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:''This article is a biographical article about LaRouche. For a discussion of LaRouche's political views, see ].'' | :''This article is a biographical article about LaRouche. For a discussion of LaRouche's political views, see ].'' | ||
'''Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr.''' (born ], ]) is an ] political activist who leads political organizations in the United States and other countries. He is a ] for ], having set a record for most consecutive attempts at the office by running eight times |
'''Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr.''' (born ], ]) is an ] political activist who leads political organizations in the United States and other countries. He is a ] for ], having set a record for most consecutive attempts at the office by running eight times, LaRouche has run for the Democratic nomination for President in every election year since 1980, even in 1992 while he was in prison. | ||
However, he and his followers have never gained significant electoral support. Although he has no formal qualifications, he has written extensively on economic, scientific, political, and cultural topics, and is noted as a theorist of conspiracies. | |||
He is frequently described as an extremist or a ] leader, and is accused of being a ] and ]. He denies these charges. He is regarded by his followers as a brilliant and unfairly persecuted individual. |
He is frequently described as an extremist or a ] leader, and is accused of being a ] and ]. He denies these charges. He is regarded by his followers as a brilliant and unfairly persecuted individual. | ||
In ] LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment for conspiracy, ], and tax code violations. He continued his political activities from behind bars. He was released in ] on ] after having served five years. | In ] LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment for conspiracy, ], and tax code violations. He continued his political activities from behind bars. He was released in ] on ] after having served five years. | ||
As of 2003, he |
As of 2003, he is lists his formal position as a director and contributing editor of the ''Executive Intelligence Review'' News Service, a core part of the LaRouche movement. | ||
{{LaRouche movement}} | |||
<!-- and member of the International Ecological Academy of ]. I have made this invisible until we learn what it means to be a "member" and whether being a member is a "formal position" as the sentence said. See Talk. --> | |||
{{LaRouche}} | |||
== Early life== | |||
==1922—1946 Early life== | |||
LaRouche, the son of Lyndon H. LaRouche, Sr. and Jessie Weir LaRouche, was born in ] and grew up in ], where his father, an immigrant from ], was a shoe salesman. He was raised as a ] and grew up speaking ] and ], as well as English. He enrolled at ] in ], but dropped out in ]. As a Quaker, he was at first a ] during ], but in ] he joined the ], serving in medical units in ] and ]. During this period, he read works by ] and became a ]. While travelling home from India on the troop ship ''SS General Bradley'' in ], he met Don Merrill, a fellow soldier, who was also from Lynn. Merrill won LaRouche to ] on the journey home. Back in the United States, LaRouche attempted to resume his university education, but again dropped out of Northeastern. | |||
LaRouche, the son of Lyndon H. LaRouche, Sr. and Jessie Weir LaRouche, was born in ] and grew up in ], where his father, an immigrant from ], was a shoe salesman. He was raised as a ] and grew up speaking ] and ], as well as English. He enrolled at ] in ], but dropped out in ]. As a Quaker, he was at first a ] during ], but in ] he joined the ], serving in medical units in ] and ]. During this period, he read works by ] and became a ]. While travelling home from India on the troop ship ''SS General Bradley'' in ], he met Don Merrill, a fellow soldier, who was also from Lynn. Merrill won LaRouche to ] on the journey home. Back in the United States, LaRouche attempted to resume his university education, but again dropped out of Northeastern. | |||
==LaRouche and Trotskyism== | ==1946—1968 LaRouche and Trotskyism== | ||
In ], LaRouche returned to Lynn after dropping out of college and began attending meetings of the ] (SWP)'s Lynn branch. He joined the party the next year, adopting the ] '''Lyn Marcus''' for his political work. | In ], LaRouche returned to Lynn after dropping out of college and began attending meetings of the ] (SWP)'s Lynn branch. He joined the party the next year, adopting the ] '''Lyn Marcus''' for his political work. | ||
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In ], LaRouche left Wohlforth's group and joined the ], which had split with Wohlforth. He left after a few months and wrote a letter to the SWP declaring that all factions and sections of the Trotskyist ] were dead, and announcing that he and his new common-law wife, Carol Larrabee (also known as Carol Schnitzer), were going to build the Fifth International. | In ], LaRouche left Wohlforth's group and joined the ], which had split with Wohlforth. He left after a few months and wrote a letter to the SWP declaring that all factions and sections of the Trotskyist ] were dead, and announcing that he and his new common-law wife, Carol Larrabee (also known as Carol Schnitzer), were going to build the Fifth International. | ||
In ], the couple joined the ] ''Committee for Independent Political Action'' and formed a branch in New York's ]. He began giving classes for the New York ] on ] and attracted around him a group of graduate students from ], many of whom were involved with the ] ] (PL) group, itself very prominent in the ] (SDS). In the 1988 version of his autobiography, LaRouche writes that he was not really a Marxist when he gave his lecture at the Free School, but that he merely used his familiarity with Marxism as a "passport" in order to win students away from the ] ] which, he claims, was financed for nefarious purposes by the ]. | In ], the couple joined the ] ''Committee for Independent Political Action'' and formed a branch in New York's ]. He began giving classes for the New York ] on ] and attracted around him a group of graduate students from ], many of whom were involved with the ] ] (PL) group, itself very prominent in the ] (SDS). In the 1988 version of his autobiography, LaRouche writes that he was not really a Marxist when he gave his lecture at the Free School, but that he merely used his familiarity with Marxism as a "passport" in order to win students away from the ] ] which, he claims, was financed for nefarious purposes by the ]. | ||
LaRouche's movement was heavily involved in the ] student strike and occupation of Columbia and was able to win control of the university's SDS and PL branches by putting forward a political program linking student struggles with those of ]s in ]. His growing following allowed him to create a third tendency within the SDS competing with the two dominant tendencies, the "Action Faction," led by ] (which soon became the ]) and the "Praxis Axis," which saw students as the vanguard of the revolution. LaRouche organized his faction as the "SDS Labor Committee". He criticized SDS, and the ] in general, for being too oriented toward the ] and not enough toward labor. He held meetings in the Columbia area. Wohlforth attended one and writes: | LaRouche's movement was heavily involved in the ] student strike and occupation of Columbia and was able to win control of the university's SDS and PL branches by putting forward a political program linking student struggles with those of ]s in ]. His growing following allowed him to create a third tendency within the SDS competing with the two dominant tendencies, the "Action Faction," led by ] (which soon became the ]) and the "Praxis Axis," which saw students as the vanguard of the revolution. LaRouche organized his faction as the "SDS Labor Committee". He criticized SDS, and the ] in general, for being too oriented toward the ] and not enough toward labor. He held meetings in the Columbia area. Wohlforth attended one and writes: | ||
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:<small>Twenty to 30 students would gather in a large apartment and sit on the floor surrounding LaRouche, who now sported a very shaggy beard. The meeting would sometimes go on as long as seven hours. It was difficult to tell where discussions of tactics left off and educational presentation began. Encouraging the students, LaRouche gave them esoteric assignments, such as searching through the writings of ] to discover Rudd's anarchistic origins, or studying ]'s ''The Accumulation of Capital''. Since SDS was strong on spirit and action but rather bereft of theory, the students appeared to thoroughly enjoy this work.</small> | :<small>Twenty to 30 students would gather in a large apartment and sit on the floor surrounding LaRouche, who now sported a very shaggy beard. The meeting would sometimes go on as long as seven hours. It was difficult to tell where discussions of tactics left off and educational presentation began. Encouraging the students, LaRouche gave them esoteric assignments, such as searching through the writings of ] to discover Rudd's anarchistic origins, or studying ]'s ''The Accumulation of Capital''. Since SDS was strong on spirit and action but rather bereft of theory, the students appeared to thoroughly enjoy this work.</small> | ||
== |
==1969—1973 NCLC, and "Operation Mop-up"== | ||
] | ] | ||
After its expulsion from the SDS in ] the SDS Labor Committee became the ] (NCLC). Despite its name, it had no significant connection with the labor movement and viewed intellectuals as the revolutionary vanguard. According to ], NCLC's internal life was highly regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The movement developed an internal discipline technique, "ego stripping," which was intended to reinforce conformity and loyalty to LaRouche. | After its expulsion from the SDS in ] the SDS Labor Committee became the ] (NCLC). Despite its name, it had no significant connection with the labor movement and viewed intellectuals as the revolutionary vanguard. According to ], NCLC's internal life was highly regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The movement developed an internal discipline technique, "ego stripping," which was intended to reinforce conformity and loyalty to LaRouche. | ||
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Around this time there were reports in the ''New York Times'' and other newspapers of LaRouche members being kidnapped and forced to admit to being brainwashed. The LaRouche group announced at a national conference it had discovered a brainwashing or assassination plot by the CIA and KGB involving top member Chris White, a 26-year-old British national who had married LaRouche's ex-girlfriend, Carol Schnitzer, a woman ten years his senior, before moving with her to London to organize a British branch of the NCLC. | Around this time there were reports in the ''New York Times'' and other newspapers of LaRouche members being kidnapped and forced to admit to being brainwashed. The LaRouche group announced at a national conference it had discovered a brainwashing or assassination plot by the CIA and KGB involving top member Chris White, a 26-year-old British national who had married LaRouche's ex-girlfriend, Carol Schnitzer, a woman ten years his senior, before moving with her to London to organize a British branch of the NCLC. | ||
According to ], NCLC's internal life became more regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The LaRouche organization developed an internal discipline technique, called "ego stripping," which reinforced conformity and loyalty to LaRouche. | |||
King writes: | |||
At about this time there were reports in the ''New York Times'' and other newspapers of LaRouche members being kidnapped and forced to admit to being brainwashed. The LaRouche group announced at a national conference it had discovered a brainwashing/mind control/assassination plot by the CIA and KGB involving top member Chris White, who had married LaRouche's ex-girlfriend. | |||
:<small>"In December 1973, LaRouche ordered to return to New York for an NCLC year-end conference. White had good reason to feel nervous about this. He had done a poor job of organizing the British branch, and was a prime candidate for ego-stripping even apart from the love triangle. During the flight over the Atlantic, he viewed the film ''Trinity''. According to his recollection of the plot (in an article he wrote two months later), the hero has a girlfriend "at least ten years older than himself." She is murdered, and the hero then arranges the execution of a "rather paternal figure." White became increasingly agitated. When the plane landed, he began to shout that the CIA was planning to kill both his wife and LaRouche.</small> | |||
King continues: | |||
:<small>"Instead of calling a doctor, Carol called LaRouche. Chris was rushed into a deprogramming session at LaRouche's apartment. LaRouche's security aides and Dr. Gene Inch, a physician and NCLC member, rushed to the scene. Meanwhile, members from across the country had gathered in New York for the conference. The suspense began to mount as alarming rumors emanated from LaRouche's apartment. It was said that White had been tortured and brainwashed in a London basement by the CIA and British intelligence, who had programmed him first to kill his wife upon the utterance of a trigger word and then to finger LaRouche for assassination by Cuban exile frogmen.</small> | |||
:<small>"...members from across the country had gathered in New York for the conference. The suspense began to mount as alarming rumors emanated from LaRouche's apartment. It was said that White had been tortured and brainwashed in a London basement by the CIA and British intelligence, who had programmed him first to kill his wife upon the utterance of a trigger word and then to finger LaRouche for assassination by Cuban exile frogmen.</small> | |||
:<small> |
:<small>LaRouche mobilized the entire NCLC. They passed out fliers on a massive scale in New York and other cities, describing White's alleged tortures in lurid detail. The national office issued over forty press releases in a two-week period. LaRouche and the Whites filed a complaint with the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and launched a lawsuit against the CIA. NCLC members frantically solicited their parents and friends to serve on an Emergency Commission of Inquiry.</small> | ||
::<small> Dennis King, ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', (New York: Doubleday, 1989), pp. 27-28.</small> | ::<small> Dennis King, ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', (New York: Doubleday, 1989), pp. 27-28.</small> | ||
According to articles in the '']'' and other publications, |
Following this, the NCLC adopted violent and disruptive tactics under LaRouche's direction. According to articles in the '']'' and other publications, NCLC members physically attacked meetings of the ], and later of the SWP and other groups who were classed by LaRouche as "left-protofascists." These attacks were called "Operation Mop-up." According to ], some ex-NCLC members who left the group at this time say that LaRouche was studying the career of ] and consciously adopting the tactics of the early ]. | ||
The NCLC claimed that they acted in self-defense, even though all other accounts say that it was the NCLC that initiated the violence. LaRouche writes that "the FBI was orchestrating its assets in the leadership of the Communist Party U.S.A., to bring about my personal 'elimination',", citing a document obtained through the ]. | The NCLC claimed that they acted in self-defense, even though all other accounts say that it was the NCLC that initiated the violence. LaRouche writes that "the FBI was orchestrating its assets in the leadership of the Communist Party U.S.A., to bring about my personal 'elimination',", citing a document obtained through the ]. | ||
Some of LaRouche's most outspoken opponents are to be found among those who remained in the Left, after LaRouche and his followers had moved away from Marxism. According to ] and Dennis Tourish: |
Some of LaRouche's most outspoken opponents are to be found among those who remained in the Left, after LaRouche and his followers had moved away from Marxism. According to ] and Dennis Tourish: | ||
:<small>The parallel between LaRouche's thinking and that of the classical fascist model is striking. LaRouche, like Mussolini and Hitler before him, borrowed from Marx yet changed his theories fundamentally. Most important, Marx's internationalist outlook was abandoned in favor of a narrow nation-state perspective. Marx's goal of abolishing capitalism was replaced by the model of a totalitarian state that directs an economy where ownership of the means of production is still largely in public hands. The corporations and their owners remain in place but have to take their orders from LaRouche. Hitler called the schema "national socialism". LaRouche hopes the term "the ]" will be more acceptable."</small> |
:<small>The parallel between LaRouche's thinking and that of the classical fascist model is striking. LaRouche, like Mussolini and Hitler before him, borrowed from Marx yet changed his theories fundamentally. Most important, Marx's internationalist outlook was abandoned in favor of a narrow nation-state perspective. Marx's goal of abolishing capitalism was replaced by the model of a totalitarian state that directs an economy where ownership of the means of production is still largely in public hands. The corporations and their owners remain in place but have to take their orders from LaRouche. Hitler called the schema "national socialism". LaRouche hopes the term "the ]" will be more acceptable."</small> | ||
Whether or not LaRouche has ever called for a political arrangement similar to fascism is disputed. | Whether or not LaRouche has ever called for a political arrangement similar to fascism is disputed. The NCLC engaged in activity such as defending alleged ] ] ], who was acquitted by the ] of ], and associating with the far-right ]<!--documented by researcher Scott McLemee and others -->. | ||
==1971—1979== | |||
The NCLC engaged in activity such as defending alleged ] ] ], who was acquitted by the ] of ], and associating with the far-right ] <!--documented by researcher Scott McLemee and others-->. The New York Supreme Court ruled that it is "fair comment" to describe LaRouche as an ], as did a jury in Virginia. | |||
In ], LaRouche founded the ] as a vehicle for electoral politics, maintaining that both the major parties had abandoned the ] economic policies that the LaRouche organization had embraced (LaRouche names Republican ] and Democrat ] as exemplars of this school of thought.). | |||
In ], LaRouche organized the ''New Solidarity International Press Service'' as a wire service for his publications. He founded the weekly ''Executive Intelligence Review'' and co-founded the Fusion Energy Foundation. | |||
<!-- FAIR USE of Larouche-Congress.jpg: see image description page at http://en.wikipedia.org/Image:Larouche-Congress.jpg for rationale --> | |||
]'']] | |||
By the mid-1970s, LaRouche and his movement were no longer promoting a socialist agenda. Readings of Marx and Lenin were off the reading list of LaRouche's followers, to be replaced by texts by ], ] and ]. A key factor in the shift may be found in the published articles of NCLC Executive Committee member ] on ] and the ] school of political economy, culminating in his book, ''The Civil War and the American System.'' The LaRouche organization, after some deliberation and dissent, adopted Salisbury's thesis, that the American System approach was different from, and superior to, either Marxism or ] capitalism, and the organization's publications rapidly reflected this re-assessment. Another book was published, a collection of source documents entitled ''The Political Economy of the American Revolution''. LaRouche also became a strong advocate of ] and directed energy technologies for ]. | |||
==The LaRouche Group View of its New Policy Directions== | |||
In ], a former member of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party, Gregory Rose, published an article in '']'' alleging that LaRouche had established contacts with ] organizations such as the ] (PFLP), and also with the ] mission to the ] in ]. These contacts culminated in LaRouche's visit to ] in ], during which he made a presentation to the ] conference on the topic of his "Oasis Plan," a proposal for Arab-Israeli peace based on the joint construction of massive water projects. During ], LaRouche's newspaper ''New Solidarity'' began running articles favourable to Iraq, and extensively quoting ], at that time Iraq's vice-president. Rose also alleged that LaRouche at this time was in contact with ] diplomats. | |||
LaRouche asserts that much of the hostile characterizations of LaRouche and his ideas that came during this period was the result of a coordinated attack on the LaRouche movement, in conjunction with an ] program named ]. | |||
In ], he ran for ] as a U.S. Labor Party candidate, polling 40,043 votes (0.05%). This campaign was the first to broadcast a paid half-hour television address, which gave LaRouche the opportunity to air his views before a national audience. (This was to become a regular feature of later campaigns during the 1980s and 1990s.) | |||
In an interview with former ] ] and Democratic Presidential Candidate ], he was asked: | |||
In ] he married ], a ] political activist. | |||
:<small>'''EIR''': Can't the Democratic Party be changed, in the way you tried to change it in 1968, and Lyn is trying to change it now?.</small> | |||
In a September 24, ] op-ed in the '']'', entitled "NCLC: A Domestic Political Menace," Stephen Rosenfeld wrote: "We of the press should be chary of offering them print or air time. There is no reason to be too delicate about it: Every day we decide whose voices to relay. A duplicitous violence prone group with fascistic proclivities should not be presented to the public unless there is reason to present it in those terms." | |||
:<small>'''McCarthy''': I would hope so, but I doubt it. After 1968, the great fear of the Establishment was that a President might be elected on the basis of a political dialogue of the American people. There was great psychological warfare against me. You know there was great psychological warfare against Lyn.</small> | |||
::<small></small> | |||
LaRouche asserts that much of the hostile characterizations of LaRouche and his ideas that came during this period was the result of a coordinated attack on the LaRouche movement, in conjunction with an ] program named ]. | |||
By the mid-1970s, LaRouche and his movement were no longer promoting a socialist agenda. Readings of Marx and Lenin were off the reading list of LaRouche's followers, to be replaced by texts by ], ] and ]. A key factor in the shift may be found in the published articles of NCLC Executive Committee member ] on ] and the ] school of political economy, culminating in his book, ''The Civil War and the American System.'' The LaRouche organization, after some deliberation and dissent, adopted Salisbury's thesis, that the American System approach was different from, and superior to, either Marxism or ] capitalism, and the organization's publications rapidly reflected this re-assessment. Another book was published, a collection of source documents entitled ''The Political Economy of the American Revolution''. | |||
Beginning in ], the LaRouche movement has also conducted some of its activities within the framework of the ], despite the disapproval of the ]. | |||
LaRouche became a strong advocate of ] and directed energy technologies for ]. He maintains that it was his version of the policy that was later adopted by ], as the ] (SDI). He also claims that he posed the policy as a means for ending adherence to the doctrine of ] (M.A.D.), and also as a '']'' to rejuvenate the industrial economies of both the East and West blocs. Despite having become a registered ], LaRouche was harshly critical of ] in the ]. | |||
] | |||
] wrote his first of several articles about LaRouche in ] for the ''Chicago Sun Times.'' LaRouche sued Berlet and King for defamation, along with ] News and the ], but LaRouche lost the case, and the same jury awarded damages to NBC. | |||
Beginning in the late 1970s, the ], the ], and '']'' began publishing material highly critical of the LaRouche organization, which LaRouche claims was part of a "defamatory campaign laid the political groundwork for a later, new wave of corrupt Justice Department operations launched at, once again, the instigation of ]." In ], journalists Russ Bellant, ], and ] released a set of documents to the press which they claimed revealed a pattern of potentially illegal activity by LaRouche and his followers. They called for government investigations. | |||
The LaRouche organization opposed the ]'s support for ] in the ], arguing that Reagan's policy was in violation of the ]. LaRouche also strongly opposed the Reagan Administration's arming of the ] ]. The group also opposed the zero-growth policies of the ] and formed a countergroup named "Club of Life" on the issue. | |||
A ] ruled in a defamation suit brought by LaRouche that it is "fair comment" to describe LaRouche as an ]. <!-- FYI, the "Supreme Courts" of NY are really lower courts --> | |||
In its 2004 assessment of presidential candidates, the National Right to Life Committee gave LaRouche a grade of 75% and declared that he is "] in every way (against ], ], etc)." | |||
==1980s== | |||
LaRouche has opposed the ] and other international organizations in cases where he says they interfere with the concept of the ] and the ]nic ideal of a "perfectly sovereign nation-state republic". This holds especially true for their conduct toward the nations of the ], where LaRouche argues that they practise ]. | |||
Despite having become a registered ], LaRouche was harshly critical of ] in the ], with whom he had competed for the Democratic Party nomination. | |||
==Biographical issues== | |||
] | |||
LaRouche had become interested in the possible uses of ]s and other directed energy weapons during the ]. When ] took office in ], LaRouche sought to share his knowledge with the new administration, hoping that these weapons could be used against nuclear missiles. | |||
In ], LaRouche organized the ''New Solidarity International Press Service'' as a wire service for his publications. In 1974, he founded the weekly ''Executive Intelligence Review'', of which he is Contributing Editor. Former Reagan advisor and ] senior analyst, Dr. Norman Bailey, has said that the LaRouche network was "one of the best private intelligence services in the world." In 1974, LaRouche co-founded the Fusion Energy Foundation and, in 1984, participated in the founding of the ] with his current wife, ]. | |||
LaRouche and his representatives met with Reagan administration Energy Secretary ], Interior Secretary ], Science Adviser Dr. ], and State Department official ] in early ]. Later that year Lyndon and Helga Zepp-LaRouche met with ] Deputy Director ]. Long-time LaRouche supporter and former head of German Military Intelligence, General Paul-Albert Scherer, has said: | |||
He has written numerous articles, pamphlets, and books published mostly by his own press. These include his autobiography ''The Power of Reason'' (1980), ''There Are No Limits to Growth'' (1983), and a second autobiography, ''The Power of Reason 1988''. His 1984 textbook, ''So, 'You Wish To Learn All About Economics'', circulates internationally in several languages, as does his ] ''The Science of Christian Economy''. | |||
:"In the Spring of 1982 here in the Soviet Embassy there were very important secret talks that were held.... The question was: Did the United States and the Soviet Union wish jointly to develop an anti-ballistic missile defense that would have made nuclear war impossible? Then, in August, you had this very sharp Soviet rejection of the entire idea.... I have discussed this thoroughly with the developer, the originator of this idea, who is the scientific-technological strategic expert, Lyndon LaRouche. The rejection came in August, and at that point the American President Reagan decided to push this entire thing out into the public eye, so he made his speech of March 1983." | |||
Separating fact from fiction in LaRouche's biography is made difficult by the barrages of conflicting accounts generated by the LaRouche movement and its critics (see '']''.) LaRouche writes in his autobiography that he developed his ideas in the ] and has advocated them consistently ever since. <!--His followers claim he is a respected economist and commentator on world affairs. Provide source --> He claims to have pioneered such ideas as the International Development Bank, the ] or "Star Wars," and the so-called Eurasian Land-Bridge. It also claimed that he was used by the ] administration as a "back-channel" for negotiations with the ]. Outside of the LaRouche network, there is little support for these claims. | |||
:::<small>General Paul-Albert Scherer (ret.), Press Conference at the National Press Club, Washington, DC., May 6, 1992;</small> | |||
LaRouche has also had contact with some foreign leaders. On May 23, ], he met with ] President ], and advised him to suspend foreign debt payments (which was done in August 1982), and to declare exchange controls and nationalize Mexico's banks (done in September 1982). Years later, on December 1, ], while sharing the podium with Helga Zepp-LaRouche before a meeting of the Mexican Society of Geography and Statistics in Mexico City, former President Lopez Portillo said "It is now necessary for the world to listen to the wise words of Lyndon LaRouche." | |||
A military specialist involved in the SDI program, retired General Daniel O. Graham, has complained about the LaRouche attempts to take credit for SDI. "They also mounted a furious attack on me personally. Even today I get mail asking if I'm in league with LaRouche," said Graham. LaRouche countered, " "President Reagan's initial version of SDI was consistent with what I had introduced into U.S.-Soviet back-channel discussions over the period beginning February 1982. However, immediately thereafter, the mice went to work. Daniel Graham, the leading opponent of SDI up to that time, now proclaimed himself the virtual author of the policy, and was used, thereafter, to remove all of the crucial elements from the original policy." There is no independent verification outside of LaRouche group media, however, of the claim that LaRouche originated or played a major role in the development of "Star Wars" missile defense. | |||
In the ]s, LaRouche launched the ] initiative in ], which would have placed ] back on that state's List of Communicable Diseases subject to ] law. Opponents claimed that the measure could have instituted ]s and sexual contact tracing. After its defeat in 1986 it was reintroduced two years later and again defeated. | |||
LaRouche opposed Reagan's support for ] in the ], arguing that the policy was in violation of the ]. LaRouche also strongly opposed the Reagan Administration's arming of the ] ]. He also opposed the zero-growth policies of the ] and formed a countergroup named "Club of Life" on the issue. LaRouche has also had contact with some foreign leaders. On May 23, ], he met with ] President ], and advised him to suspend foreign debt payments (which was done in August 1982), and to declare exchange controls and nationalize Mexico's banks (done in September 1982). | |||
==Critical Analysis of LaRouche== | |||
In ], '']'' sued for damages when it found that LaRouche reporters were impersonating its reporters in phone calls. Lyndon LaRouche and his aide, Jeffrey Steinberg, gave depositions that revealed that their policy was for reporters to only pretend to be from ''non''-existing publications, and that they had infiltrated the campaigns of competing presidential nominees. | |||
In ], a former member of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party, Gregory Rose, published an article in '']'' alleging that LaRouche had established contacts with ] organizations such as the ] (PFLP), and also with the ] mission to the ] in ]. These contacts culminated in LaRouche's visit to ] in ], during which he made a presentation to the ] conference on the topic of his "Oasis Plan," a proposal for Arab-Israeli peace based on the joint construction of massive water projects. During ], LaRouche's newspaper ''New Solidarity'' began running articles favourable to Iraq, and extensively quoting ], at that time Iraq's vice-president. Rose also alleged that LaRouche at this time was in contact with ] diplomats. | |||
Without admitting guilt, the LaRouche group agreed not to impersonate ''U.S. News'' reporters in the future. | |||
===John Train "Salon"=== | |||
According to the ''Washington Post'', "Becoming a faithful follower of LaRouche is like entering the Bizarro World of the Superman comic books, says Paul Kacprzak, 45, who joined LaRouche as an idealistic teenager in the 1970s and worked for him for about a decade. As long as you stay inside the movement, everything you are told makes a certain sense. But if you try to view it from the outside, he says, 'it's Bizarro World.'" | |||
The '''John Train Salon''' is the name given by supporters of ] to several meetings they allege took place between 1983 and 1985 at the home of New York investment banker ]. Articles published by the LaRouche organization claim that these meetings, which were attended by a number of journalists and others, were held in order to plan the publication of articles critical of LaRouche. A LaRouche publication claims that Train coordinated a media slander campaign and introduced salon participants to officials of the FBI and the IRS with the aim of instigating criminal prosecutions of LaRouche. | |||
: <small>April Witt, “No Joke,” ''Washington Post'', Sunday, October 24, 2004; Page W12</small>. | |||
According to second-hand accounts, the attendees included: ], ], ], journalist, Roy Godson, academic, then a consultant to the ] and the ] (PFIAB), ], head of fact-finding at the Washington, D.C. offices of the ] and former employee of the ], ], a Pittsburgh businessman known for contributing to conservative causes, Patricia Lynch, an ] reporter, and unnamed journalists from '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']'' | |||
According to Chip Berlet and Matthew N. Lyons: | |||
The LaRouche organization claims that news coverage describing LaRouche as a ], ], ], ], ] leader and ] resulted from these meetings, although many articles making these claims had appeared in the mainstream and alternative press before the meetings are alleged to have taken place. According to a log of media coverage compiled by the LaRouche organization, NBC-TV also broadcast two programs in April of ], produced by alleged "John Train Salon" participant Pat Lynch, which repeated her earlier characterizations of LaRouche's ideas, and went on to accuse LaRouche of plotting the assassination of ]. NBC then broadcast programs in March and December 1986 claiming that LaRouche had been responsible for the assassination of ] Prime Minister ]. <!-- We should find corroboration that NBC did accuse LaRouche of these things; it sounds far-fetched to me. Chip, do you happen to know what these broadcasts said? --> The information published by the LaRouche organization about the John Train meetings has not been independently verified. | |||
:<small>"Though often dismissed as a bizarre political cult, the LaRouche organization and its various front groups are a fascist movement whose pronouncements echo elements of Nazi ideology. Beginning in the 1970s, the LaRouchites combined populist antielitism with attacks on leftists, environmentalists, feminists, gay men and lesbians, and organized labor. They advocated a dictatorship in which a 'humanist' elite would rule on behalf of industrial capitalists. They developed an idiosyncratic, coded variation on the Illuminati Freemason and Jewish banker conspiracy theories. Their views, though exotic, were internally consistent and rooted in right-wing populist traditions."</small> | |||
===Other events in the 1980s=== | |||
::<small>Chip Berlet & Matthew N. Lyons, ''Right-Wing Populism in America'', p. 273.</small> | |||
In 1984, participated in the founding of the ] with his current wife, ] | |||
Daniel Levitas writes: "For almost three decades, Lyndon LaRouche has engaged in political activities that have been chameleonlike in their shifts from left to right; however, he has been consistent in creating and elaborating conspiracy theories that contain a strong dose of antisemitism." <small> Daniel Levitas, "Antisemitism and the Far Right: "Hate" Groups, White Supermacy, and the Neo-Nazi Movement," in ed. Jerome A. Chanes, ''Antisemitism in America Today: Outspoken Experts Explode the Myths'', (New York: Birch Lane Press/Carol Publishing, 1995), pp. 191-192.</small> | |||
In ] LaRouche launched the ] initiative in ], which would have placed ] back on that state's List of Communicable Diseases subject to ] law. Opponents claimed that the measure could have instituted ]s and sexual contact tracing. After its defeat it was reintroduced two years later and again defeated. | |||
==LaRouche and the press== | |||
During the 1980s, the print and electronic media rarely mentioned LaRouche's name without the prefix, "political extremist." The LaRouche campaign in 1988, conducted while LaRouche was on trial, attempted to poke fun at this practice by broadcasting a national TV spot which featured a montage of clips of different TV announcers, all saying "political extremist Lyndon LaRouche." | |||
LaRouche has had an antagonistic relationship with the American news media throughout his career. In a September 24, ] op-ed in the '']'', entitled "NCLC: A Domestic Political Menace," Stephen Rosenfeld wrote: "We of the press should be chary of offering them print or air time. There is no reason to be too delicate about it: Every day we decide whose voices to relay. A duplicitous violence prone group with fascistic proclivities should not be presented to the public unless there is reason to present it in those terms." | |||
===1988—1994 Criminal conviction and imprisonment=== | |||
During the 1980s, the print and electronic media rarely mentioned LaRouche's name without the prefix, "political extremist." The LaRouche campaign in 1988 attempted to poke fun at this practice by broadcasting a national TV spot which featured a montage of clips of different TV announcers, all saying "political extremist Lyndon LaRouche." | |||
By the 1980s, LaRouche and Helga Zepp-LaRouche had built an extensive political network, including the ] in Germany, headed by Zepp-LaRouche, and branches in several other countries. The LaRouche organization devoted much of its energy to the sale of literature and the soliciting of small donations at airports and on university campuses. It also solicited donations by phone. Press reports alleged that this fundraising activity sometimes involved tax law violations, the conversion of publication sales into donations for LaRouche political campaigns that were then matched by the Federal Election Commission, and fraudulent soliciting of "loans" from vulnerable elderly people. | |||
In October ], the FBI and Virginia state authorities raided the LaRouche headquarters in ] in search of evidence to support the persistent accusations of fraud and extortion. LaRouche and six associates were charged with ] and ] related to fundraising. LaRouche was also charged with conspiring to hide his personal income since ], the last year he had filed a federal tax return. In December ], a federal jury in ] convicted LaRouche and his associates, and LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years in prison. LaRouche served five years of his sentence and was paroled. The convictions of LaRouche and his associates were a defining moment in the history of the LaRouche network. LaRouche supporters insisted that LaRouche was jailed, not for any violation of the law, but for his beliefs. The convictions of LaRouche and his associates were a defining moment in the history of the LaRouche network. LaRouche supporters insisted that LaRouche was jailed, not for any violation of the law, but for his beliefs. | |||
In March of ], the '']'' printed a facsimile of the Democratic Presidential Primary Ballot with LaRouche's name airbrushed out. | |||
LaRouche did not stop all political activity while in jail. He ran for president again in 1992, met with international personages, and gave interviews. During part of his imprisonment he shared a cell with televangelist ], who later wrote of his astonishment at LaRouche's detailed knowledge of the Bible. LaRouche was released on pardon in 1994. | |||
(((add LaRouche quote on journalists))) | |||
*''For more information on the case, see ]'' | |||
(((add US News lawsuit over hoax reporters))) | |||
Meanwhile, in ] the father of an adult involved with the LaRouche movement paid associates of the ] to have his son abducted and "deprogrammed". Lewis du Pont Smith, objected and his father sought to have him declared incompetent. The incident resulted in serious legal repurcussions for those involved. | |||
] | |||
==1994—present== | |||
At various times, the views of journalists Dennis King and Chip Berlet have received coverage in the mainstream press. Various LaRouche group publications have claimed that Berlet and King are part of a massive government-linked cnspiracy against LaRouche. | |||
] | |||
LaRouche continued his political activity upon his release from prison in ], concentrating much of his attention on ] nations. He was invited to ] by members of the city council of ], and was made an honorary citizen of that city on ] of that year. On December 1, ], while sharing the podium with Helga Zepp-LaRouche before a meeting of the Mexican Society of Geography and Statistics in Mexico City, former President Lopez Portillo said "It is now necessary for the world to listen to the wise words of Lyndon LaRouche." | |||
When LaRouche ran for president again in 1996 the Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Don Fowler, refused to allow LaRouche to be considered as a candidate or receive delegates. (LaRouche had received enough votes from a Louisiana parish to earn 2 delegates). LaRouche sued under the Voting Rights Act and lost. He appealed to the First Court of Appeals and lost there as well, in 1999, on the grounds that freedom of association permit political parties to reject members. | |||
(((need links))) | |||
During the ] scandal, LaRouche mobilized his supporters in defense of Clinton. They formed a group called the "Committee to Save the Presidency," which petitioned nationwide against resignation or impeachment. LaRouche asserted that the same people and institutions that had attacked him were behind the attacks on Clinton. | |||
The only substantial biography of LaRouche is ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', by King (Doubleday, ]). King, an investigative journalist, charges LaRouche with developing an intellectualized version of fascism mixed with political cultism and anti-Semitism (see ].) | |||
In March of ], the '']'' printed a facsimile of the Democratic Presidential Primary Ballot with LaRouche's name airbrushed out. <!-- anybody have proof? --> | |||
] wrote his first of several articles about LaRouche in ] for the ''Chicago Sun Times.'' LaRouche sued Berlet and King for defamation, along with ] News and the ], but LaRouche lost the case, and the same jury awarded damges to NBC. | |||
In ] and ], he toured ], speaking at various conferences and university seminars. He has also traveled to ], where on several different occasions, LaRouche publications report that he has addressed both the Economics Committee of the Russian ] and the ], most recently in ]. | |||
(((Add LaRouche defamation lawsuit))) | |||
LaRouche and his organizations opposed the ]. LaRouche was cited by an op-ed in the ''Syria Times'' as "mong the US voices of reason" for asserting that the war is the result of a "1996 Israeli government policy that is being foisted on the President by a nest of (pro-Israel senior officials) inside the U.S. government." LaRouche critic ] suggests that the commentary on Iraq by LaRouche-affiliated publications, which is incorporated into some Arab and Muslim commentaries, represents ] and ], especially through the use of what Berlet describes as "stereotyped descriptions of the ] network and their power." | |||
''See also ]'' | |||
===2004=== | |||
<!-- FAIR USE of NonFreeImageRemoved.svg: see image description page at http://en.wikipedia.org/Image:NonFreeImageRemoved.svg for rationale --> | |||
]'']] | |||
LaRouche entered the primary elections for the Democratic Party's nomination in ]. He did so even though his home state of Virginia is one of a handful of states which still has lifetime denial of the vote to ex-felons, which can only be overturned on appeal to the governor. The Democratic Party did not consider his candidacy to be legitimate and ruled him ineligible to win delegates. He gained negligible electoral support. | |||
<!-- Add ((LaRouche cadres aggressively disrupted comptetitor's meetings and harassed campaign workers.)) --> | |||
==Presidential bids== | |||
In its 2004 assessment of presidential candidates, the National Right to Life Committee gave LaRouche a grade of 75% and declared that he is "] in every way (against ], ], etc)." | |||
In ], LaRouche founded the ] as a vehicle for electoral politics, maintaining that both the major parties had abandoned the ] economic policies that the LaRouche organization had embraced (LaRouche names Republican ] and Democrat ] as exemplars of this school of thought.). In ], he ran for ] as a U.S. Labor Party candidate, polling 40,043 votes (0.05%). According to LaRouche supporters, the major accomplishment of the campaign was the broadcast of a paid half-hour television address, which gave LaRouche the opportunity to air his views before a national audience. <!-- according to which LaRouche supporters? --> This was to become a regular feature of later campaigns during the 1980s and 1990s. | |||
LaRouche was present in Boston during the ] but did not attend the convention itself. He held a media conference in which he declared his support for ] and pledged to mobilize his organization to help defeat ] in the ]. He also waged a campaign, begun in October ] , to have ] resign, or be dumped from the ] ticket. | |||
Since ], the LaRouche movement has also conducted some of its activities within the framework of the ], despite the disapproval of the ]. LaRouche has run for the Democratic nomination for President in every election year since, even in 1992 while he was in prison. | |||
A significant change in the LaRouche organization since LaRouche was released from prison has been the development of the "]" (LYM) beginning in 1999. The recruitment of young people in the 18-25 year-old age bracket has reportedly brought more members into the LaRouche organization than at any time in the past. | |||
''For more information see ]'' | |||
<!-- (((Add work with Nation of Islam and attacks on ADL))) | |||
==Criminal conviction== | |||
(((Add Analysis of necons and antisemitic stereotypes))) --> | |||
International publicity about LaRouche was sparked in 2003 and 2004 after ], a Jewish student from the UK who was attending a conference and "cadre school" in Germany organized by the Schiller Institute and LaRouche Youth Movement, died in mysterious circumstances in ]. LaRouche publications claim Duggan was suicidal, but a British court ruled out suicide, and decided that Duggan died while "in a state of terror". | |||
Beginning in the late 1970s, the ], the ], and '']'' began publishing material highly critical of the LaRouche organization, which LaRouche claims was part of a "defamatory campaign laid the political groundwork for a later, new wave of corrupt Justice Department operations launched at, once again, the instigation of ]." In ], journalists Russ Bellant, ], and ] released a set of documents to the press which they claimed revealed a pattern of potentially illegal activity by LaRouche and his followers. They called for government investigations. | |||
By the 1980s, LaRouche and Helga Zepp-LaRouche had built an extensive political network, including the ] in Germany, headed by Zepp-LaRouche, and branches in several other countries. The LaRouche organization devoted much of its energy to the sale of literature and the soliciting of small donations at airports and on university campuses. It also solicited donations by phone. | |||
Critics charged that this fundraising activity sometimes involved tax law violations, the conversion of publication sales into donations for LaRouche political campaigns that were then matched by the Federal Election Commission, and fraudulent soliciting of "loans" from vulnerable elderly people. | |||
==Note on biography== | |||
In October ], the FBI and Virginia state authorities raided the LaRouche headquarters in ] in search of evidence to support the persistent accusations of fraud and extortion. LaRouche and six associates were charged with ] and ] related to fundraising. LaRouche was also charged with conspiring to hide his personal income since ], the last year he had filed a federal tax return. In December ], a federal jury in ] convicted LaRouche and his associates, and LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years in prison. LaRouche served five years of his sentence and was paroled. | |||
Separating fact from fiction in LaRouche's biography is made difficult by the barrages of conflicting accounts generated by the LaRouche movement and its critics. LaRouche writes in his autobiography that he developed his ideas in the ] and has advocated them consistently ever since. <!-- His followers claim he is a respected economist and commentator on world affairs. Provide source --> He claims to have pioneered such ideas as the International Development Bank, the ] or "Star Wars," and the so-called Eurasian Land-Bridge. He also claims that he was used by the ] administration as a "back-channel" for negotiations with the ]. There is no independent verification of these claims. | |||
The convictions of LaRouche and his associates were a defining moment in the history of the LaRouche network. LaRouche supporters insisted that LaRouche was jailed, not for any violation of the law, but for his beliefs. They have collected a long list of persons calling fro the exoneration of LaRouche.(); | |||
The only substantial biography of LaRouche is ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', by King (Doubleday, ]). King, an investigative journalist, charges LaRouche with developing an intellectualized version of fascism mixed with political cultism and anti-Semitism (see ].) | |||
The jury foreman in the Virginia case, however, told the ''Washington Post'' (12/17/1988) that it was the failure of LaRouche aides to repay loans that swayed the jury, and that the jury "all agreed was not on trial for his political beliefs. We did not convict him for that. He was convicted for those 13 counts he was on trial for." | |||
==Timeline== | |||
*''For more information on the case, see ]'' | |||
*1922: Born | |||
*1942: Dropped out of Northwestern | |||
*1944: Enlisted in Army | |||
*1946: Return from India | |||
*1948: Socialist Worker Party mtgs. | |||
*1954: Married Janice Neuberger | |||
*1956: Son born | |||
*1963: Janice leaves | |||
*1964: Revolutionary Tendency | |||
*1965: Expelled from Socialist Worker Party | |||
*1965: Joins Spartacist League | |||
*1965: Cohabit with Carol Larrabee | |||
*1966: Joins Committee for Independent Political Action | |||
*1968: Protests at Columbia with SDS | |||
*1969: Expelled from SDS | |||
*1969: Forms NCLC | |||
*1971: Forms U.S. Labor Party | |||
*1971: New Solidarity press service | |||
* 1972: Carol Larrabee Schnitzer leaves LaRouche | |||
*1973: Operation Mop-up | |||
*1974: Executive Intelligence Review | |||
*1974: Fusion Energy Foundation | |||
*1975: Visit to Iraq | |||
*1976: 1st Pres. bid, w/ US Labor | |||
*1976: Critical Washington Post article | |||
*1977: Married Helga Zepp | |||
*1979: Brings & loses libel suit | |||
*1979: moves to opposition to deregulation | |||
*1979: Move to Democratic Party | |||
*1980: USLP disbanded | |||
*1980: 2nd Pres. bid, w/ Democratic Party | |||
*1982: U.S. News suit | |||
*1983: Train Salon | |||
*1984: 3rd Pres. bid. | |||
*1984: Inspired formation of Schiller Institute | |||
*1986: California AIDS initiative loses | |||
*1986: Illinois state contests | |||
*1986: FBI raids HQ | |||
*1986: LaRouche & 6 others charged w/ fraud | |||
*1987: Forced bankruptcy | |||
*1988: Misttrial, charges refiled | |||
*1988: 2nd California AIDS intitiative loses | |||
*1988: 4th Pres. bid | |||
*1988: LaRouche & others convicted | |||
*1992: 5th Pres. bid, from prison | |||
*1992: CAN kidnapping of Lewis du Pont Smith | |||
*1994: Paroled | |||
*1996: 6th Pres. bid | |||
*1996: Takeover of Citizens Electoral Council | |||
*1996: ''LaRouche v Fowler'' | |||
*1999: formed Larouche Youth Movement | |||
*2000: 7th Pres. bid | |||
*2003: Death of Duggan | |||
*2004: 8th Pres. bid | |||
== |
==Works== | ||
Lyndon LaRouche has written numerous articles, pamphlets, and books published mostly by his own press. These include his autobiography ''The Power of Reason'' (1980), ''There Are No Limits to Growth'' (1983), and a second autobiography, ''The Power of Reason 1988''. His 1984 textbook, ''So, 'You Wish To Learn All About Economics'', circulates internationally in several languages, as does his ] ''The Science of Christian Economy''. | |||
LaRouche resumed his political activity upon his release from prison in ]., concentrating much of his attention on ] nations. He was invited to ] by members of the city council of ], and was made an honorary citizen of that city on ] of that year. In ] and ], he toured ], speaking at various conferences and university seminars. He has also traveled to ], where on several different occasions he has addressed both the Economics Committee of the Russian ] and the ], most recently in ]. | |||
LaRouche and his organizations opposed the ]. LaRouche was cited by an op-ed in the ''Syria Times'' as "mong the US voices of reason" for asserting that the war is the result of a "1996 Israeli government policy that is being foisted on the President by a nest of (pro-Israel senior officials) inside the U.S. government." LaRouche critic ] suggests that the commentary on Iraq by LaRouche-affiliated publications, which is incorporated into some Arab and Muslim commentaries, represents ] and ], especially through the use of what Berlet describes as "stereotyped descriptions of the ] network and their power." | |||
During the ] scandal, LaRouche mobilized his supporters in defense of Clinton. They formed a group called the "Committee to Save the Presidency," which petitioned nationwide against resignation or impeachment. LaRouche asserted that the same people and institutions that had attacked him were behind the attacks on Clinton. | |||
LaRouche entered the primary elections for the Democratic Party's nomination in ], even though as a convicted felon he is not permitted to vote. The Democratic Party did not consider his candidacy to be legitimate and ruled him ineligible to win delegates. He gained negligible electoral support. | |||
LaRouche was present in Boston during the ] but did not attend the convention itself. He held a media conference in which he declared his support for ] and pledged to mobilize his organization to help defeat ] in the ]. He also waged a campaign, begun in October ] , to have ] resign, or be dumped from the ] ticket. | |||
A significant change in the LaRouche organization since LaRouche was released from prison has been the development of the "]" (LYM) beginning in 1999. The recruitment of young people in the 18-25 year-old age bracket has reportedly brought more members into the LaRouche organization than at any time in the past. | |||
(((Add work with Nation of Islam and attacks on ADL))) | |||
(((Add Analysis of necons and antisemitic stereotypes))) | |||
International publicity about LaRouche was sparked in 2003 and 2004 after ], a Jewish student from the UK who was attending a conference and "cadre school" in Germany organized by the Schiller Institute and LaRouche Youth Movement, died in mysterious circumstances in ]. LaRouche publications claim Duggan was suicidal, but a British court ruled out suicide, and decided that Duggan died while "in a state of terror". | |||
==Books about Lyndon LaRouche and his movement== | ==Books about Lyndon LaRouche and his movement== | ||
*Gilbert, Helen (2003) ''Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism restyled for the new Millennium'', Red Letter Press, ISBN |
*Gilbert, Helen (2003) ''Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism restyled for the new Millennium'', Red Letter Press, {{ISBN|0932323219}} | ||
*Beyes-Corleis, Aglaja (1994) ''Verirrt: Mein Leben in einer radikalen Politorganisation'', Herder/Spektrum, ISBN |
*Beyes-Corleis, Aglaja (1994) ''Verirrt: Mein Leben in einer radikalen Politorganisation'', Herder/Spektrum, {{ISBN|3451042789}} | ||
*King, Dennis (1989) ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', Doubleday, ISBN |
*King, Dennis (1989) ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', Doubleday, {{ISBN|0385238800}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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* | * | ||
* : LaRouche Publications |
* : LaRouche Publications | ||
* | * | ||
* |
* {{spaced ndash}}LaRouche-affiliated Science organization | ||
* | * | ||
* LaRouche response to the various accusations against him | * LaRouche response to the various accusations against him | ||
* |
*{{spaced ndash}}LaRouche response to the recent ''Independent'' and ''Washington Post'' articles | ||
Other links: | Other links: | ||
* includes a 1995 series on LaRouche by John Mintz and links to other ''Washington Post'' articles on LaRouche |
* includes a 1995 series on LaRouche by John Mintz and links to other ''Washington Post'' articles on LaRouche | ||
* |
*{{spaced ndash}}Pasadena City College | ||
* |
*{{spaced ndash}}UC San Diego forum | ||
* Boston paper | * Boston paper | ||
* by ] and others. | * by ] and others. | ||
* by Nizkor Project |
* by Nizkor Project | ||
* Series of articles from the ] Institute for the Study of Destructive Cults |
* Series of articles from the ] Institute for the Study of Destructive Cults | ||
* |
* {{spaced ndash}}Review of ]'s book | ||
* | * | ||
* | * | ||
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* 1975 article published by the ] whose members joined LaRouche's NCLC for a period in the early 1970s. | * 1975 article published by the ] whose members joined LaRouche's NCLC for a period in the early 1970s. | ||
* by ] who worked closely with LaRouche in 1964 and 1965 and also observed him afterwards. | * by ] who worked closely with LaRouche in 1964 and 1965 and also observed him afterwards. | ||
* |
*{{spaced ndash}}''Washington Post'', October 2004 | ||
* by Terry Kirby, July 2004 (''The Independent'' of London) |
* by Terry Kirby, July 2004 (''The Independent'' of London) | ||
* | * | ||
Category:United States presidential candidates|LaRouche, Lyndon]] | |||
Category:Conspiracy theorists|LaRouche, Lyndon]] | |||
Category:Octogenarians|LaRouche, Lyndon]] | |||
Category:1922 births|LaRouche, Lyndon]] | |||
Category:Journalists|LaRouche, Lyndon]] | |||
de:Lyndon LaRouche]] | |||
fr:Lyndon LaRouche]] | |||
==Editing Navigation Aides== | ==Editing Navigation Aides== | ||
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Latest revision as of 23:02, 7 July 2017
- This article is a biographical article about LaRouche. For a discussion of LaRouche's political views, see Political views of Lyndon LaRouche.
Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr. (born September 8, 1922) is an American political activist who leads political organizations in the United States and other countries. He is a perennial candidate for President of the United States, having set a record for most consecutive attempts at the office by running eight times, LaRouche has run for the Democratic nomination for President in every election year since 1980, even in 1992 while he was in prison. However, he and his followers have never gained significant electoral support. Although he has no formal qualifications, he has written extensively on economic, scientific, political, and cultural topics, and is noted as a theorist of conspiracies.
He is frequently described as an extremist or a cult leader, and is accused of being a fascist and anti-Semite. He denies these charges. He is regarded by his followers as a brilliant and unfairly persecuted individual.
In 1988 LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment for conspiracy, mail fraud, and tax code violations. He continued his political activities from behind bars. He was released in 1994 on parole after having served five years.
As of 2003, he is lists his formal position as a director and contributing editor of the Executive Intelligence Review News Service, a core part of the LaRouche movement.
LaRouche movement | ||
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History | ||
Active organizations | ||
Defunct organizations | ||
Members |
| |
Members who separated from the movement | ||
Critics | ||
Related persons | ||
1922—1946 Early life
LaRouche, the son of Lyndon H. LaRouche, Sr. and Jessie Weir LaRouche, was born in Rochester, New Hampshire and grew up in Lynn, Massachusetts, where his father, an immigrant from Quebec, was a shoe salesman. He was raised as a Quaker and grew up speaking French and German, as well as English. He enrolled at Northeastern University in Boston, but dropped out in 1942. As a Quaker, he was at first a conscientious objector during World War II, but in 1944 he joined the United States Army, serving in medical units in India and Burma. During this period, he read works by Karl Marx and became a Marxist. While travelling home from India on the troop ship SS General Bradley in 1946, he met Don Merrill, a fellow soldier, who was also from Lynn. Merrill won LaRouche to Trotskyism on the journey home. Back in the United States, LaRouche attempted to resume his university education, but again dropped out of Northeastern.
1946—1968 LaRouche and Trotskyism
In 1948, LaRouche returned to Lynn after dropping out of college and began attending meetings of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP)'s Lynn branch. He joined the party the next year, adopting the pseudonym Lyn Marcus for his political work.
LaRouche obtained work as a management consultant in New York City, which included advising companies on how to use computers to maximise efficiency and speed-up production. In 1954, he married fellow SWP member Janice Neuberger. By 1961, the LaRouches lived in a large apartment on Central Park West. His activity in the internal life of the SWP was minimal due to his preoccupation with his career.
LaRouche remained in the SWP until his expulsion in 1965. He now maintains that he was soon disillusioned with Marxism, dropped out of the SWP in the mid-1950s, and only resumed his activism at the prompting of the FBI citing national security concerns. In an interview on the Pacifica Radio network, LaRouche claims that he returned to the SWP because he believed that only the Left was likely to combat what he calls the "utopian" danger coming from the Right, typified by the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam War. His ex-wife and other SWP members from that time dispute this. During these years LaRouche developed his interests in economics, cybernetics, psychoanalysis, business management and other subjects. Janice left him in 1963 (they had one son, Daniel, born in 1956) and, in the late 1960s, she became a leader of the New York City branch of the National Organization of Women.
In 1964, while still in the SWP, LaRouche became a supporter of a faction called the Revolutionary Tendency, which had been expelled from the party and was under the influence of the British Trotskyist leader Gerry Healy, leader of the British Socialist Labour League. Those familiar with the Left in this period believe that LaRouche was heavily influenced by Healy's catastrophism. For six months, LaRouche worked closely with American Healyite leader Tim Wohlforth, who later wrote:
- LaRouche had a gargantuan ego. Convinced he was a genius, he combined his strong conviction in his own abilities with an arrogance expressed in the cadences of upper-class New England. He assumed that the comment in the Communist Manifesto that "a small section of the ruling class cuts itself adrift, and joins the revolutionary class ..." was written specifically for him. And he believed that the working class was lucky to obtain his services.
- LaRouche possessed a marvelous ability to place any world happening in a larger context, which seemed to give the event additional meaning, but his thinking was schematic, lacking factual detail and depth. It was contradictory. His explanations were a bit too pat, and his mind worked so quickly that I always suspected his bravado covered over superficiality. He had an answer for everything. Sessions with him reminded me of a parlor game: present a problem, no matter how petty, and without so much as blinking his eye, LaRouche would dream up the solution.
In 1965, LaRouche left Wohlforth's group and joined the Spartacist League, which had split with Wohlforth. He left after a few months and wrote a letter to the SWP declaring that all factions and sections of the Trotskyist Fourth International were dead, and announcing that he and his new common-law wife, Carol Larrabee (also known as Carol Schnitzer), were going to build the Fifth International.
In 1966, the couple joined the New Left Committee for Independent Political Action and formed a branch in New York's West Village. He began giving classes for the New York Free School on dialectical materialism and attracted around him a group of graduate students from Columbia University, many of whom were involved with the Maoist Progressive Labor (PL) group, itself very prominent in the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). In the 1988 version of his autobiography, LaRouche writes that he was not really a Marxist when he gave his lecture at the Free School, but that he merely used his familiarity with Marxism as a "passport" in order to win students away from the New Left counterculture which, he claims, was financed for nefarious purposes by the Ford Foundation.
LaRouche's movement was heavily involved in the 1968 student strike and occupation of Columbia and was able to win control of the university's SDS and PL branches by putting forward a political program linking student struggles with those of Blacks in Harlem. His growing following allowed him to create a third tendency within the SDS competing with the two dominant tendencies, the "Action Faction," led by Mark Rudd (which soon became the Weather Underground) and the "Praxis Axis," which saw students as the vanguard of the revolution. LaRouche organized his faction as the "SDS Labor Committee". He criticized SDS, and the New Left in general, for being too oriented toward the counterculture and not enough toward labor. He held meetings in the Columbia area. Wohlforth attended one and writes:
- Twenty to 30 students would gather in a large apartment and sit on the floor surrounding LaRouche, who now sported a very shaggy beard. The meeting would sometimes go on as long as seven hours. It was difficult to tell where discussions of tactics left off and educational presentation began. Encouraging the students, LaRouche gave them esoteric assignments, such as searching through the writings of Georges Sorel to discover Rudd's anarchistic origins, or studying Rosa Luxemburg's The Accumulation of Capital. Since SDS was strong on spirit and action but rather bereft of theory, the students appeared to thoroughly enjoy this work.
1969—1973 NCLC, and "Operation Mop-up"
After its expulsion from the SDS in 1969 the SDS Labor Committee became the National Caucus of Labor Committees (NCLC). Despite its name, it had no significant connection with the labor movement and viewed intellectuals as the revolutionary vanguard. According to Dennis King, NCLC's internal life was highly regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The movement developed an internal discipline technique, "ego stripping," which was intended to reinforce conformity and loyalty to LaRouche.
Around this time there were reports in the New York Times and other newspapers of LaRouche members being kidnapped and forced to admit to being brainwashed. The LaRouche group announced at a national conference it had discovered a brainwashing or assassination plot by the CIA and KGB involving top member Chris White, a 26-year-old British national who had married LaRouche's ex-girlfriend, Carol Schnitzer, a woman ten years his senior, before moving with her to London to organize a British branch of the NCLC.
According to Dennis King, NCLC's internal life became more regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The LaRouche organization developed an internal discipline technique, called "ego stripping," which reinforced conformity and loyalty to LaRouche.
At about this time there were reports in the New York Times and other newspapers of LaRouche members being kidnapped and forced to admit to being brainwashed. The LaRouche group announced at a national conference it had discovered a brainwashing/mind control/assassination plot by the CIA and KGB involving top member Chris White, who had married LaRouche's ex-girlfriend.
King continues:
- "...members from across the country had gathered in New York for the conference. The suspense began to mount as alarming rumors emanated from LaRouche's apartment. It was said that White had been tortured and brainwashed in a London basement by the CIA and British intelligence, who had programmed him first to kill his wife upon the utterance of a trigger word and then to finger LaRouche for assassination by Cuban exile frogmen.
- LaRouche mobilized the entire NCLC. They passed out fliers on a massive scale in New York and other cities, describing White's alleged tortures in lurid detail. The national office issued over forty press releases in a two-week period. LaRouche and the Whites filed a complaint with the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and launched a lawsuit against the CIA. NCLC members frantically solicited their parents and friends to serve on an Emergency Commission of Inquiry.
- Dennis King, Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism, (New York: Doubleday, 1989), pp. 27-28.
Following this, the NCLC adopted violent and disruptive tactics under LaRouche's direction. According to articles in the Village Voice and other publications, NCLC members physically attacked meetings of the Communist Party, and later of the SWP and other groups who were classed by LaRouche as "left-protofascists." These attacks were called "Operation Mop-up." According to Dennis King, some ex-NCLC members who left the group at this time say that LaRouche was studying the career of Adolf Hitler and consciously adopting the tactics of the early Nazi Party.
The NCLC claimed that they acted in self-defense, even though all other accounts say that it was the NCLC that initiated the violence. LaRouche writes that "the FBI was orchestrating its assets in the leadership of the Communist Party U.S.A., to bring about my personal 'elimination',", citing a document obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.
Some of LaRouche's most outspoken opponents are to be found among those who remained in the Left, after LaRouche and his followers had moved away from Marxism. According to Tim Wohlforth and Dennis Tourish:
- The parallel between LaRouche's thinking and that of the classical fascist model is striking. LaRouche, like Mussolini and Hitler before him, borrowed from Marx yet changed his theories fundamentally. Most important, Marx's internationalist outlook was abandoned in favor of a narrow nation-state perspective. Marx's goal of abolishing capitalism was replaced by the model of a totalitarian state that directs an economy where ownership of the means of production is still largely in public hands. The corporations and their owners remain in place but have to take their orders from LaRouche. Hitler called the schema "national socialism". LaRouche hopes the term "the American system" will be more acceptable."
Whether or not LaRouche has ever called for a political arrangement similar to fascism is disputed. The NCLC engaged in activity such as defending alleged Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk, who was acquitted by the Supreme Court of Israel, and associating with the far-right Liberty Lobby.
1971—1979
In 1971, LaRouche founded the U.S. Labor Party as a vehicle for electoral politics, maintaining that both the major parties had abandoned the American System economic policies that the LaRouche organization had embraced (LaRouche names Republican Abraham Lincoln and Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt as exemplars of this school of thought.).
In 1971, LaRouche organized the New Solidarity International Press Service as a wire service for his publications. He founded the weekly Executive Intelligence Review and co-founded the Fusion Energy Foundation.
By the mid-1970s, LaRouche and his movement were no longer promoting a socialist agenda. Readings of Marx and Lenin were off the reading list of LaRouche's followers, to be replaced by texts by Alexander Hamilton, Friedrich Schiller and Plato. A key factor in the shift may be found in the published articles of NCLC Executive Committee member Allen Salisbury on Henry Carey and the American System school of political economy, culminating in his book, The Civil War and the American System. The LaRouche organization, after some deliberation and dissent, adopted Salisbury's thesis, that the American System approach was different from, and superior to, either Marxism or Laissez-faire capitalism, and the organization's publications rapidly reflected this re-assessment. Another book was published, a collection of source documents entitled The Political Economy of the American Revolution. LaRouche also became a strong advocate of nuclear energy and directed energy technologies for ballistic missile defense.
In 1974, a former member of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party, Gregory Rose, published an article in National Review alleging that LaRouche had established contacts with Palestinian terrorist organizations such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), and also with the Iraqi mission to the United Nations in New York. These contacts culminated in LaRouche's visit to Baghdad in 1975, during which he made a presentation to the Baath Party conference on the topic of his "Oasis Plan," a proposal for Arab-Israeli peace based on the joint construction of massive water projects. During 1975, LaRouche's newspaper New Solidarity began running articles favourable to Iraq, and extensively quoting Saddam Hussein, at that time Iraq's vice-president. Rose also alleged that LaRouche at this time was in contact with Soviet diplomats.
In 1976, he ran for President of the United States as a U.S. Labor Party candidate, polling 40,043 votes (0.05%). This campaign was the first to broadcast a paid half-hour television address, which gave LaRouche the opportunity to air his views before a national audience. (This was to become a regular feature of later campaigns during the 1980s and 1990s.)
In 1977 he married Helga Zepp, a German political activist.
In a September 24, 1976 op-ed in the Washington Post, entitled "NCLC: A Domestic Political Menace," Stephen Rosenfeld wrote: "We of the press should be chary of offering them print or air time. There is no reason to be too delicate about it: Every day we decide whose voices to relay. A duplicitous violence prone group with fascistic proclivities should not be presented to the public unless there is reason to present it in those terms."
LaRouche asserts that much of the hostile characterizations of LaRouche and his ideas that came during this period was the result of a coordinated attack on the LaRouche movement, in conjunction with an FBI program named COINTELPRO.
Beginning in 1979, the LaRouche movement has also conducted some of its activities within the framework of the Democratic Party, despite the disapproval of the Democratic National Committee.
Chip Berlet wrote his first of several articles about LaRouche in 1979 for the Chicago Sun Times. LaRouche sued Berlet and King for defamation, along with NBC News and the Anti-Defamation League, but LaRouche lost the case, and the same jury awarded damages to NBC.
Beginning in the late 1970s, the Heritage Foundation, the Anti-Defamation League, and The New York Times began publishing material highly critical of the LaRouche organization, which LaRouche claims was part of a "defamatory campaign laid the political groundwork for a later, new wave of corrupt Justice Department operations launched at, once again, the instigation of Henry Kissinger." In 1981, journalists Russ Bellant, Chip Berlet, and Dennis King released a set of documents to the press which they claimed revealed a pattern of potentially illegal activity by LaRouche and his followers. They called for government investigations.
A New York Supreme Court ruled in a defamation suit brought by LaRouche that it is "fair comment" to describe LaRouche as an anti-Semite.
1980s
Despite having become a registered Democrat, LaRouche was harshly critical of Jimmy Carter in the November 1980 election, with whom he had competed for the Democratic Party nomination.
LaRouche had become interested in the possible uses of lasers and other directed energy weapons during the 1970s. When Ronald Reagan took office in 1981, LaRouche sought to share his knowledge with the new administration, hoping that these weapons could be used against nuclear missiles.
LaRouche and his representatives met with Reagan administration Energy Secretary Donald Hodel, Interior Secretary James Watt, Science Adviser Dr. George Keyworth, and State Department official Richard Morris in early 1981. Later that year Lyndon and Helga Zepp-LaRouche met with CIA Deputy Director Bobby Ray Inman. Long-time LaRouche supporter and former head of German Military Intelligence, General Paul-Albert Scherer, has said:
- "In the Spring of 1982 here in the Soviet Embassy there were very important secret talks that were held.... The question was: Did the United States and the Soviet Union wish jointly to develop an anti-ballistic missile defense that would have made nuclear war impossible? Then, in August, you had this very sharp Soviet rejection of the entire idea.... I have discussed this thoroughly with the developer, the originator of this idea, who is the scientific-technological strategic expert, Lyndon LaRouche. The rejection came in August, and at that point the American President Reagan decided to push this entire thing out into the public eye, so he made his speech of March 1983."
A military specialist involved in the SDI program, retired General Daniel O. Graham, has complained about the LaRouche attempts to take credit for SDI. "They also mounted a furious attack on me personally. Even today I get mail asking if I'm in league with LaRouche," said Graham. LaRouche countered, " "President Reagan's initial version of SDI was consistent with what I had introduced into U.S.-Soviet back-channel discussions over the period beginning February 1982. However, immediately thereafter, the mice went to work. Daniel Graham, the leading opponent of SDI up to that time, now proclaimed himself the virtual author of the policy, and was used, thereafter, to remove all of the crucial elements from the original policy." There is no independent verification outside of LaRouche group media, however, of the claim that LaRouche originated or played a major role in the development of "Star Wars" missile defense.
LaRouche opposed Reagan's support for Britain in the Falklands-Malvinas War, arguing that the policy was in violation of the Monroe Doctrine. LaRouche also strongly opposed the Reagan Administration's arming of the Nicaraguan Contras. He also opposed the zero-growth policies of the Club of Rome and formed a countergroup named "Club of Life" on the issue. LaRouche has also had contact with some foreign leaders. On May 23, 1982, he met with Mexican President José López Portillo, and advised him to suspend foreign debt payments (which was done in August 1982), and to declare exchange controls and nationalize Mexico's banks (done in September 1982).
In 1982, U.S. News and World Report sued for damages when it found that LaRouche reporters were impersonating its reporters in phone calls. Lyndon LaRouche and his aide, Jeffrey Steinberg, gave depositions that revealed that their policy was for reporters to only pretend to be from non-existing publications, and that they had infiltrated the campaigns of competing presidential nominees. Without admitting guilt, the LaRouche group agreed not to impersonate U.S. News reporters in the future.
John Train "Salon"
The John Train Salon is the name given by supporters of Lyndon LaRouche to several meetings they allege took place between 1983 and 1985 at the home of New York investment banker John Train. Articles published by the LaRouche organization claim that these meetings, which were attended by a number of journalists and others, were held in order to plan the publication of articles critical of LaRouche. A LaRouche publication claims that Train coordinated a media slander campaign and introduced salon participants to officials of the FBI and the IRS with the aim of instigating criminal prosecutions of LaRouche.
According to second-hand accounts, the attendees included: Chip Berlet, Dennis King, John Rees, journalist, Roy Godson, academic, then a consultant to the National Security Council and the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB), Mira Lansky Boland, head of fact-finding at the Washington, D.C. offices of the Anti-Defamation League and former employee of the CIA, Richard Mellon Scaife, a Pittsburgh businessman known for contributing to conservative causes, Patricia Lynch, an NBC reporter, and unnamed journalists from Readers Digest, Business Week, The New Republic, and The Wall Street Journal
The LaRouche organization claims that news coverage describing LaRouche as a fascist, communist, racist, anti-Semitic, cult leader and conspiracy theorist resulted from these meetings, although many articles making these claims had appeared in the mainstream and alternative press before the meetings are alleged to have taken place. According to a log of media coverage compiled by the LaRouche organization, NBC-TV also broadcast two programs in April of 1986, produced by alleged "John Train Salon" participant Pat Lynch, which repeated her earlier characterizations of LaRouche's ideas, and went on to accuse LaRouche of plotting the assassination of Henry Kissinger. NBC then broadcast programs in March and December 1986 claiming that LaRouche had been responsible for the assassination of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme. The information published by the LaRouche organization about the John Train meetings has not been independently verified.
Other events in the 1980s
In 1984, participated in the founding of the Schiller Institute with his current wife, Helga Zepp-LaRouche
In 1986 LaRouche launched the Proposition 64 initiative in California, which would have placed AIDS back on that state's List of Communicable Diseases subject to Public Health law. Opponents claimed that the measure could have instituted quarantines and sexual contact tracing. After its defeat it was reintroduced two years later and again defeated.
During the 1980s, the print and electronic media rarely mentioned LaRouche's name without the prefix, "political extremist." The LaRouche campaign in 1988, conducted while LaRouche was on trial, attempted to poke fun at this practice by broadcasting a national TV spot which featured a montage of clips of different TV announcers, all saying "political extremist Lyndon LaRouche."
1988—1994 Criminal conviction and imprisonment
By the 1980s, LaRouche and Helga Zepp-LaRouche had built an extensive political network, including the Schiller Institute in Germany, headed by Zepp-LaRouche, and branches in several other countries. The LaRouche organization devoted much of its energy to the sale of literature and the soliciting of small donations at airports and on university campuses. It also solicited donations by phone. Press reports alleged that this fundraising activity sometimes involved tax law violations, the conversion of publication sales into donations for LaRouche political campaigns that were then matched by the Federal Election Commission, and fraudulent soliciting of "loans" from vulnerable elderly people.
In October 1986, the FBI and Virginia state authorities raided the LaRouche headquarters in Leesburg in search of evidence to support the persistent accusations of fraud and extortion. LaRouche and six associates were charged with conspiracy and mail fraud related to fundraising. LaRouche was also charged with conspiring to hide his personal income since 1979, the last year he had filed a federal tax return. In December 1988, a federal jury in Alexandria, Virginia convicted LaRouche and his associates, and LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years in prison. LaRouche served five years of his sentence and was paroled. The convictions of LaRouche and his associates were a defining moment in the history of the LaRouche network. LaRouche supporters insisted that LaRouche was jailed, not for any violation of the law, but for his beliefs. The convictions of LaRouche and his associates were a defining moment in the history of the LaRouche network. LaRouche supporters insisted that LaRouche was jailed, not for any violation of the law, but for his beliefs.
LaRouche did not stop all political activity while in jail. He ran for president again in 1992, met with international personages, and gave interviews. During part of his imprisonment he shared a cell with televangelist Jim Bakker, who later wrote of his astonishment at LaRouche's detailed knowledge of the Bible. LaRouche was released on pardon in 1994.
- For more information on the case, see United States v. LaRouche
Meanwhile, in 1992 the father of an adult involved with the LaRouche movement paid associates of the Cult Awareness Network to have his son abducted and "deprogrammed". Lewis du Pont Smith, objected and his father sought to have him declared incompetent. The incident resulted in serious legal repurcussions for those involved.
1994—present
LaRouche continued his political activity upon his release from prison in 1994, concentrating much of his attention on Third World nations. He was invited to Brazil by members of the city council of S‹o Paulo, and was made an honorary citizen of that city on June 12 of that year. On December 1, 1998, while sharing the podium with Helga Zepp-LaRouche before a meeting of the Mexican Society of Geography and Statistics in Mexico City, former President Lopez Portillo said "It is now necessary for the world to listen to the wise words of Lyndon LaRouche."
When LaRouche ran for president again in 1996 the Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Don Fowler, refused to allow LaRouche to be considered as a candidate or receive delegates. (LaRouche had received enough votes from a Louisiana parish to earn 2 delegates). LaRouche sued under the Voting Rights Act and lost. He appealed to the First Court of Appeals and lost there as well, in 1999, on the grounds that freedom of association permit political parties to reject members. Opinion in LaRouche v Fowler 96-7191
During the Monica Lewinsky scandal, LaRouche mobilized his supporters in defense of Clinton. They formed a group called the "Committee to Save the Presidency," which petitioned nationwide against resignation or impeachment. LaRouche asserted that the same people and institutions that had attacked him were behind the attacks on Clinton.
In March of 2000, the Los Angeles Times printed a facsimile of the Democratic Presidential Primary Ballot with LaRouche's name airbrushed out.
In 2001 and 2003, he toured India, speaking at various conferences and university seminars. He has also traveled to Russia, where on several different occasions, LaRouche publications report that he has addressed both the Economics Committee of the Russian State Duma and the Russian Academy of Sciences, most recently in 2001.
LaRouche and his organizations opposed the US invasion of Iraq. LaRouche was cited by an op-ed in the Syria Times as "mong the US voices of reason" for asserting that the war is the result of a "1996 Israeli government policy that is being foisted on the President by a nest of (pro-Israel senior officials) inside the U.S. government." LaRouche critic Chip Berlet suggests that the commentary on Iraq by LaRouche-affiliated publications, which is incorporated into some Arab and Muslim commentaries, represents conspiracism and anti-Semitism, especially through the use of what Berlet describes as "stereotyped descriptions of the neoconservative network and their power."
2004
LaRouche entered the primary elections for the Democratic Party's nomination in 2004. He did so even though his home state of Virginia is one of a handful of states which still has lifetime denial of the vote to ex-felons, which can only be overturned on appeal to the governor. The Democratic Party did not consider his candidacy to be legitimate and ruled him ineligible to win delegates. He gained negligible electoral support.
In its 2004 assessment of presidential candidates, the National Right to Life Committee gave LaRouche a grade of 75% and declared that he is "pro-life in every way (against euthanasia, capital punishment, etc)."
LaRouche was present in Boston during the 2004 Democratic National Convention but did not attend the convention itself. He held a media conference in which he declared his support for John Kerry and pledged to mobilize his organization to help defeat George W. Bush in the November presidential election. He also waged a campaign, begun in October 2002 , to have Dick Cheney resign, or be dumped from the Republican ticket.
A significant change in the LaRouche organization since LaRouche was released from prison has been the development of the "LaRouche Youth Movement" (LYM) beginning in 1999. The recruitment of young people in the 18-25 year-old age bracket has reportedly brought more members into the LaRouche organization than at any time in the past.
International publicity about LaRouche was sparked in 2003 and 2004 after Jeremiah Duggan, a Jewish student from the UK who was attending a conference and "cadre school" in Germany organized by the Schiller Institute and LaRouche Youth Movement, died in mysterious circumstances in Wiesbaden. LaRouche publications claim Duggan was suicidal, but a British court ruled out suicide, and decided that Duggan died while "in a state of terror".
Note on biography
Separating fact from fiction in LaRouche's biography is made difficult by the barrages of conflicting accounts generated by the LaRouche movement and its critics. LaRouche writes in his autobiography that he developed his ideas in the 1950s and has advocated them consistently ever since. He claims to have pioneered such ideas as the International Development Bank, the Strategic Defense Initiative or "Star Wars," and the so-called Eurasian Land-Bridge. He also claims that he was used by the Reagan administration as a "back-channel" for negotiations with the Soviet Union. There is no independent verification of these claims.
The only substantial biography of LaRouche is Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism, by King (Doubleday, 1989). King, an investigative journalist, charges LaRouche with developing an intellectualized version of fascism mixed with political cultism and anti-Semitism (see Political views of Lyndon LaRouche.)
Timeline
- 1922: Born
- 1942: Dropped out of Northwestern
- 1944: Enlisted in Army
- 1946: Return from India
- 1948: Socialist Worker Party mtgs.
- 1954: Married Janice Neuberger
- 1956: Son born
- 1963: Janice leaves
- 1964: Revolutionary Tendency
- 1965: Expelled from Socialist Worker Party
- 1965: Joins Spartacist League
- 1965: Cohabit with Carol Larrabee
- 1966: Joins Committee for Independent Political Action
- 1968: Protests at Columbia with SDS
- 1969: Expelled from SDS
- 1969: Forms NCLC
- 1971: Forms U.S. Labor Party
- 1971: New Solidarity press service
- 1972: Carol Larrabee Schnitzer leaves LaRouche
- 1973: Operation Mop-up
- 1974: Executive Intelligence Review
- 1974: Fusion Energy Foundation
- 1975: Visit to Iraq
- 1976: 1st Pres. bid, w/ US Labor
- 1976: Critical Washington Post article
- 1977: Married Helga Zepp
- 1979: Brings & loses libel suit
- 1979: moves to opposition to deregulation
- 1979: Move to Democratic Party
- 1980: USLP disbanded
- 1980: 2nd Pres. bid, w/ Democratic Party
- 1982: U.S. News suit
- 1983: Train Salon
- 1984: 3rd Pres. bid.
- 1984: Inspired formation of Schiller Institute
- 1986: California AIDS initiative loses
- 1986: Illinois state contests
- 1986: FBI raids HQ
- 1986: LaRouche & 6 others charged w/ fraud
- 1987: Forced bankruptcy
- 1988: Misttrial, charges refiled
- 1988: 2nd California AIDS intitiative loses
- 1988: 4th Pres. bid
- 1988: LaRouche & others convicted
- 1992: 5th Pres. bid, from prison
- 1992: CAN kidnapping of Lewis du Pont Smith
- 1994: Paroled
- 1996: 6th Pres. bid
- 1996: Takeover of Citizens Electoral Council
- 1996: LaRouche v Fowler
- 1999: formed Larouche Youth Movement
- 2000: 7th Pres. bid
- 2003: Death of Duggan
- 2004: 8th Pres. bid
Works
Lyndon LaRouche has written numerous articles, pamphlets, and books published mostly by his own press. These include his autobiography The Power of Reason (1980), There Are No Limits to Growth (1983), and a second autobiography, The Power of Reason 1988. His 1984 textbook, So, 'You Wish To Learn All About Economics, circulates internationally in several languages, as does his 1991 The Science of Christian Economy.
Books about Lyndon LaRouche and his movement
- Gilbert, Helen (2003) Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism restyled for the new Millennium, Red Letter Press, ISBN 0932323219
- Beyes-Corleis, Aglaja (1994) Verirrt: Mein Leben in einer radikalen Politorganisation, Herder/Spektrum, ISBN 3451042789
- King, Dennis (1989) Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism, Doubleday, ISBN 0385238800
External links
LaRouche publications:
- LaRouche Political Action Committee
- Executive Intelligence Review: LaRouche Publications
- Schiller Institute
- Twenty First Century Science and Technology – LaRouche-affiliated Science organization
- Philippine LaRouche Society
- "He's a bad guy, but we can't say why" LaRouche response to the various accusations against him
- The Bizarre Case of Baroness Symons – LaRouche response to the recent Independent and Washington Post articles
Other links:
- The Cult Controversy includes a 1995 series on LaRouche by John Mintz and links to other Washington Post articles on LaRouche
- Larouche Exposed – Pasadena City College
- Letter on LaRouche Youth Movement – UC San Diego forum
- The Weekly Dig Boston paper
- Articles about LaRouche from Political Research Associates by Chip Berlet and others.
- Partners in Bigotry: The LaRouche Cult and the Nation of Islam by Nizkor Project
- Lyndon Larouche/Executive Intelligence Review Series of articles from the Rick A. Ross Institute for the Study of Destructive Cults
- Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism – Review of Dennis King's book
- Lyndon LaRouche - Disinfopedia article
- Pre-1990 Larouche quotes, from primary-source documents
- LaRouche: Sex Maniac & Demagogue by Clara Fraser, a former colleague of LaRouche in his Trotskyist days—reproduced in the second part of this email to the Marxmail e-list.
- True History of Lyn Marcus (Lyndon LaRouche) and the Labor Committees 1975 article published by the International Workers Party whose members joined LaRouche's NCLC for a period in the early 1970s.
- Lyndon LaRouche: Fascist Demagogue: A '60's Socialist Takes a Hard Right by Tim Wohlforth who worked closely with LaRouche in 1964 and 1965 and also observed him afterwards.
- No Joke (the effect LaRouche has on young recruits) – Washington Post, October 2004
- The cult and the candidate by Terry Kirby, July 2004 (The Independent of London)
- 2003 Personal Financial Disclosure for Lyndon H. LaRouche Jr. (PDF)
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