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A Republican Workers' Party?


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2016 Aug 10, 7:03am   2,572 views  8 comments

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Democratic incompetence has made the previously unthinkable possible: Republicans are reimagining themselves as a labor party. In it, conservative intellectuals say they disavow Donald Trump, but also see in his rise a reason to shift their party's focus.

The new Republicans would no longer be the party of "business and the privileged," but the protector of a disenfranchised working class.

This was unplanned. If it happens, it'll be a change that takes place not because conservative leaders ever wanted it, but because voters demanded it.

Basically, large numbers of working-class voters, particularly white working-class voters, long ago abandoned the Democratic Party in favor of the Republicans.

A few conservatives saw this coming. Chin-stroking New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, whom Esquire's Charles Pierce once described as a "god-bothering newsboy on his best day," along with National Review editor Reihan Salam, claim they saw the writing on the wall.

In their 2008 book, Grand New Party, Douthat and Salam argued that the Republicans needed to reshape themselves, and admitted "the policy elite of the Republican Party" is "out of touch with the majority of Republican voters."

They also noted, in a recent Times editorial, "A Cure for Trumpism," that the Republican Party has "increasingly depended on mostly white working-class support, even as its policy agenda was increasingly unresponsive to working-class voters' problems."

All of this soul-searching is happening now because the maniac Trump has hijacked a portion of the Republican base and is driving it off an electoral cliff. (He will clutch his own hand all the way down in the inevitable Thelma & Louise crash ending.)

Republican propaganda for decades pushed magical-thinking concepts like "trickle-down economics" that asked lower-income voters to accept present sacrifices for theoretical bigger payoffs down the road.

Until this year, Republican voters mostly bought it. But Trump was their way of telling their leaders they're done waiting. They want their piece of the pie now, even if it means unleashing the Trumpinator to get it.

People have been conscious of the defection of working-class voters to the Republican Party for years, but this has always been dismissed as the consequence of skillfull propaganda. It's the What's the Matter With Kansas? creation story, i.e., that the white working class has been hoodwinked into going against its own economic interests thanks to cynical/backward appeals to race, religion and culture.

But that isn't the whole story, as some leading Democrats are beginning to realize. Joe Biden went on Morning Joe a few weeks ago and admitted that "the Democratic Party over all hasn't spoken enough to [working-class voters]," the "ordinary people busting their necks."

Biden's admission is a massive understatement. If we're going to be honest about what's happened in the last 30 or 40 years, the new iteration of the Democratic Party has embraced hocus-pocus neoliberal theory that is not much different from trickle-down economics.

The Democratic Party leaders have been fervent believers in the globalization religion since the late Eighties, when the braintrust at the Democratic Leadership Council made a calculated decision to transform the party from one that depended largely on unions for financial and logistical support to one that embraced corporate objectives, in particular free trade.

When he signed NAFTA into law in 1993, Bill Clinton laid out a utopian vision of how free trade would work. "We have the opportunity to remake the world," he said, boldly.

More trade agreements, he said, would create a world that would not only be more prosperous all over, but freer and more able to serve as a market for our exports.

"We will press for workers in all countries to secure rights that we now take for granted, to organize and earn a decent living," he said.

Critically, Clinton promised that free-trade agreements would emphasize new environmental standards, would expand the rights of workers in signatory countries, that we would not trade with countries that employed subsidies or tariffs against us, and that displaced domestic workers would eventually see gains after being retrained and redeployed for new jobs that would eventually appear to replace the lost ones.

"To the men and women of our country who were afraid of these changes," Clinton said, "the gains from this agreement will be your gains, too."

It was never articulated this way, exactly, but the basic promise of free trade was that the American middle class would experience temporary losses that over time would be balanced out by increased growth worldwide.

It was trickle-down economics, only repackaged with an international spin: After a long trip around the world, the wealth eventually gets back to you.

Twenty-three years later, we see how all of this has turned out. There have been some improvements in the economic condition of foreign workers.

But we never excluded politically oppressive regimes from free-trade deals, never made sure that trade partners weren't also massive human rights violators, never seriously worried about environmental enforcement. Mostly, we just made cheap, un-free foreign labor available to Western manufacturers.

Even a onetime die-hard NAFTA cheerleader like staunch Clinton supporter Paul Krugman, who once compared free trade's critics to the anti-evolutionist followers of William Jennings Bryan at the Scopes Monkey Trial, now admits that the case for "ever-freer" trade is a "scam":

"The elite defense of globalization is basically dishonest: false claims of inevitability, scare tactics (protectionism causes depressions!), vastly exaggerated claims for the benefits of trade liberalization and the costs of protection, hand-waving away the large distributional effects that are what standard models actually predict."

Like Marxism, globalization is a borderless utopian religion. Its adherents almost by definition have to reject advocacy for the citizens of one country over another. Just as "Socialism in One Country" was an anathema to classic Marxists, "prosperity in one country" is an anathema to globalists, no matter what their politicians might say during election seasons.

If you bring up the destruction of the American middle class, pro-globalization adherents will point to facts like the rising fortunes of those hundreds of millions of Chinese workers who are now supposedly above the World Bank definition of poverty, making more than $1.90 a day.

That those same workers still have virtually no rights or benefits and on occasion have to be housed in factories with safety nets to keep them from killing themselves at an astronomical rate is immaterial to True Believers.

They want even American voters to focus on the good news of incrementally increased wages abroad, forgetting that American workers never signed up for a plan to disenfranchise themselves so that workers in China or India could earn a few quarters more per day. Moreover, they certainly didn't elect leaders to push such policies.

The problem with all of this is that the Democrats went so far in the direction of advocacy for the global religion that they made something as idiotic as the rise of unabashed nativist Donald Trump possible.

Worse, Trump's rise will give the Globalist Faith Militant an automatic argument for more time. They will decry any criticism of free trade or globalization as racist Trumpism, and Trump is such a galactic jackass that this will work, his vast inventory of offensive bleatings discrediting even the legitimate economic concerns of his voters.

But expecting American politicians to advocate first and foremost for their own constituents isn't isolationism. It's just rational self-interest, which neoliberals only seem to disbelieve in when it pertains to labor. Moreover we didn't call movements to disinvest from South Africa or the Soviet Union "nativism." We called that idealism.

We haven't shown much of that in the last decades, as huge majorities of Westerners buy cell phones, clothes and other products increasingly likely to have been made by abused sweatshop workers or even children (like the Indonesian eight-year-olds recently found harvesting tobacco sold to the West).

As Krugman explained earlier this year, the question of what to do about any of this is a very hard one. He even called the Bernie Sanders campaign "a bit of a scam itself" because it hinted that anything at all can be done about the vast inequities and injustices of globalization.

Krugman claimed the maze of trade agreements is so entrenched by now that chaos would ensue from any attempt to undo them. A Trump might try, he said, but only as part of a "reign of destruction on many fronts."

Maybe that's true, and maybe it isn't.

But to deny that something needs to be done, and to ask American voters to keep having faith in this "we'll all see gains in the end" fairytale that so far has very conspicuously only delivered gains to a tiny group of very wealthy people in this country, will do nothing but drive more workers into the Trump tent.

And maybe the next strongman those voters pick to lead them out of the wilderness won't be quite as huge an idiot, or as suicidal a campaigner, as Trump. Sooner or later, failing to deal with these questions is going to come back and bite all of us.

Matt Taibbi http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/a-republican-workers-party-w433295

#GOP #Trump #Politics

Comments 1 - 8 of 8        Search these comments

1   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2016 Aug 10, 8:57am  

The Dems claimed the middle with Clinton when Perot was railing against NAFTA. Then, the republicans abandoned the center in a swing to the right so that they could claim Dems were communists. That left the middle for the Dems, who have left the lower middle class out in the cold as they tended more to the upper middle class and the poor.
The Repubs have been trying to get the lower middle class organized for them, but their tax, fiscal, and trade policies betray them. They have the talk, but not the policy agenda.

2   Dan8267   2016 Aug 10, 9:17am  

anonymous says

A Republican Workers' Party?

A Republican Worker's Party is a system in which the workers don't mind being abused because they have aspirations of entering the owner class and a delusional belief that this is possible. In such a party, the working class keeps voting for the interests of the rich against their own interests simply because they wrongly think that they are one website, one mobile app, one get-rich-quick scheme away from becoming members of the ruling class. Greed leads to self-delusion which leads to poverty.

3   MisdemeanorRebel   2016 Aug 10, 10:14am  

FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP
Another Great Matt Taibbi Piece. Thanks, Bay Area Observer.

We have two establishment parties: Bank-endorsed Wealthy Elite Party, the Republicans, AND, the bank-endorsed Snotty Technocrat Silly Con Valley Elite Party.

Once upon a time the professionals and wealthy were both Republicans, with the working class in the Dems. Both parties have 0 interest in white working/middle class America in terms of economics, so they've been culture warring as a mass distraction.

Trump has grabbed the economic concerns and made them front and center. Free Trade Extremisists have been reduced to babbling incoherently because all the evidence shows it has gutted Middle America from Binghampton to Reading to Gary to Sacramento.

Both have been marching in iron lock step about endless unlimited Free Trade and Labor Gluts (aka "Open Borders to Crush Wages")

Wages were down .2% by the way, according to the BLS.

4   tatupu70   2016 Aug 10, 10:21am  

thunderlips11 says

Trump has grabbed the economic concerns and made them front and center. Free Trade Extremisists have been reduced to babbling incoherently because all the evidence shows it has gutted Middle America from Binghampton to Reading to Gary to Sacramento.

He's grabbed free trade, yes. But he's abandoned the working class in every other way economically. His tax plan is a middle finger to the working man.

5   Blurtman   2016 Aug 10, 10:32am  

It has been pointed out, that the next time, there will be a better spoken, more PC anti-estabiishment Republican (worker's party?) candidate - a refined Trump that will also be an outsider. The system is not working for many Americans. But they must be in tune to the divide and conquer strategies of the PTB.

6   anonymous   2016 Aug 10, 10:38am  

Trump still hasn't played the Trump Card yet. Economics, shmeckonomics, most don't even know what they're talking about when they say "we have to save The Economy!" Yea, what would we ever do without a bazillion
Quickie-Marts
Nail Salons
Hair Salons
Dollar Stores
Chinese Food
Med Express

Fuck that hogwash, twice. What people do understand is their personal budgets.

Which first requires a Job
Then you give ~ 1/4 to The State in taxes.
Then you give 1/3 to the landlord in rent/bank in mortgage/municipality in property taxes

So if you're lucky, you have ~ .40 of every dollar left on which to live. And this is where Trump can steal the election

Most the rest of that is force fed to the "health" "care" industry, by the demand of The State. Hillary has promised to take more. Most Working Class Americans know it is a raw deal, they could never afford to utilize it, and they get absolutely nothing in return for those dollars.

Which is why Bernie garnered so much support. And Trump would be wise, to pick up where Bernie left off. Same valid criticism of Clinton as Bernie. Same campaign promises. There are a lot of people who benefit from the rape and pillaging of the White Working Class, by The State, but maybe not quite enough to outvote those of us that make the world turn. Yet.

7   Shaman   2016 Aug 10, 1:01pm  

Great article! I agree that the Republican Party is being dragged kicking and screaming into the workers party agenda. The great lie of globalism is being fully exposed and people are exercising their rage. Clinton literally represents the weasels who inflicted this free trade upon us. Hell, she is freaking married to the head weasel and has vowed to put him back in charge of the economy! We can look forward to more outsourcing, more strategic immigration laws to depress wages, and a stagnant or declining economy. Electing Clinton will put America in the back of the bus and signal to the other politicians that any amount of corruption is permissible as long as they retain enough power to bury their misdeeds under a mountain of bureaucracy.

8   HydroCabron   2016 Aug 10, 1:10pm  

anonymous says

The new Republicans would no longer be the party of "business and the privileged," but the protector of a disenfranchised working class.

The problem is that the entire Republican leadership, including Ryan and Trump, is still on board with supply-side tax idiocy and ending the estate and capital gains taxes.

So, yeah, the party could go in that direction, but obstacles remain.

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