truthdig | Exactly 200 days before the crucial midterm election that will
determine whether Republicans maintain control of Congress, the
Democratic National Committee filed a 66-page lawsuit that surely cost
lots of money and energy to assemble.
Does the lawsuit target
purveyors of racist barriers to voting that block and deflect so many
people of color from casting their ballots?
No.
Well,
perhaps this ballyhooed lawsuit aims to ensure the rights of people who
don’t mainly speak English to get full access to voting information?
Unfortunately, no.
Maybe it’s a legal action to challenge the ridiculously sparse voting booths provided in college precincts?
Not that either.
Announced with a flourish by DNC Chair Tom Perez, the civil lawsuit—which
reads like a partisan polemic wrapped in legalisms—sues the Russian
government, the Trump campaign and operatives, as well as WikiLeaks and
its founding editor, Julian Assange.
It’s hard to imagine that
many voters in swing districts—who’ll determine whether the GOP runs the
House through the end of 2020—will be swayed by the Russia-related
accusations contained in the lawsuit. People are far more concerned
about economic insecurity for themselves and their families, underscored
by such matters as the skyrocketing costs of health care and college
education.
To emphasize that “this is a patriotic—not
partisan—move,” Perez’s announcement of the lawsuit on April 20 quoted
one politician, Republican Sen. John McCain, reaching for the hyperbolic
sky: “When you attack a country, it’s an act of war. And so we have to
make sure that there is a price to pay, so that we can perhaps persuade
the Russians to stop these kind of attacks on our very fundamentals of
democracy.”
Setting aside the dangerous rhetoric about “an act of
war,” it’s an odd quotation to choose. For Russia, there’s no “price to
pay” from a civil lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York. As the DNC well knows, any judgment
against such entities as the Russian Federation and the general staff of
its armed forces would be unenforceable.
The DNC’s lawsuit
amounts to doubling down on its fixation of blaming Russia for the
Democratic Party’s monumental 2016 loss, at a time when it’s essential
to remedy the failed approaches that were major causes of Hillary
Clinton’s defeat in the first place. Instead of confronting its fealty
to Wall Street or overall failure to side with working-class voters
against economic elites, the Democratic National Committee is ramping up
the party leadership’s 18-month fixation on Russia Russia Russia.
After
a humongous political investment in depicting Vladimir Putin as a
pivotal Trump patron and a mortal threat to American democracy,
strategists atop the Democratic Party don’t want to let up on seeking a
big return from that investment. Protecting the investment will continue
to mean opposing the “threat” of détente between the world’s two
nuclear superpowers, while giving the party a political stake in
thwarting any warming of the current ominously frigid relations between
Moscow and Washington.
In truth, the party’s Russia fixation
leaves significantly less messaging space for economic and social issues
that the vast majority of Americans care about far more. Similarly, the
Russia obsession at MSNBC (which routinely seems like “MSDNC”) has left
scant airtime for addressing, or even noting, the economic concerns of
so many Americans. (For instance, see the data in FAIR’s study, “Russia or Corporate Tax Cuts: Which Would Comcast Rather MSNBC Cover?”)
But
even some of the congressional Democrats who’ve been prominent
“Russiagate” enthusiasts have recognized that the lawsuit is off track.
When Wolf Blitzer on CNN
asked a member of the House Intelligence Committee, Jackie Speier,
whether she believes that Perez and his DNC team “are making a big
mistake by filing this lawsuit,” the California congresswoman’s reply
was blunt: “Well, I’m not supportive of it. Whether it’s a mistake or
not we’ll soon find out.” Speier called the lawsuit “ill-conceived.”
The
most unprincipled part of the lawsuit has to do with its targeting of
Assange and WikiLeaks. That aspect of the suit shows that the DNC is
being run by people whose attitude toward a free press—ironically
enough—has marked similarities to Donald Trump’s.
0 comments:
Post a Comment