Endless Ukraine Funding Is Further Proof US Politicians Don’t Care What Voters Think
The Biden administration ignoring public opposition to
more funding for the Ukraine war follows a bipartisan tradition of Washington
ignoring the public in favor of special interests
by Jon
Reynolds Posted on August 14, 2023
Less than a week after a CNN poll found a majority of Americans oppose sending
more money to Ukraine, the
Biden administration announced that it will be seeking another $24 billion in
funding. If approved, the total amount spent by the US since 2022 on its proxy
war against Russia will reach about $137 billion.
“We have seen throughout this war solid support from
the American people, solid support from the Congress in a bipartisan and
bicameral way for continuing to support Ukraine and we’re going to stay focused
on that,” National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications
John Kirby told CNN regarding the poll. “It’s not just important to
the people of Ukraine, but it’s important to our European allies and partners,
particularly our NATO allies, given that this fighting is on the doorstep of
many of those NATO allies.”
Kirby’s comments echo those of Bush-era Vice President
Dick Cheney, who, in 2008, was confronted with polling data showing a vast
majority of Americans opposed the war in Iraq, and infamously responded: “So?”
Cheney continued by adding that we “cannot be blown
off course by the fluctuations in the public opinion polls.”
Such blatant disregard by elected officials regarding
views of the majority is clearly nothing new, but what makes it particularly
dystopian is the recent emphasis by cable news channels about the merits of –
and threats to – “our democracy”.
What democracy?
For years now, a majority of Americans have
supported legalizing marijuana, and yet the drug war continues to rage on without an
end in sight.
Polling data in 2012 – and again in 2018 – showed a majority of Americans
supported withdrawing troops from Afghanistan, and yet the US nonetheless
remained in the country until 2021.
More recently, a 2023 poll showed a majority of Americans don’t want
Trump or Biden to run for
office next year, and
yet they persist in haunting us with their unwanted presence. It was the same story back in 2016 when the choices were Trump vs Hillary Clinton,
who were the “two most unpopular presidential candidates in more than 30 years
of ABC News/Washington Post polling.”
Examples like these are truly endless. Time and time
again, we see a majority of Americans supporting or opposing a policy and politicians
blatantly ignoring them in favor of the monied interests which brought them to
power.
The drug war continues – in the face of overwhelming public opposition
– because special interests profiting from it spend millions every election year to support their preferred
drug warrior.
Unwanted wars such as the one in Afghanistan, the one
in Ukraine, or the one in Iraq – where the US still has troops as of
2023 – continue
because of what has become known as the “military industrial complex” – a
network of defense companies which spend millions every election year to support their hawk of choice.
There’s nothing democratic about any of this, and the
talking heads on cable news networks who make repeated comments about our
“democracy” are either totally oblivious and out of touch with reality or
entirely complicit and invested in propping up illusions of a system that
doesn’t actually exist.
In 2014, a Princeton study took data from nearly 2,000 public opinion
surveys and compared what the people wanted to what the government actually
did. What they found was that the opinions of the bottom 90% had no impact at
all.
The study’s authors concluded that “economic elites
and organized groups representing business interests have substantial
independent impacts on US government policy, while mass-based interest groups
and average citizens have little or no independent influence.”
And while the study may have its limitations, the writing is on the wall and has been for a long
time. Special interests donate millions to Biden, Trump, Mickey Mouse, or
whoever, because they see it an investment opportunity –
because they expect something in return when that politician
gets into office.
After every election, both of the major parties
repeatedly make it clear that they care more about wealthy donors than the
everyday voters coming out to support them on Election Day. Sadly, the Biden
administration’s support for sending billions more to Ukraine – despite what
appears to be a shift in public opinion – is just more proof.
Jon Reynolds is a freelance journalist covering a wide
range of topics with a primary focus on the labor movement and collapsing US
empire. He writes at The Screeching Kettle at Substack. Reprinted with permission.
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