An Anti-War Democrat Can Win the Presidency in 2020
Isn't it time to get behind the peace flag?
W.J. Astore
How can Democrats win the presidency in 2020? The answer is simple: field a candidate who's genuinely anti-war. A candidate focused on America and the domestic health of our country rather than on global empire. A candidate like Tulsi Gabbard, for example, who's both a military veteran and who's anti-war. (Gabbard does say, however, that she's a hawk against terrorism.) Another possibility is Bernie Sanders, who's beginning to hone his anti-war bona fides, and who's always been focused on domestic issues that help ordinary Americans, e.g. a higher minimum wage, single-payer health care for all, and free college education at public institutions.
Many Democrats still don't recognize that Hillary Clinton lost in 2016 in part because she was more hawkish than Trump on foreign policy and wars. (As an aside, the burdens of war are most likely to fall on those people Hillary dismissed as "deplorables.") Most Americans are tired of endless wars in faraway places like Afghanistan and Syria as well as endless global commitments that drive a "defense" budget that stands at $716 billion this year, increasing to $750 billion next year. Throwing more money at the Pentagon, to put it mildly, isn't the wisest approach if your goal is to end wasteful wars and restore greatness here at home.
Many of Trump's supporters get this. I was reading Ben Bradlee Jr.'s book, The Forgotten, which examines the roots of Trump's victory by focusing on Pennsylvania. Bradlee interviews a Vietnam veteran, Ed Harry, who had this to say about war and supporting Trump:
"We're tired. Since I've been born, we've been in a state of war almost all the time. When does it stop? We're pissing away all our money building bombs that kill people, and we don't take care of veterans at home that need the help."
Harry says he voted for Trump "because he was a nonpolitician" rather than a liberal or conservative. Trump, the "nonpolitician," dared to talk about America's wasteful wars and the need to end them, whereas Hillary Clinton made the usual vague yet tough-sounding noises about staying the course and supporting the military.
Again, Democrats need to listen to and embrace veterans like Ed Harry when he says: "All the money pissed away on wars could be used here to take care of the needs of the people."
I'd like to cite one more Vietnam veteran, Richard Brummett, who was interviewed in 2018 by Nick Turse at The Nation. Brummett, I think, would identify more as a liberal and Harry more as a conservative, but these labels really mean little because these veterans arrive at the same place: arguing against America's endless wars.
Here's what Brummett had to say about these wars: "I feel intense sadness that we've gotten the country into this. All these naive 20-year-olds, 18-year-olds, are getting chewed up by these wars--and then there's what we're doing to the people of all these countries. The list gets longer all the time: Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Libya, Syria. Who is benefiting from all this agony? I had the naive hope, in the years after Vietnam, that when I died--as a really old guy--the obituary would read: 'America's last combat veteran of any war died today.'"
If Democrats want to lose again, they'll run a "centrist" (i.e. a pseudo-Republican) like Joe Biden or Kamala Harris who'll make the usual noises about having a strong military and keeping the world safe by bombing everywhere. But if they want to win, they'll run a candidate who's willing to tell the truth about endless wars and their incredibly high and debilitating costs. This candidate will promise an end to the madness, and as a result he or she will ignite a fire under a large and diverse group of voters, because there are a lot of people out there like Harry and Brummett who are fed up with forever war.