When Odysseus told the one-eyed Cyclops he had just blinded that his
name was “Nobody”, he momentarily confused the giant and his brothers, allowing
him and his men to escape. Is there not
a lesson here for the 2016 election? Can
we not register our disgust with the two party system by voting for “Nobody”
and could this not cause some disarray in the ranks of the capitalist class who
have rigged this election from the start? I only make this suggestion half in
jest because in fact there is no one to vote for in this election.
The
2016 election campaign is noteworthy for exposing the fundamentally
anti-democratic nature of American political life. This
is open and obvious with the demagogy and bullying of Trump. With Clinton it is
mostly behind the scenes, but occasionally we can see a glimpse of her contempt
for ordinary people through the leaks of her speeches at Goldman Sachs. She says one thing on the campaign trail
where she claims to speak for working people and quite another when she
addresses the billionaires who back her candidacy. One can of course say that this two-faced posture is the norm for successful American political
leaders, but rarely has it been exposed so blatantly.
We
see on the one hand the rise of a right wing populist movement coalescing
around Donald Trump, who has captured the Republican Party and turned it
against the patrician establishment that has dominated it for over a century. Trump was able to do this because he was able
to channel the anger that a significant section of the working class felt
toward the status quo. His opponents in
the Republican primary were a collection of criminals, sociopaths, religious
reactionaries, peppered with a few representatives of the old guard who were so
obviously out of touch with their constituency that no one took them
seriously except the professional pundits. (Remember when Jeb Bush was the clear favorite to win the Republican nomination?) Trump, was able to connect to
this constituency of the forgotten white working class, not in spite of his boorishness and bullying, narcissistic
personality, but very much because of it. [1]
His promise to “Make America Great Again” touched the collective myth of the
American Dream, a myth as we have argued, that serves as a substitute for
socialism in American political life. [2]
At
the same time we saw the rise of a left populism within the Democratic Party
with the Sanders campaign. The Sanders
campaign had wide popular support, but the corrupt Democratic Party
establishment, solidly behind Clinton as the Wiki-Leaks emails have revealed,
conspired to steal the nomination away from Sanders. Despite Sanders’ shameful
capitulation to Clinton and the Democratic Party establishment he was for a
moment able to articulate policies hearkening back to the New Deal era of the
Democratic Party that galvanized tremendous support. His campaign
also showed that socialism can now be a popular slogan. Were there a viable
revolutionary socialist movement in this country this wave of left populism
could have been harnessed for the project of building an independent mass
socialist party rooted in the working class. But alas no
such movement exists in the United States.
Instead what we have, with few
exceptions, are sectarian grouplets who are hopelessly isolated from and
hostile to the working class on the one hand, and radicals influenced by the
remnants of the New Left, who are hopelessly dismissive of theoretical
clarity. Insofar as the “Left” has any
presence, it is through the radicals who have absorbed anarchist theories in
recent years, theories that make a virtue of an absence of a program and a
party. Their disdain for theoretical
clarity is of a piece with their disdain for program and organization. This explains why, despite their enormous
impact on the public imagination, absolutely nothing of lasting political
significance came out of either the Occupy Wall Street movement or the Sanders
campaign.
In
contrast to Trump and Sanders, the Clinton campaign, which from the beginning
was identified with the status quo and a continuation of the Obama
Administration, never generated any enthusiasm. Her base of support comes from
the 10 - 15% of the population who are more or less comfortable. Along with the
strata of bourgeois feminists and media flaks from the New York Times, Clinton
finds wide support among those middle class layers whose personal assets have
grown in the last few years. Also working in her favor are a host of constituencies
who are motivated more by their repulsion with Trump than any love for her. She
will thus be the beneficiary of Trump’s screeds against Hispanics, Muslims,
African-Americans and women.
So
voters are now left with a choice - either the reactionary Populism of Donald
Trump, a form of populism entangled with an economic policy that supports the
wealthy, racism, xenophobia and the rise of fascist armed vigilantes – or
support the favorite of Wall Street and the neo-cons, Hillary Clinton, who
promises more wars and more attacks on whatever is left of the social safety
net despite her phony adoption of some of Sanders policy positions. The 2016
election demonstrates like nothing previously, the bankruptcy of the logic of
“lesser-evilism”. Even if one thought that voting for the “lesser-evil” of
these two widely hated candidates for President was a viable strategy, it is
not at all clear who the “lesser-evil” is in this election. It is indeed, to hearken back to the Odyssey,
a case of being caught between the twin evils of Scylla and Charybdis. We will leave it to the likes of Michael Moore
and Noam Chomsky to explain to us why voting for Hillary Clinton is the “lesser
evil” in this election.[3] Their logical gymnastics in support of the
candidate of Wall Street and the military industrial establishment should once
and for all put an end to their reputation as radicals of any sort. [4]
One
thing this election has done is write the epitaph of the two party system and
that is a positive outcome. These putrid political formations are overripe for
extinction. The Republican Party is now hopelessly fractured, with many prominent
Republicans refusing to support their own Presidential candidate. In fact,
Clinton is the Republican candidate in this election in all but name whereas
Trump is in effect running as a Third Party candidate. The remnants of Sanders supporters will not
likely find a home in the Democratic Party which has been exposed as being even
more anti-democratic than the Republican Party.
What we have now is an enormous potential for the rise of a new party
representing the working class. Whether
that happens depends to a great extent on whether the left can learn the
lessons behind the dissolution of Sanders’ “political revolution” and the Occupy
movement.
Insofar
as this election is concerned, one is still left with the question, “If not
Trump or Clinton, why not vote for one of the other candidates?” While none of the
other candidates stands a chance of winning could a vote for them advance the
cause of socialism? It’s a legitimate
question. But an examination of third party candidates provides few reasons for
optimism. The obvious alternative to
Clinton or Trump is the Green Party candidate, Jill Stein. Stein has gained some support by articulating
policies supporting social equality and opposing U.S. imperialism. But the Green Party is not a working class
party in any sense and has never adopted an explicitly socialist program.
Insofar as Stein and her supporters think her policy proposals can be achieved
within the profit system – a more humane form of capitalism – they are
subscribing to a dangerous illusion.
Furthermore, Stein has selected for her running mate, Ajamu Baraka, a
person who is at home attending conferences of Holocaust deniers.[5]
This alone should disqualify her from
consideration.
In
New York State, with its arcane election laws designed to keep third party
candidates off the ballot, the only candidate on the ballot besides Clinton,
Trump and Stein running for President is the reactionary nincompoop Gary
Johnson of the Libertarian Party. New
York State does have a procedure for registering as an official “write-in”
candidate however. If you register as an
official candidate then your vote must be counted whereas if you are not
registered a write in vote for you is simply tossed out. The procedure for
registering as an official write-in candidate is not very difficult, consisting
of little more than filling out an application obtainable online. There are 32
official write-in candidates for President in New York State. The only name I
recognized in the list was that of Gloria la Riva, from the Party for Socialism
and Liberation, a break off from the Workers World Party. Neither the Socialist
Workers Party’s candidate, Alyson Kennedy, nor the Socialist Equality Party candidate,
Jerry White, was included in the list of registered write-in candidates. It is
clear that if they could not even be bothered to submit an application to be a
write-in candidate that their campaigns are not at all serious but a Potemkin
village production designed to impress their membership and bolster morale.
In
years past, I voted for the candidate that came closest to the socialist
policies I support. On those occasions when no candidate was even close to my
political orientation, I would vote for whatever party was running that had the
word “Socialist” in its label just to make a symbolic statement. Unfortunately,
although there are official write-in candidates on the ballot in New York,
their party affiliation is not registered. So you cannot even vote for a party
this year in New York that says it is “socialist” despite the fact that the “socialist”
label became popular among millions through the Sanders campaign.
Given
the paucity of even a making a symbolic statement in this election, my
conclusion is that the lesser evil is to vote for Nobody.
According to the New York Times polling
information, Hillary Clinton is all but assured of winning the
election as she has the necessary votes in the Electoral College already locked
up. However the popular vote according to the latest polls is very close and it
is conceivable that Clinton could win the Electoral College vote but lose the
popular vote. If that happens it would embolden the authoritarian elements not
only in the Republican Party, but in the military and police apparatus of the national
security state to openly sabotage a Clinton Presidency from the start. Trump
and his right wing enablers are already, even before the election, threatening to
impeach Clinton. And reports that elements within the FBI have been leaking
false information to the press in an attempt to undermine Clinton’s candidacy
indicate that significant sections of the ruling class are prepared to do away
with the fig leaves of democracy in favor of an openly authoritarian state.
Even if Clinton wins by an overwhelming margin Trump and his supporters within
the state apparatus will not recognize her legitimacy. The United States will
become ungovernable. There is no going back to “normal” times. We are entering
a period with no parallel in our history with the exception of the period
leading up to the Civil War. Ahead lies
great dangers but also great opportunities for the emergence of a revolutionary
socialist alternative.
[1] One
political scientist has shown that an identification with authoritarian ideas
is a good indication of a preference for Trump:
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/01/donald-trump-2016-authoritarian-213533
This discovery was anticipated more than 80 years ago
by the pioneering study of the authoritarian personality in Weimar Germany by the
Left Freudian psychoanalyst, Erich Fromm, whose research was supported by the
Frankfurt School.
[2] See
our essays, The American Political
Landscape in 2016, http://forum.permanent-revolution.org/2016/07/the-american-political-landscape-in_13.html
and The Working Class and Populist
Politics, http://forum.permanent-revolution.org/2016/07/the-working-class-and-populist-politics.html
[3]
Both Chomsky and Moore have have made what they consider serious arguments for
supporting Clinton as the “lesser evil”. See for instance, https://chomsky.info/an-eight-point-brief-for-lev-lesser-evil-voting/
[4]
Some left commentators have argued that it is really Trump who is the “lesser evil”. See for
instance,
[5]
See https://radicalarchives.org/2016/08/10/ajamu-baraka-holocaust-denial/
. After his relations with Holocaust deniers were publicized, Baraka denied
that he supported Holocaust denialism, claiming he was unaware of Kevin Barrett’s
connections to anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial. It defies credibility that
Baraka was ignorant of the background of a person on whose radio show he has
appeared twice and for whose anthology he contributed an essay.
7 comments:
Alex,
This post expresses most of my own feelings on bourgeois elections in general, though I admit that I have never bothered to even register to vote. But despite your assertion that there will be a great opportunity for revolutionary socialism, I feel a sort of despair emanating from your piece, or maybe I'm only projecting. Trump's election, contrary to our expectations, raises questions that I can't find the answers to: Should we re-evaluate our assessment of events thus far? Should we have a discussion on Fromm and Reich (not that I'm an expert on either)? And most of all, what should we do now? I know that we're just individuals and that we can't wage the revolution or just wish a party into existence.
I called for an active boycott of the presidential election: http://weeklyworker.co.uk/worker/1125/letters/
No socialist group adopted this approach.
Some are disconcerted by the Trump win because they think he's more "evil" than Clinton. I don't share this view at all. But those like me who were sure Clinton would win do have a real reason to feel disconcerted - something was wrong with the analysis.
Broadly, I agreed with Julian Assange that Trump couldn't win because he lacked the support of any significant part of the ruling class or inner state. This isn't a general truth, but it is implausible that in the absence of much class struggle, a reactionary who is opposed by the entire ruling class would be elected.
But most socialists I've read seem to think that's what happened. I don't. Trump expressed the distress of the rural working class, but the farmlands don't rule. An atomized and peripheralized rustbelt working class is not a cohesive political force. It requires the glue of a section of the ruling class and inner state to hold this extremely politically confused coalition together.
A greater number of monopoly capitalists supported Trump than was apparent. But probably most important, Trump has the support of a section of the inner state whose power is burgeoning: the domestic police. The militarization of the police has increased their social weight, to the point where the FBI can successful attack a 4-star general leading the CIA (Petraus). And when a section of the state apparatus was moved to put its finger on the scale for Trump, it was the FBI. (To great effect, in part due to Clinton's political ineptness and her reflexive retreat to her stock mudslinging.)
Eighty-four percent of cops support Trump. Cops have become enmeshed in the lives of the poor in America, with drug courts and domestic violence crusades. They are greatly respected by the rural workers they actually oppress.
The role of the domestic police, from the FBI to the municipal cops, has not to my knowledge been seriously explored. (See "Pseudo-transparency: From the FBI to the State Bars" - http://kanbaroo.blogspot.com/2016/11/interlude-30-pseudo-transparency-from.html )
That's a really great point, Stephen. And I never really bought the whole "Trump is an outside" rhetoric. His program is essentially routine far-right Republican Party boilerplate. There are some isolationist tendencies that will be dealt with by the ruling elites, but otherwise he's just an extreme form of what we got with the Bush Administration.
Stephen,
I don't agree at all with this analysis. It flies in the face of the facts we know to say that a great number of "monopoly capitalists" supported Trump. Certainly some did, like the Silicon Valley businessman Peter Thiel. But he was almost alone within that group. The capitalists and the political elite were overwhelmingly opposed to Trump. Of course now that he has been elected they will make their peace with Trump and see opportunities for profits and lower taxes. In any case Clinton had far more financial backing from this elite group than Trump. I agree that a section of the military and police were avid Trump supporters but that doesn't explain what happened in this election. Trumps' base of support came from traditional working class centers. Of course it is true that he also captured large sections of middle class voters. And it is also true that significant sections of the working class opposed Trump. But not enough of them. Sanders galvanized large sections of the working class when he was running in the Democratic primaries against Clinton. But after he capitulated I think most of his supporters stayed home on election day. Some of them even voted for Trump. I think you are trying to place a square peg into a round hole by denying that Trump got significant support from the working class. Thus your references to "rural farmlands" as if workers from rural parts of a state - that is not necessarily "farmland"- aren't really part of the working class. And as if workers in large metropolitan areas that were traditionally Democratic didn't desert the Democrats in droves. You want to see the Trump phenomenon through the glasses of the rise of fascism in the 1930s when the base of fascism was primarily the middle classes. The Trump phenomenon is different. I will discuss that more in a subsequent post.
I'll delay part of my response for your upcoming piece, and for now restrict myself to a few points for the sake of clarity.
First, let me state where we disagree, as I don't hold all of the analysis you attribute to me. Where we disagree is that I think it impossible that a reactionary candidate without the support of a section of the ruling could win an election. This might be up your alley, in that it would require considerable autonomy for psychology if candidates can win based _wholly_ on false consciousness.
There was more support for Trump than was evident in the polls. There was _much_ more support for Trump within the ruling class than was evident from journalism. For the same reason: the liberal bourgeoisie controls the means of intellectual production. Ruling class Trumpists usually find it better to hide their views. This isn't just my opinion: I owe the observation to the same Peter Theil, who estimated that 25% of the Silicon Valley plutocracy supported Trump. It may be asked, what's the point of support if it isn't expressed? What it means is that there was no united front across the whole capitalist class against Trump. The mass media were not restrained (by pulling advertising) in affording him tremendous mass publicity.
I agree that the Trump movement isn't analogous to fascism; Trump appeals to workers. (This is why I opposed attempts by many leftists to disrupt Trump rallies.) But the fact that this proletariat is rural is relevant. The cities are simply more advanced than the outlying areas, _surrounded_ by farmlands. Moreover, this is a partly lumpenized working class, highly demoralized in several senses of the word, deeply interpenetrated by the police and military.
A side note: I think the Trump victory is to be celebrated. Conditions for the development of a working class movement will surely accelerate. I just read the Spartacist's WV, which said "Trump's election is bad news." This is concentrated centrism, valuing the opportunity for reforms over possibilities for the development of a class-based movement. My hope is that the working class can pull a labor party against the Trump administration before he is impeached.
"When Odysseus told the one-eyed Cyclops he had just blinded that his name was “Nobody”, he momentarily confused the giant and his brothers, allowing him and his men to escape."
Odysseus told the Cyclops his name was "Nobody", before he and his men blinded him.
Reply to Anonymous,
You are indeed correct!
Alex
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