In the wake of the election-- THE ELECTION, in capital letters and with strong emphasis-- I have read many insightful and thoughtful assessments of how we have arrived at the point where Donald Trump was re-elected. I highly recommend the recent scathing essay by my colleague at Marxism-Leninism Today, Chris Townsend, on the crying need for an alternative to the two-party charade and the bankruptcy of the Democratic Party as a representative for working people.
But for every good analysis, there are a dozen awful commentaries that ultimately blame the voters’ judgment or endorse their worst fears.
However, if pressed for a simple explanation of the election results, one might consider the following:
Once again, offered the odious, devil's choice between two candidates who are rich, elitist, and completely detached from “ordinary” people, the US voter chose a candidate who was rich, elitist, and completely detached from the lives and interests of most people.
Of course, people want to know why the voters chose this particular rich elitist at this particular time. That question calls forth both a specific, practical response and a far deeper, concerning answer.
Polls and disregarded economic data show that most voters have a profoundly negative and often painful relationship with their economic status-- they are not doing well. They typically punish incumbents when under economic distress. This should come as no surprise. But the highly paid consultants of both parties-- with approaching two billion dollars to spend-- chose to press many other issues as well and deal with the economy only superficially.
But in the end, exit polls show that economic distress played a decisive role in shaping voters’ choices. Apparently, the pundits forgot how persistent, value-sucking inflation led to the election of Ronald Reagan forty-four years ago.
Again, like today, the 1970s were a period of realignment. The Democrats had lost the South to the Republicans over desegregation and the Civil Rights legislation. After the Nixonian scandals associated with the Watergate burglaries and other dirty tricks, the Democrats won over suburbanites disgusted with Republican chicaneries-- a demographic thought by many functionaries to be the needed replacement for the lost South.
In 1976, the Democrats swept in with a squeaky-clean, untarnished candidate, James Carter. With the decade-long stagflation coming to a climax, the Carter regime was short-lived; despite a rightward turn on his part, Carter was beaten by an ultra-right movie star turned politician, Ronald Reagan. Reagan was the default choice for voters wanting change after a lost decade.
For those who like their history repeating from tragedy to farce, consider the transition from the self-righteous old red-baiter, Ronald Reagan, to the pompous, supercilious windbag, Donald Trump. History has a wicked sense of humor.
Few pundits acknowledge that Democratic Party strategists decided in the 1980s that the future of the party would be determined by the interests and concerns of metropolitan voters, especially those in the suburban upper-middle stratum who were “super voters,” economically secure, and attuned to lifestyle and identity liberalism. While they represented the legacy of “white flight,” the suburbanites contradictorily espoused the urbanity of tolerance and personal choice.
Coincident with the embrace of the suburban vote, Democratic Party strategists saw no need to attend to past central components of their coalition: the working class and multi-class Blacks. Loyal union leaders would corral the working-class vote and ascendant Black leaders would rally African Americans of all classes.
Besides, it was believed that neither had any other place to go besides the Democratic Party.
Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, revealed this thinking in 2016, when he said: “For every blue-collar Democrat we lose in western Pennsylvania, we will pick up two moderate Republicans in the suburbs in Philadelphia, and you can repeat that in Ohio and Illinois and Wisconsin.” Even before that careless remark, both Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama-- in moments of candor-- revealed their contempt for working people outside of the metropolis.
This election stamped “paid” on this program, with nearly all the assumed components of the Democratic coalition drifting towards the Republicans.
The always insightful Adam Tooze, writing in The London Review of Books, concludes that the Democratic Party failings demonstrate “the high-achieving, insincere, vacuous incoherence that thrives at the top of the American political class.”
There is, however, a far deeper explanation of the Trump phenomenon seldom mentioned by mainstream commentators. Those who cite the specific issues of abortion rights, immigration, trans rights, crime, racism, etc.-- issues that indeed played a role in the November election-- neglect the fact that Trumpism is part of an international trend that infects the politics of such far-flung countries as India, Japan, and Argentina, as well as many European countries for often vastly different reasons. The rise of right populism in virtually all European countries-- Orban’s Hungary, Meloni’s Italy, RN in France, AfD in Germany, Vox in Spain, Chega in Portugal, and similar parties in virtually every other European country-- share one defining feature with the politics of India’s Modi and Argentina’s Milei: a rejection of centrist, traditional parties.
Right populism rises as a response to the ineffectiveness of the politics of normality. It reflects the dissatisfaction with business as usual.
For hundreds of millions throughout the world, the twenty-first century has brought a series of crises eroding, even destroying their quality of life. Ruling classes have stubbornly refused to address these crises through the indifference of traditional bourgeois political parties. Voters have punished these parties by turning to opportunist right-populist formations that promise to give voice to their anger. Of course, this often takes the form of ugly, reprehensible claims and slogans-- appealing to the basest of motives.
But it is not enough to denounce these backward policies without addressing the desperation that unfortunately popularizes those policies. It is not helpful to righteously raise the alarm of “fascism” if we fail to offer an alternative that will answer the hopelessness and misery that serves as the fertile soil for reaction.
From the tragedy of the Reagan election to the farce of the Trump re-election, we have suffered from two sham parties taking turns representing the “people,” while neither did. Isn’t it time for an independent people's party-- a party of the working class majority-- that addresses the twenty-first century economic crises and their aftermath, the acute environmental crisis, the broken public health and health care systems, the insidious impoverishment of inflation, the crumbling infrastructure, and a host of other urgent demands, a party dedicated to serving the working people of the US and not its wealthy and powerful?
Greg Godels
zzsblogml@gmail.com
Even though it looks impossible, the alternative to political parties, including labor parties, is socialism/communism where the working class has power. Capitalism is based on exploiting workers for profit. Alternative parties may win more financial support for healthcare and education, but they don't change the way the bankers, financiers, and CEOs create wealth for themselves. by paying workers as little as possible. We need more people taking jobs in industries where they can disrupt the economy. Imagine general strikes of transportation, communications, and tech workers against wars and repression. That's power.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant analysis of one mess we have gotten ourselves into
ReplyDeleteThe 'party' we need is in front of your nose. It's the Justice Democrats (AOC, the squad plus Bernie is the core). It's a faction/party under the Dem tent. History often doesn't give you want you need just as you like it. We have maybe 10 votes in Congress at the moment. Work to make it 100. At 150, thinks will get very dicey under the Dem tent. The Third way crew might move to expel us, in which case we take the best of the Dems with us. Or something unforseen. But the last thing we need is to pull out now. More Summer Lee's please!
ReplyDeleteWe have conducted this argument since Carl enthused over the "millions" attending the Obama administration inauguration to mark a new dawn in US politics. Now, 16 years later, I'm told to enthuse over the "maybe" 10 votes "we" have in Congress. The Dems sure are transforming slowly. What happened to the impatient Carl Davidson of SDS and the Maoist movement?
DeleteI agree completely with this analysis, but there is even another factor mentioned by Branko Marcetic before the election in article in Jacobin, many of MAGA's core feel they are part of a movement that gives them power, via Trump, to change their situation. There is a camaraderie that the Dems do not offer, something left parties used to offer also.
ReplyDelete"The 'party' we need is in front of your nose. It's the Justice Democrats (AOC,..."
ReplyDeleteBit-by-bit inside the Democratic Party. We've been through this. In California, the overwhelmingly Democratic legislature is a past master at promising single payer health care, passing a bill in one house but the other, or passing it in both houses when a governor Schwarzenegger would be sure to veto it, or just killing it in committee because now governor Newsom doesn't want to be confronted with it.
U.S. Representatives Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), Debbie Dingell (MI-06) and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) are today introducing the Medicare for All Act of 2023. The House legislation is cosponsored by more than half of the Democratic Caucus.
jayapal.house.gov/2023/05/17/jayapal-dingell-sanders-introduce-medicare-for-all-with-record-number-of-house-cosponsors/
Charles Andrews
Great example, Charles, of the calculated treachery of the Democratic Party leadership!
DeleteI agree thoroughly with this analysis, including that we need a new working-class party. Now that we are facing the potential dismantlement of bourgeois democracy and its replacement with something that could be even more disastrous, way more people are agreeing that this is needed.
ReplyDeleteI was a local leader of the failed 1990s Labor Party, so I know how hard it is to create such a vehicle, but our failure to do so allowed the Dems to continue enabling, and even actively creating, the conditions that have led us to where we are now. (Check out https://www.lcipcommittee.org/ for one group trying to come up with a viable strategy to create a alternative, an effort founded by various ex-Labor Party folks who learned some valuable lessons from that experience.) The Democratic Party is where social movements go to die; attempts to reform it have not worked. True, neither have efforts to build alternative parties, but under the conditions we face now, that may rapidly change. There are more voters registered as independent or third party today than are registered as Dems or Repubs. Significant voices within labor are raising the need for a workers/labor party again. People are fed up, and without a party to represent their economic interests as workers, the vacuum gets filled by the false promises of right-wing populism. Our survival depends on getting out of the vicious circle of lesser-evilism because what we are experiencing now is exactly where that has gotten us. Thanks, Greg, for this excellent piece.
Thanks, Millie. I couldn't agree with you more. I am writing this beneath a lamp with my delegate badge to the 1996 Labor Party founding convention in Cleveland affixed. It was a lost opportunity. We need a clear and complete analysis of what went wrong, so we don't make the same mistake next time. We need a labor-based party desperately.
DeleteAs usual Greg present a fine analysis but draws the wrong or inadequate conclusions. Essentially he criticizes populism with populism but leaving completely out of consideration the centrality of class struggle. As Karyn, I believe points out, this leads to the old amorphous good vs evil, rich vs poor narrative. The result is the same, get rid of the evil and keep the good.
ReplyDeleteSuch talk as forming a "peoples Party" to fight all the ills generated by capitalism is simply warmed over reformist hash. Why not work toward the formation of a party of the proletariat for the destruction of capitalism?
As in most cases Greg presents a fine analysis only to arrive at an inadequate or wrong conclusion. He opposes populism with populism by failing to argue for the centrality of the class struggle. All talk about a "Peoples Party" to combat theills of capitalism is reformism pure and simple. Needed is a political party of the pproletariat capable of leading its class to self emancipation through the destruction of capitalism
ReplyDeleteThanks, Wrogers (and Karyn). Yes, we need a Leninist revolutionary party for socialism. In fact, the Labor Party tactic mentioned above likely would become mired in opportunism without the participation and leadership from a Communist Party. That has been the history of all successful broad movement for change. Given the class composition and the current balance of forces in the US, we need both!
Delete