Opinion

Red Alert: Trumpism

Yes, decency and idealism won this round. Yet, the toxicity in White America that Trump tapped is alive and well. Biden-Harris will have to dig deep to defuse an explosive device made of systemic injustice.

Red Alert: Trumpism
info_icon

The November election in the United States took place under most extraordinary circumstances. A deadly pandemic, historic levels of unemployment, massive protests against racism and deep polarisation defined the context within which the electoral battle played out. Despite the odds, supporters of President Trump and all those who wanted him out of the White House participated, leading to a high turnout with an unprecedented number of mail-in ballots. When polling started on November 3, more than 100 million had already voted. Americans meant business. After all, this was no ordinary election. Defeating something larger than the man, i.e. Trumpism, turned into a goal for millions. Yet, Trump did not lose in political terms. Over 70 million Americans continue to support his world view바카라a toxic mix of high-pitched populist rhetoric underlined by xenophobia, racist overtones and a directness that politicians usually avoid.

Donald Trump바카라s ascension to the highest office gave voice to White working and middle classes who have faced unp­recedented economic decline in the past few decades. Two-thirds of Americans have no emergency savings and most live 바카라paycheck to paycheck바카라; in many parts of the country the minimum wage has not been upgraded for years. Skewed globalisation and neoliberalism have fueled inequality, bringing it to the levels of early 20th century, when such economic phenomenon led to cataclysmic changes in the politics of the West. This time, the fast-changing demographic have added to the anxiety. Roughly 40 per cent of the population is non-White and the fear that White sup­remacy shall dwindle over the next few years is real. Trumpism, therefore, has a formidable base and plays on economic and racial insecurities.

ALSO READ:

Trump blundered in his handling of both the COVID-19 pandemic and the police brutality protests that shook America and the world. Where competent handling of the virus could have well bolstered Trump to victory, he instead chose to downplay the advice of doctors and scientists, misrepresenting the risk of the virus. Small wonder that the US remains the most affected among developed nations. Countries with far less resources have handled the pandemic better. This is one of the reasons why the vulnerable senior voter population chose not to support him.

Mishandling the protests against police brutality also hurt him. Commentators have noted that 바카라Trump sought, like Richard Nixon in 1968, to ride a wave of white racial angst over race riots to a presidential victory바카라accusing Democrats of supporting lawlessness and riots바카라. This excessive pandering of the Trumpists throughout his presidency and the campaign was bound to alienate other groups within the voting population.

ALSO READ:

In a recent interview, the leading public intellectual Noam Chomsky, nearly invisible in corporate media, stated that while Biden won the election, Trump did concerningly well and the fact that people came out at all in his support is a huge victory for him. Trump, despite losing, succeeded at 바카라[tapping into] reservoirs of anger and economic resentment among the working and middle classes who have been subjected to the bipartisan neoliberal assault of the last 40 years.바카라 Trumpism also blames American elites for their troubles. This is not too different from the strongmen playbook in other parts of the world. The irony is that these figures rise to power and serve the very elites they condemn. But Trump gained White America바카라s trust in a way no politician has accomplished before. Of course, Trump cannot be singled out for White supremacy바카라racism and xenophobia are integral to American culture since its inception. In Trump they found a national and global mouthpiece.

The ultra-rich minority in America have more influence on federal policy than the ave­rage American does. Sam Pizzigati quoted Thomas Ferguson of The Institute for Economic Thinking, acknowledging that 바카라making real change like taxing the rich and passing Medicare for all requires 바카라a real mass movement not dependent on the goodwill of the super-rich.바카라바카라 Research analysts Shawn McGuire and Charles Delahunt mention 바카라the underlying disease바카라money-driven policy outcomes바카라leading to present-day symptoms goes mostly unspoken바카라.

Economic stress, COVID-19 and racial tensions were key issues in the presidential elections. The Fox News exit polls demonstrated that Medicare for All­바카라public health insurance바카라was supported by the American people. While the Democrats lost Florida in the presidential race, the state voted for a $15 minimum wage, an issue that Bernie Sanders and the Democrats have argued for. Esssentially, Americans want a bigger role of the government in leading a transition to a green economy, and free college is popular with them. Trump had promised a lot but his delivery remained a mix of Republican tax cuts for the rich and lip service to the impoverished.

Once the celebration of Trump바카라s defeat ends, pressure on Biden will mount to deliver on containing COVID-19 (not going anywhere despite media euphoria on vaccines) and the economy. Robert Freeman noted in a piece for Common Dreams, 바카라Until those legions of humiliated working-class Whites have some of their dignity restored through meaningful work, they will continue to fester and infect any polity of the next 100 years.바카라

While Trumpism is a reality and a political force to contend with, the coalition that rallied under Biden-Harris campaign바카라progressives led by Bernie Sanders and those on the right of the democratic spectrum바카라agreed on the single-point agenda of ousting Trump. The progressive activists with their grassroots organising were critical in creating the united front 바카라to defeat Trump바카라. The progressives have been rallying to challenge the 바카라corporate Democrats바카라 and have long argued that neoliberal policies have alienated the working class whilst protecting the rich. Biden바카라s centrist rec­ord and tone will be called into question and he would need to keep this coalition together for effective governance, for Trumpism will challenge every decision that he might take. Biden will need the progressives but the prescriptions of the latter are likely to clash with the corporate power that is also vital to claim and sustain power in America. But these divisions will not be easy to navigate and manage; this will be the greatest challenge for Biden as he finds a team. With a hostile Senate and a slim majority in the Congress (and that could change too), things will be tough. Perhaps the greatest of challenges will be to tackle systemic racism, as both Biden and Harris mentioned in their speeches. Mainstream media commentaries have focused on how Trump managed to secure the Hispanic vote. Confusion has been cast in the direction of the Cuban community who voted, in large part, for Trump in spite of his anti-immigrant rhetoric. This attention put upon the Cuban community (and Latino people in general) 바카라seems to underplay the fact that White voters are largely responsible for the Trump presidency바카라. Black and brown communities cannot be treated like monoliths, and attention must be paid to the fact that Donald Trump was voted president in 2016 because White people voted overwhelmingly for him. Biden did not win 2020 in a landslide for the same reasons.

Perhaps the biggest symbolism of this election has been Kamala Harris바카라the first female and the first person of colour to be assuming the office of vice president. Her record is mixed but her presence in the administration and potential to be the president at a later stage is of immense significance. In a highly charged and polarised political environment, the task of the Biden-Harris duo will be even more challenging. The pressure to appease those on the right will resurface, as it did under Obama. Biden will have to demonstrate that he is not returning to the discreet norms of White supremacy and elitism. There is long-due reform needed within the racially constructed oligarchic institutions of power. That is an area where Biden-Harris will be tested.

(Raza Rumi is director, Park Center for Independent Media. Views are personal.)

×