In 2008, Obama, with control of both houses of Congress, could have immediately resolved the immigration issue once and for all, or alleviated the misery of those burdened by housing and student debt, but he followed a strictly neoliberal governing philosophy, catering only to the banks and big corporations. (In a way, election 2016 is payback from the white working-class for everything Obama failed to pursue as a possibility in his two terms.)...
Essentially, those who chose Hillary over Bernie during the primaries, when we had a clear choice, voted for Trump, since Bernie was always the stronger candidate against Trump or any Republican general election candidate. The polls consistently proved it......
Zizek had it right, Michael Moore had it right, and I had been saying all along that this outcome was inevitable. I wrote back in May that Trump would win by pinning neoliberal failures squarely on Hillary’s shoulders......
The liberal elite, all during this campaign, showed its intolerant colors, mocking anyone who raised questions about Hillary’s background and competence as inherently misogynist, sidelining questions of political economy in favor of preferred identity politics tropes
... Anis Shivani, AlternetFrom Michael Fiorillo who keeps coming up with the greatest hits.
By the way - who is Zizek? He is a Marxist who was on the Brian Lehrer show the other day and had a fascinating analysis of neo-liberalism and the left and why he felt Trump was a preferred option to Hillary's neo-liberalism. (Not that I think Trump will actually end up doing much of the non neo-liberal things he said he would do.)
Slavoj Zizek on Trump, Capitalism, and the Left's Global Crisis
on Brian Lehrer show the other day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7Awx0qJM_I
Here is the article that dovetails into the above by Anis Shivani.
Is This the Death of the Democratic Party? The Death of the Liberal Media? And by the Way, Bernie Would Have Won | Alternet
http://www.alternet.org/ election-2016/death- democratic-party-death- liberal-media-and-way-bernie- would-have-won
November 9, 2016
There have always been two narratives about this election. One predicted what actually happened in the end, while the other missed the boat completely.
Narrative 1. Bernie Sanders represents the unachievable in American politics. Hillary Clinton is the candidate of experience and realism. Donald Trump is a temporary phenomenon, feeding on passions and resentments, not meant to last the duration. Trump’s supporters are more economically privileged than Clinton and Sanders voters, and are motivated by pure racism and misogyny. The election is about the cultural values of tolerance, openness and identity, therefore we must support Hillary. Anyone who doesn’t support Hillary must be suspected of harboring racist and misogynist feelings themselves.
Narrative 2. Bernie Sanders is offering necessary correctives, at the most minimal level, to the excesses of the neoliberal economy of the past 40 years. Hillary Clinton represents the essence of said neoliberalism, embodying its worst practices, from trade to immigration. Donald Trump has tapped into real economic anxiety among those—half of the country at least—who have lost under neoliberal globalization. This election is about returning equal economic rights to all citizens. Only Bernie Sanders has the winning message for this explosive situation.
Everyone who propagated Narrative 1—which is nearly 100 percent of the liberal media, the intellectual community as a whole and elite professionals—got it wrong every step of the way. The utter failure of predictive power means that the model was flawed.
Those who believed in Narrative 2—which included a vanishingly small proportion of intellectuals—got it right at every turn. Trump won, Hillary lost, and we are in for a very bad time, just as our model predicted. Zizek had it right, Michael Moore had it right, and I had been saying all along that this outcome was inevitable. I wrote back in May that Trump would win by pinning neoliberal failures squarely on Hillary’s shoulders.
Essentially, those who chose Hillary over Bernie during the primaries, when we had a clear choice, voted for Trump, since Bernie was always the stronger candidate against Trump or any Republican general election candidate. The polls consistently proved it.
The liberal elite, all during this campaign, showed its intolerant colors, mocking anyone who raised questions about Hillary’s background and competence as inherently misogynist, sidelining questions of political economy in favor of preferred identity politics tropes, banning dissenters and skeptics of Narrative 1 from their websites and forums, questioning their very humanity. Even now—in the wake of the Trump win—they are refusing to accept their culpability in making the wrong choice by throwing up their hands and exclaiming: “I can’t understand how this could have happened!”
On a Pacifica radio show on October 27, where I discussed the reasons why Trumpism had come into being and why I expected it to last well beyond the election regardless of the outcome, half the callers repeated the neoliberal Narrative 1, saying in essence that Trump supporters were facing undesirable economic fates because of their own lack of responsibility toward their personal lives. Why don’t they get educated, why don’t they get jobs, why don’t they move to where the jobs are? And why wasn’t I talking about the Access Hollywood tape—apparently the paramount issue in this campaign? Why didn’t I talk about Trump’s misogyny, which was instantly disqualifying and branded his supporters too as falling in the same vein? This was from Pacifica listeners, presumably the most liberal audience in America!
But there was also the other half, believers of Narrative 2, who thought that the Democratic Party had been suicidal by not choosing Bernie, and who understood the economic grievances of the “leftovers” who supported Trump on the Republican side and Bernie on the Democratic side. They were not falling for the moral righteousness of the liberal media.
What can we say now about the fate of the entities involved in this crash of an election, when the contradictions have so manifestly come to the fore?
1. Is neoliberalism dead? Hardly. This is the ideology that survived 9/11, the presidency of George Bush Jr. and the Great Recession, with barely a scratch. But it has received its most serious blow yet (the first, less severe one, was Brexit), as its entire range of practices, from neoliberal trade benefiting large corporations to a kind of exploitative identity politics that favors internalization of neoliberal psychology, has come under attack from Trumpism. We shall see how neoliberalism responds and regroups, how it works through the Democratic Party to find a different channel of expression than the Clintonian one.
2. Is the Democratic Party dead? Given a clear progressive choice in the primaries, the Democratic Party establishment went for the failed neoliberal candidate of war, inequality and injustice. At the moment, the entire party stands discredited. It is not easy to write off a behemoth as powerful as this, but it is more vulnerable than it has been since the 1960s. The philosophy of catering to upwardly mobile professionals, exploiting immigrants in the neoliberal setup while simultaneously expounding their virtues, and constructing a façade of moral righteousness while ignoring the existence of poor people of any color, stands discredited. After their catastrophic loss in 2008, the Republicans went through one more cycle of doubling down, with Mitt Romney in 2012, before a populist revolution swept the establishment away. How long will it take the Democratic Party as we knew it to end?
3. Is the Republican Party dead? Clearly, it is not what it was before Trumpism, it is no longer the party of Reagan and other supply-siders. On paper at least, Trumpism is virulently opposed to the principles of neoliberalism, around which Republicans, with minor differences on taxation and welfare and other policies, cohere with Democrats as a governing philosophy. To what extent will Trump put his anti-trade, anti-immigration and anti-interventionist policies into practice? Even if he draws back on his stated goals, the genie is out of the bottle. The Republican Party, exploiting cultural fears (exactly as the Democrats have done on the other side) while executing economic policies that benefit the rich, can no longer exist in its old form.
4. Is the liberal media dead? One of the positives of this campaign is that despite relentless 24/7 propaganda about Trump, exaggerating his personal foibles while painting anyone not supportive of Hillary as a closet misogynist, racist or even sexual predator, the message failed to get through. In the end, no one paid any attention. Those inside the elite bubble were persuaded that they were headed for victory, hearing nothing contrary in their own ecosphere, when they were in fact doomed. The people have shown that they can tune out this noise. The media has fragmented so much that only those who are already persuaded come within the ambit of any new message, so in essence they have pounded their way into their own irrelevance.
Enough deaths, I guess. I want to say that this feels eerily, and gloomily, like the night of election 2000, when every idealistic hope that young people had constructed, in the wake of the Bill Bradley and Ralph Nader campaigns, vanished into thin air, never to be seen again. We regressed massively at that time, all talk of privacy and individualism, community and preventive health care, reparations and debt forgiveness, and international justice adjudication, disappearing forever.
In 2008, Obama, with control of both houses of Congress, could have immediately resolved the immigration issue once and for all, or alleviated the misery of those burdened by housing and student debt, but he followed a strictly neoliberal governing philosophy, catering only to the banks and big corporations. (In a way, election 2016 is payback from the white working-class for everything Obama failed to pursue as a possibility in his two terms.)
Now, in 2016, at a minimum, following the Sanders revolt, we should have been talking in the context of the next administration about a $20 minimum wage, free college, Medicare for all, and a liberal, humane, 21st-century immigration policy to live up to our ideals. Instead, we are going to regress almost a century in our attitudes to corporations, migrants, working conditions, taxation, welfare, the environment, and health care. We should be talking at this point, a decade after the financial collapse, about a transcendent alternative to failed capitalist practices that are not in tune with current levels of science and technology, but instead we are backsliding at an apocalyptic pace toward primitive levels of discourse.
At each stage of crisis, neoliberalism has gifted us with a serious regression to the past. Now we face the most serious regression of all.
In the 1920s, facing another economic crisis, America, unlike Europe, chose the path of liberal universalism, a preliminary welfare state that admitted the existence of poverty and misery. This time, following Europe, we have chosen a proto-fascist, or at least extreme right-wing authoritarian, path. We can trace this deadly outcome directly to the inability of the governing elites to steadily refuse to do anything about extreme inequality. Clinton, during the primaries, mocked free college and single-payer health care, saying it would never happen. Even a rhetorical concession to a $15 minimum wage by the candidate of the elites was too much.
The people who will suffer dramatically in the coming days are immigrants in general, and Muslims in particular, since they are the most defenseless of all the targeted constituencies. Everyone else has their defenders in the establishment, but not this group of people. To all those who made the cynical choice of supporting Hillary Clinton, when the evidence was clear that she would perform much worse than Bernie Sanders against Trump or any other Republican, thank you for causing this catastrophe. You are directly responsible for the desperate fate of millions of people about to undergo unimaginable hardship, while you talk cavalierly of moving to Canada or Europe. Keep talking, in your bubble.
Difficult to believe you can opine on the future of progressives within the current Democratic party without referencing Wikileaks. Just check the disgusting actions of Wasserman-Shultz (former DNC Head)and Brazile (current DNC head) in torpedoing Bernie.
ReplyDeleteThe disdain with which the Democratic elite treated Trump's constituency was topped only by their awful treatment of Bernie and his supporters. Trump was right, the process was crooked and fixed, he was only wrong in his mis-identification of the responsible party.
Right trump was right. The crooked process made him president without winning the popular vote. But if we're wiki got republican emails I guarantee you would have seen similar shit. This has gone on forever. How about dnc and McCarthy insurgency against Johnson?
Delete"Is the Republican Party dead?" This is the party that now controls POTUS, SCOTUS, Senate, House of Representatives, and all but 15 governorships. Has it EVER been more powerful?
ReplyDeleteThe party fatally split between identity politicking and grievance reciting progressives and the old time liberals is dead. This was not a glancing blow.
If this is the death of the Democratic Party so be it. It long ago abandoned labor, the middle class and those living in horrendous circumstances. Obama has been a terrible disappointment and Clinton failed to deliver a coherent message. The Clinton Foundation should be throughly investigated. I am tired of being stabbed in the back by Democratic promotion of charter schools and standardized testing. What the DNC did to Sanders was reprehensible.
ReplyDeleteAbigail Shure
Yeah but what takes its place or worst case nothing takes its place and we have a one party system - Trump - like Putin and Russia where they gain control of the entire media and he has a 90% approval rating to kill the media -- all conditions point to that.
DeleteI think people have to go in and redo the Dem party because what else? The useless far left?
We'll have a very strong Republican Party for the next 8 years (dominating all three branches of Federal Government and almost all state capitols...as it is poised to do post-inauguration).
DeleteAt the same time there will be a Democratic Party but it will be weaker and fractured between various grievances/interest groups. Not a one party system at all. Two parties, one stronger and one weaker.
I say 8 years because the public post-election tantrums have greatly strengthened Trump today. And he'll just run those tapes 4 years from now. After 8 years, there may be hope for a stronger Democratic Party. .
Abigail is 100% right. It's why I went so far as to vote for Trump myself. It's why counties all across the country flipped from blue to red including the NY county in which I live. We got tired of being stabbed in the back by the party that we supported election cycle after election cycle. Norm's right too. A one party system is not good. But that is not enough to convince those who voted for Trump to vote democrat. If the democrats can't win back working class Americans and promote an agenda to rebuild the middle class, they are toast. American workers decided this election. If the democrats ignore that then they deserve to take their last breath. Roseanne McCosh
DeleteThe problem is you voted to end your job. Vouchers are coming which means every parent will be taking kids out of public schools into every little school every shyster starts. Charters will have an open venue with not even minimal controls. No matter how bad the dems that would not have happened. Watch the NYC teaching staff begin to drop and with not enough people to pay into the pension system watch that crisis. So even if you retire the nightmare will follow.
DeleteI too am aware of the consequences, Norm. Someone on MSNBC commented the night of the election that translates to---enough people see our government as so cancerous that we are willing to chemo the shit out of it even if it means we all die from the side effects. This is the underestimation of the rage I speak of. No matter how bad the republicans are it is the democrats that have stabbed us in the back, and they must continue to pay the price for it until they change their ways. The other guys are awful is not enough of an argument anymore. I would love for the democrats to earn back my vote and the votes of the dejected American workers who decided this election on Tuesday. Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisonsin working class turned their backs on the democrats they have previously supported and I imagine they did so for the same reasons I did. Complete and utter disgust for the party that has repeatedly sold us out. I posted soemthing on the Ravitch blog in great detail. In short, it's the plight of the American worker that should unite us and continue to drive election results. Dems lost this election because they ignored us. roseanne
DeleteMy problem is I've studied too much history and understood how situations like this lead to one party systems where republicans use power to assurr dems can never win. A more capable demagogue than trump like Putin or endowan in turkey comes along and attacks media and begins to take control. I don't think you see that no matter how bad things seem they can be so much worse. Trump tanks the economy badly and the wingnut right and left will be out of control. We have begun to think about what ifs. I'd rather have backstabbing incompetent neoliberal dems than republican witch hunts. Republicans are scarier than trump and I would not be surprised to see them find a way to get rid of him to make pence president. Dems will be limited to a few pockets on the coasts.
DeletePence would be a great president. He does not believe in evolution and he has done a wonderful job gutting public education in Indiana.
DeleteErdogan has locked up so many political prisoners in Turkey that he had to release hordes of real criminals.
Trump is already back pedaling on building the wall on the Mexican border and he is considering salvaging some portions of Obamacare.
The future has never looked better.
Abigail Shure
I was heading for New Zealand until today's earthquake. Mars might be the best option if I can get medicare there.
DeleteAt first glance, the names put forward to head the DNC look to be headed in the same old direction. Have you seen any big shot Democrats come forward to say, "This is where we went wrong. This is what we have to do better."? They are wandering around in a stupor, which is truly pathetic.
ReplyDeleteAbigail Shure
New Jersey public employee pensions are the worst funded in the nation. Charters are well on the way to taking over Newark schools. Cerf went to court to end LIFO. I am well ahead of the curve.
ReplyDeleteAbigail Shure