Archive history Murray Bookchin — The Bernie Sanders Paradox

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authorJeffrey <jeffrey@theanarchistlibrary.org>2018-05-30 23:19:52 +0000
committerJeffrey <jeffrey@theanarchistlibrary.org>2018-05-30 23:19:52 +0000
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Published: /library/bookchin-sanders #761
* 2018-05-13T21:31:10 Added new text -- stew312856 * 2018-05-30T23:19:26 . -- jeffrey
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#date November-December 1986
#source Socialist Review 90
#lang en
-#pubdate 2018-05-13T21:29:18
#notes This is a polemic written by Bookchin when he and Bernie Sanders were both making their political homes in Burlington, Vermont. While other writers, such as the late Alexander Cockburn and other contributors to Counterpunch, have long chronicled Sanders' career and his embrace of Democratic Party imperialism, union busting, and mistreatment of frontline communities, Bookchin's analysis is unique in that it took on Sanders' politics from a position that included both policy as well as economics.
@@ -36,7 +35,7 @@ This is not to deny that Burlington has its fair share of economic predators and
Herein lies the greatest irony of all: all rhetoric aside, Bernard Sanders’ version of socialism is proving to be a subtle instrument for rationalizing the marketplace — not for controlling it, much less threatening it. His thirties-type radicalism, like Frankenstein’s “monster,” is rising up to challenge its own creator. In this respect, Sanders does not make history; more often than not, he is one of its victims. Hence to understand the direction he is following and the problems it raises for radicals generally, it is important to focus not on his rhetoric, which makes his administration so alluring to socialists inside and outside of Vermont, but to take a hard look at the realities of his practice.
-* Sanders’ Record
+ **Sanders’ Record**
SANDERS’ CLAIM that he has created “open government” in Burlington is premised on a very elastic assumption of what one means by the word “open.“ That Sanders prides himself on being “responsive” to underprivileged people in Burlington who are faced with evictions, lack of heat, wretched housing conditions, and the ills of poverty is not evidence of “openness” — that is, if we assume the term means greater municipal democracy and public participation. What often passes for “open government” in the Sanders cosmos is the mayor’s willingness to hear the complaints and distress signals of his clients and courtiers, not a responsibility to give them any appreciable share in the city’s government. What Sanders dispenses under the name of “open government” is personal paternalism rather than democracy. After six years of Sanders’ paternalism, there is nothing that resembles Berkeley’s elaborate network of grassroots organizations and councils that feed into City Hall.