constitution, not
least since they saw the prime minister of their
day, Lord North, as a tool of the king.
Indeed
the title of prime minister itself was not formally
adopted until 1905, even in Britain. However, as the
office of prime minister has developed in Britain
and other places, it has become clear that it is no
bad thing for the chief executive to come from the
ranks of legislators—and to be accountable to
them.
The roles of head of state and chief executive
are separate. But with its political system frozen
in 1789, the United States missed out on this idea.
It is
not only a question of much needed political
experience. We have to ask, how far would George W.
Bush's political career have advanced if he had to
stand up for a Capitol Hill version of "Prime
Minister's Question Time" and actually explain
and defend his policies on the hoof against
unscripted questions?
On the other hand, looking at
the docility of so many of the U.S. legislators one
may wonder whether they could come up with any
killer questions on the spur of the moment without a
team of aides whispering in their ears.
IMPORTANCE
OF OPPOSITION—The offenses for which Libby was
indicted suggest that in one major respect, the
American political system is not only not reforming,
but is actually devolving.
To score petty domestic
political points against an individual who had
crossed them, high-ranking officials in the White
House were quite prepared to compromise secret
agents and national security, putting possibly
scores of lives at risk.
For the Bush team,
opposition is always disloyal, and the law is no
protection for that opposition.
If a
democracy is to function and survive, the major
protagonists within it must, in the end, believe in
the concept of a "loyal opposition."
It
does not take too much examination of the world's
politics to see that in many countries this is a
complete oxymoron, and of course, there were times
in American history, from the Federalist period
onwards, when it did not operate too smoothly as a
concept. The current White House has clearly
abandoned the quaint idea entirely.
This is
only the latest manifestation of the idea. Many
conservatives, for example, never accepted that
Clinton was really president.
The mere accident of
election did not persuade them that someone with his
views could legitimately hold the office. Similarly,
when it came to George W. Bush's assumption of
office, the technical detail that he may not have
actually won the election was for them no conceptual
barrier at all to his taking the oath.
In their
own idiosyncratic way, many Democratic legislators
have also shown signs of abandoning the concept of a
loyal opposition. They have emphasized the loyalty
at the expense of the opposition. Being
excluded from power does not make you an opposition:
opposing the incumbents does.
Though Harry Reid's
marshaling of a serious look at the road to the Iraq
War was a heartening sign, and the resistance to
John Bolton's nomination as U.N. Ambassador was as
well, these examples stand out because of their
rarity.
THE
PRIMARY PROBLEM—Their lack of feistiness is
not the only problem. Democratic legislators must
contend with one of the few innovations in the
American political system since 1789: the electoral
primaries.
The original idea behind primaries was to
take politics out of the smoke-filled rooms of the
party bosses, where as Tammany Hall's Boss Tweed
once said,
"I don't care who does the electin',
so long as I do the nominatin'." Apart from
anti-smoking laws, all that has happened since is
that check writers have taken over for ward heelers.
The
primaries are now responsible for much of the evil
in modern American politics, from apathy and
lackluster political platforms to the power of
money.
We now take it for granted, almost as
constitutional, in fact, that the race is much more
likely to go to the richest than the worthiest. To
gain access to party funding, a candidate has to
first win a primary, and to do so needs to raise
money as an individual.
As we can see, this not only
gives a head start to the Mike Bloombergs of this
world, it also means that candidates begin their
political life in hock to business interests.
Europeans
are never sure whether to be amused or horrified at
the role of campaign contributions, in the U.S., in
buying legislation.
In most other countries this
would be considered criminal corruption and outright
bribery, but the American convention is to assume
that as long as the bribes are spent on political
expenses rather than going into the candidates'
pockets, all is well.
Primaries
are flawed in principle as well as in effect, but
Americans are so used to them that even the most
radical tend to overlook just how bizarre and
essentially undemocratic they are. In few other
democracies are a party's candidates chosen by
non-party members.
In a sense, it makes a mockery of
the secret ballot for voters to declare their party
allegiances on the electoral registers, and in many
countries it would be regarded as a shocking
intrusion to have citizens' political opinions
recorded publicly in this way.
While
they are anomalous enough in the states where voters
at least have to declare which party they support in
order to participate, primaries reach the level of
outright insanity in states with "open
primaries," where supporters of one party can
actually choose another's candidates.
We saw the
results of that recently when Cynthia McKinney was
defeated in an open primary in Georgia by a
combination of cross voting from Republicans and
out-of-state money.
When she was able to present
herself in a later, general election, she won
handsomely, demonstrating presumably how ineffective
the primaries are at representing the intentions of
the electorate as a whole.
In other
democratic countries, the candidates are picked by
party members who have paid dues and declared
support for the party's principles.
Of course, the
association of party and principle seems a
contradiction in terms to many disgruntled
Americans, but maybe the primaries have had
something to do with that as well.
Another
direct consequence of this is that as far as the
public is concerned, the Democrats will be
leaderless until the primaries. There is no leader
of the opposition, loyal or otherwise, in the
American political system.
In more developed
parliamentary systems, the scores are settled right
after an election. The losing party decides whether
the leader of that party is worth another try, or
whether to pick someone else quickly to lead the
opposition back to power.
But in
the U.S., the Democrats will be rudderless for most
of the presidential term until at the end, for a
long and tedious year the contending candidates will
exhaust their wealth and the patience of potential
supporters in trashing each other, so that the one
with the most money and least mire sticking to him
emerges as the winning candidate, to be adopted at
the content-free circus that passes for a party
convention.
If half the energy that went into
opposing each other in the primaries went into the
task of opposing the incumbent over his term of
office, it would be a big step forward.
FACING
THE FACTS—Americans often take some convincing
that there is much wrong with their system, apart
from the wrong people being elected.
While the
European monarchies were evolving, the American
Republic became fossilized in its eighteenth-century
form.
The United States could benefit from a
constitutional monarchy that no one cares very much
about, and an established church that no one
believes in; but sadly the Bush dynasty, beginning
pre-Katrina, has shown many signs of developing into
an unconstitutional de facto monarchy, with the
White House controlling the legislators and the
judges and the military every bit as firmly as
George III ever did.
And the U.S., for all the talk
of separation of church and state is increasingly
intolerant in its religion. However, while you could
live with an attenuated monarchy inherited and
adapted, no rational person save Karl Rove would try
to implement one from a standing start.
So, is
there an easy way to bring the American political
system into the twenty-first century? Sadly,
probably not.
Even the primaries, enshrined as they
are in so many state legislatures, would take a long
time to disentangle.
However, the Plamegate affair
does offer an unrivaled opportunity for the
Democrats to stake out a position for the loyal
opposition, and to establish the question of to
what, or whom, loyalty is due.
All too often, the
Democrats have acted as if in their hearts they
secretly believed that the Republicans were indeed
the natural governing party of the United States in
some metaphysical way.
Loyalty
to the nation and its people now demands an exposure
of the disloyalty of the governing party.
Its
preparedness to lie and invent facts in order to
procure a war that it has yet to explain adequately;
its willingness to compromise national security to
protect its lies; its confusion of loyalty to the
Bush family and to its cronies with loyalty to the
country, all capped with a willingness to retaliate
at once against any liberals who speak out.
In fact,
it demands the application of European standards of
political conduct, which, even if they are more
often honored in the breach than the observance,
would pay dividends for a revived American democracy
that currently shows signs of ignoring decent
standards altogether.
IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
Reprinted with
permission from The
Washington Spectator.
|
|
|
|
Paid
Advertisement: Ads@MaximsNews.com
Rum:
A Social and Sociable History of the
Real Spirit of 1776,
by
Ian Williams
Order
NOW from Amazon.com.
Published
by Nation Books.

Ian
Williams discusses the more sociable
aspects of rum with Tom Roper former
Australian cabinet minister, and
Trinidad and Tobago's current Minister
of Tourism, Howard Chin Lee.
"Triumphantly
restores rum’s rightful place in
history..."
"Rum
was to the eighteenth century what oil
is to the present."
"Rum
was one of the major engines of the
American Revolution... a fact often
missing from histories of "the
era."
"RUM
shows that even the Puritans took a shot
now and then."
"RUM
explains the showdown between the
Bacardi family and Fidel Castro..."
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
MaximsNews Network® LLC
is a Global News Network reaching Over
20,000 in the International Community, is associated with MediaChannel.org and Globalvision News Network, global news and media information services with more than
350 news affiliates in 135 countries.
MaximsNews®LLC is in partnership with the United Nations Foundation and the Better World Fund.
MaximsNews Institute is in partnership with the World Policy Institute, New School University.
Diplomats, donors, key United Nations Officials, U.N. activists, all Missions to the U.N., all NGOs, journalists, activists in human rights, women's rights, African-American rights, peace, the environment, development and poverty, public policy experts, political figures, and academics.
Syndicated globally by RSS and XML feeds, GOOGLE NEWS, broadcast email, Blogs, streaming video, Internet and news wire services. For Free Subscription, RSS, or XML feeds to your website, contact: MaximsNews@MaximsNews.com
Max Stamper, Ph.D., London School of Economics, Publisher, DrMaxStamper@MaximsNews.com
Genevieve Stamper, Vassar, Associate Publisher, GenevieveStamper@MaximsNews.com
Front
Page |
About Max Stamper | Key Clients | International Affairs | Media Tools | The History of MaximsNews
Max Stamper is eager to explore your international public affairs and communication needs, and to discuss our services. Phone: +1.201.848.6162
Suite 112, 76 North Maple Ave., Ridgewood, NJ 07450 U.S.A.
MaximsNews Network® LLC
The views expressed are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of
MaximsNews® LLC
www.MaximsNews.com MaximsNews@MaximsNews.com
©
Copyrights 1999 - 2005, MaximsNews® LLC. All
rights reserved.
To
Unsubscribe: Unsubscribe@MaximsNews.com
|
|
|
|
|