What
does it mean when The Wall Street Journal, the popular
mouthpiece for the right wing of the US ruling class, joins The
New York Times (its left-wing counterpart) in vicious attacks on
the Republican Presidential nominee?
WSJ
staff writer Andy Pasztor’s Trump story was featured on the Friday,
September 2 edition front page and continued by occupying the entire
page facing the paper’s opinion section. Provocatively headlined
Donald Trump and the Mob, the article sought to tie Trump, the
developer, to Mafia linked contractors, with a sidebar recounting
Trump’s employment of the sleazy, corrupt lawyer, Roy Cohn.
It
is hardly unusual for developers associated with both parties to
engage questionable contractors, a category of employment notorious
for insider connections, corrupt deals, and, yes, unsavory
characters. Thus, the WSJ piece stands out because it
highlights behavior that usually gets a pass by the paper, especially
for Republicans. The thin charges, largely based solely on
association, stand out for their failure to make Trump seem any
different from innumerable businessmen/politicians who slither
through election cycles with barely a whisper from the mainstream
media.
As
for the employment of the late Roy Cohn-- a truly despicable
creature-- it never bothered the conscience of the WSJ when he
worked for Joe McCarthy, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, or a host of
equally heralded right-wing politicians. So, why the outrage now with
Trump?
Is
there any doubt that when The Wall Street Journal coalesces
with The New York Times and The Washington Post to
demonize a candidate, the resulting united front speaks to more than
a mere coincidence of opinion? Does even the most jaded observer
think that unanimity among representatives of all factions of US
elites-- the most powerful forces in US affairs-- does not
signal a wholesale rejection of Trump? A repudiation of any charge
that he currently represents ruling class interests?
Supporters
of Hillary Clinton’s campaign refuse to address this fact. They
refuse to acknowledge that she, rather than Trump, enjoys the broad
and deep support of nearly the entire class composed of the most rich
and powerful. They refuse to confront the meaning of a campaign that
paradoxically aligns the mouthpieces and moneybags of US elites
solidly behind the Democratic Party candidate. Marxists would call it
a “contradiction” and search for its meanings. “Left-wing”
apologists for the Clinton candidacy simply ignore it.
The
peculiar choices offered voters are lost in the clamor of personal
attack, the clash of shallow issues, and the orgy of fund-raising.
Barring any new, dramatic, and sleazy revelations, debate stumbles,
or blunders, Hillary Clinton will likely win the election in
November. After the celebration of Trump’s defeat, liberals and
organized labor will wake up to the reality that they have not moved
their agenda one step. At best, they will avoid losing what they
believe Trump threatens. That may satisfy many. But for
those hoping to change the US for the better, this awakening should
be sobering. Apart from permanent war, growing inequality,
deteriorating living standards, intensifying racism, what will this
election bring the next generation? What can reformers build upon?
Even
more alarming, this election stands as the low point of an
unrelenting process, a process of both a diminishing of the
differences between the two parties and a continual rightward drift
of the political center. Since late in the Carter administration, the
Democratic Party leadership has sought to occupy the political space
only minimally to the left of the Republicans. Recognizing this,
corporate Republicans have steered their agenda rightward, seeing an
opportunity to dismantle any and all remnants of the New Deal and the
War on Poverty. If this election cycle does deviate in any way
from this trend, it is in the promise to continue the process
primarily through the agenda of Clinton rather than the vague and
shifting positions of Trump. That is, of course, the basis for ruling
class support for Clinton.
We
have witnessed this process take us through a cast of worsening, ever
more outrageous characters: a petty Cold-War demagogue, a
self-righteous moralist, a theatrical con artist, a dishonest
backslapper, a crusading alcoholic, and the two integrity and candor
challenged candidates belched up in this election cycle.
Those
who will celebrate the Clinton victory (like those who were ecstatic
over Obama’s victory) will bear responsibility for the continued
course of this process, the process of the corruption and
trivialization of two-party politics.
The
electoral fear-mongering grows thin, as the lesser-of-two-evils
stance enables more and more evil. Scapegoating those who are trying
to find a way out of the two-party trap remains the sport of those
too cynical or lazy to look at options, too complacent to recognize
the futility of trying to drag a corporate-owned Democratic Party
toward popular change. Decades of self-righteous prattle warning of
ultra-right dangers has not slowed the rightward drift of US politics
one iota, whether Democrats win or not.
Surely
if Marxists have anything to contribute to understanding bourgeois
politics, it is to pull the curtain back and expose how it functions.
What we see is not a pretty sight.
Zoltan
Zigedy
zoltanzigedy@gmail.com
"We have witnessed this process take us through a cast of worsening, ever more outrageous characters: a petty Cold-War demagogue, a self-righteous moralist, a theatrical con artist, a dishonest backslapper, a crusading alcoholic, and the two integrity and candor challenged candidates belched up in this election cycle"
ReplyDeleteAHHHH! this is fun..they are out of order too. Here's how I would arrange them: Carter - the self righteous one. Bush 1 - The preppy gladhanding backslapper. Reagan - Cold war demagogue. Obama - theatrical con man. Bush 2 - Crusading drunk.
nice post, thanks for sharing..
ReplyDeleteCold war demagogue. Obama - theatrical con man. Bush 2 - Crusading drunk
ReplyDelete