The Democratic Party Surrenders to Nostalgia
By Bill BlumMarch 12, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Now that the
Michigan Democratic primary is over and Joe
Biden has been declared the
winner, it’s time to read the handwriting on
the political wall: Biden will be the Democratic
nominee for president, and Bernie Sanders will
be the runner-up once again come the party’s
convention in July. Sanders might influence the
party’s platform, but platforms are never
binding for the nominee. Sanders has lost, and
so have his many progressive supporters, myself
included.
I am nothing if not a realist. The idea that
Sanders might have become the Democratic
candidate was always a fantasy, not unlike my
youthful dreams of one day becoming an NFL
quarterback. Even after Sanders’ triumph in the
Nevada caucuses, I never thought the party
establishment would ever allow a socialist —
even a mild social democratic one, such as
Sanders — to head its ticket.
Funded by wealthy donors, run by Beltway
insiders and aided and abetted by a corporate
media dedicated to promoting the notion that
Sanders was “unelectable,”
the Democratic Party never welcomed Sanders as a
legitimate contender. Not in 2016 and not in
2020. In several instances, it even resorted to
some good old-fashioned
red-baiting to frighten voters; the party
is, after all, a capitalist institution. Working
and middle-class families support the Democrats
largely because they have no other place to go
on Election Day besides the completely corrupt
and craven GOP.
Now we are left with Donald Trump and Biden
to duke it out in the fall. Yes, it has come to
that.
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In terms of campaign rhetoric and party
policies, the general election campaign will
be a battle for America’s past far more than
it will be a contest for its future. The
battle will be fueled on both sides by
narratives and visions that are illusory,
regressive and, in important respects,
downright dangerous.
Of the two campaigns, Trump’s will be
decidedly more toxic. The “Make America Great
Again” slogan that propelled Trump to victory in
2016 and the “Keep America Great” slogan he will
try to sell this time around are neo-fascist in
nature, designed to invoke an imaginary and
false state of mythical past national glory that
ignores our deeply entrenched history of
patriarchal white supremacy and brutal class
domination.
The fascist designation is not a label I
apply to Trump cavalierly. I use it, as I have
before
in this column, because Trump meets many of
the standard and widely respected definitions of
the term.
As the celebrated Marxist playwright
Bertolt Brecht wrote in 1935, fascism “is a
historic phase of capitalism … the nakedest,
most shameless, most oppressive and most
treacherous form of capitalism.” Trumpism,
along with its international analogs in Brazil,
India and Western Europe, neatly accords with
Brecht’s theory.
Trumpism similarly meets the definition of
fascism offered by Robert Paxton in his classic
2004 study, “The
Anatomy of Fascism”:
Fascism may be defined as a form of
political behavior marked by obsessive
preoccupation with community decline,
humiliation, or victimhood and by compensatory
cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a
mass-based party of committed nationalist
militants, working in uneasy but effective
collaboration with traditional elites, abandons
democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive
violence and without ethical or legal restraints
goals of internal cleansing and external
expansion.
Trump and Trumpism similarly embody the 14
common factors of fascism identified by the
great writer Umberto Eco in his 1995 essay,
Ur Fascism:
- A cult of traditionalism.
- The rejection of modernism.
- A cult of action for its own sake and a
distrust of intellectualism.
- The view that disagreement or opposition
is treasonous.
- A fear of difference. Fascism is racist
by definition.
- An appeal to a frustrated middle class
that is suffering from an economic crisis of
humiliation and fear of the pressure exerted
by lower social groups.
- An obsession with the plots and
machinations of the movement’s identified
enemies.
- A requirement that the movement’s
enemies be simultaneously seen as omnipotent
and weak, conniving and cowardly.
- A rejection of pacifism.
- Contempt for weakness.
- A cult of heroism.
- Hypermasculinity and homophobia.
- A selective populism, relying on
chauvinist definitions of “the people” that
the movement claims to represent.
- Heavy usage of “newspeak” and an
impoverished discourse of elementary syntax
and resistance to complex and critical
reasoning.
Joe Biden is not a fascist. He is, instead, a
standard-bearer of neoliberalism. As with
fascism, there are different definitions of
neoliberalism, prompting some exceptionally smug
mainstream commentators like New York Magazine’s
Jonathan Chait to claim that the concept is
little more than a left-wing insult. In truth,
however, the concept describes an all-too-real
set of governing principles.
To grasp what neoliberalism means, it’s
necessary to understand that it does not refer
to a revival of the liberalism of the New Deal
and New Society programs of the 1930s and 1960s.
That brand of liberalism advocated the active
intervention of the federal government in the
economy to mitigate the harshest effects of
private enterprise through such programs as
Social Security, the National Labor Relations
Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act, Medicare, and
the Civil Rights Act of 1964. That brand of
liberalism imposed high taxes on the wealthy and
significantly mitigated
income inequality in America.
Neoliberalism, by contrast, deemphasizes
federal economic intervention in favor of
initiatives calling for deregulation, corporate
tax cuts, private-public partnerships, and
international trade agreements that augment the
free flow of capital while undermining the power
and influence of trade unions.
Until the arrival of Trump and his brand of
neo-fascism, both major parties since Reagan had
embraced this ideology. And while neoliberals
remain more benign on issues of race and gender
than Trump and Trumpism ever will be,
neoliberalism offers little to challenge
hierarchies based on social class. Indeed,
income inequality accelerated during the
Obama years and today rivals that of the
Gilded Age.
As transformational a politician as Barack
Obama was in terms of race, he too pursued a
predominantly neoliberal agenda. The Affordable
Care Act, Obama’s singular domestic legislative
achievement, is a perfect example of neoliberal
private-public collaboration that left intact a
health industry dominated by for-profit drug
manufacturers and rapacious insurance companies,
rather than setting the stage for Medicare for
All, as championed by Sanders.
Biden never tires of reminding any audience
willing to put up with his gaffes, verbal ticks
and miscues that he served as Obama’s vice
president. Those ties are likely to remain the
centerpiece of his campaign, as he promises a
return to the civility of the Obama era and a
restoration of America’s standing in the world.
History, however, only moves forward. As
charming and comforting as Biden’s imagery of
the past may be, it is, like Trump’s darker
outlook, a mirage. If Trump has taught us
anything worthwhile, it is that the past cannot
be replicated, no matter how much we might wish
otherwise.