THE PARALLELS
BETWEEN the U.K.’s shocking approval of the Brexit referendum in June and the
U.S.’ even more shocking election of Donald Trump as president last night are
overwhelming. Elites (outside of populist right-wing circles) aggressively
unified across ideological lines in opposition to both. Supporters of Brexit
and Trump were continually maligned by the dominant media narrative
(validly or otherwise) as primitive, stupid, racist, xenophobic, and
irrational. In each case, journalists who spend all day chatting with one
another on Twitter and congregating in exclusive social circles in national
capitals — constantly re-affirming their own wisdom in an endless feedback loop
— were certain of victory. Afterward, the elites whose entitlement to prevail
was crushed devoted their energies to blaming everyone they could find
except for themselves, while doubling down on their unbridled
contempt for those who defied them, steadfastly refusing to examine what drove
their insubordination.
The indisputable fact is that prevailing institutions of
authority in the West, for decades, have relentlessly and with complete
indifference stomped on the economic welfare and social security of
hundreds of millions of people. While elite circles gorged themselves
on globalism, free trade, Wall Street casino-gambling, and endless wars (wars
that enriched the perpetrators and sent the poorest and most marginalized
to bear all their burdens), they completely ignored the victims of their
gluttony, except when those victims piped up a bit too much — when they caused
a ruckus — and were then scornfully condemned as troglodytes who were
the deserved losers in the glorious, global game of meritocracy.
That message was heard loud and clear. The institutions
and elite factions that have spent years mocking, maligning, and pillaging
large portions of the population — all while compiling their own long
record of failure and corruption and destruction — are now shocked that
their dictates and decrees go unheeded. But human beings are not going to
follow and obey the exact people they most blame for their suffering. They’re
going to do exactly the opposite: purposely defy them and try to impose
punishment in retaliation. Their instruments for retaliation are
Brexit and Trump. Those are their agents, dispatched on a mission of
destruction: aimed at a system and culture that they regard, not without
reason, as rife with corruption and, above all else, contempt for them and
their welfare.
After the Brexit vote, I wrote an article comprehensively
detailing these dynamics, which I won’t repeat here
but hope those interested will read. The title conveys the crux: “Brexit Is
Only the Latest Proof of the Insularity and Failure of Western Establishment
Institutions.” That analysis was inspired by a short, incredibly insightful,
and now-more-relevant-than-ever post-Brexit Facebook note by The Los Angeles Times’ Vincent Bevins, who wrote that “both
Brexit and Trumpism are the very, very wrong answers to legitimate questions
that urban elites have refused to ask for 30 years”; in particular, “since
the 1980s the elites in rich countries have overplayed their hand, taking all
the gains for themselves and just covering their ears when anyone else talks,
and now they are watching in horror as voters revolt.”
For those who tried to remove themselves from the
self-affirming, vehemently pro-Clinton elite echo chamber of 2016, the warning
signs that Brexit screechingly announced were not hard to see. These two short
passages from a Slate interview I gave in
July — here and here —
summarized those grave dangers: that opinion-making elites were so clustered,
so incestuous, so far removed from the people who would decide this
election, so contemptuous of them, that they were not only incapable of seeing
the trends toward Trump but were unwittingly accelerating those trends with
their own condescending, self-glorifying behavior.
Like most everyone else who saw the polling data and
predictive models of the media’s self-proclaimed data experts, I long believed
Clinton would win, but the reasons why she very well could lose were not
hard to see. The warning lights were flashing in neon for a long time, but they
were in seedy places that elites studiously avoid. The few people who purposely
went to those places and listened, such as Chris Arnade, saw and heard them loud and clear. The ongoing failure to take heed of
this intense but invisible resentment and suffering guarantees that it will
fester and strengthen. This was the last paragraph of my July article on the
Brexit fallout:
Instead of acknowledging and addressing the fundamental
flaws within themselves, [elites] are devoting their energies to demonizing the
victims of their corruption, all in order to delegitimize those grievances
and thus relieve themselves of responsibility to meaningfully address them.
That reaction only serves to bolster, if not vindicate, the animating
perceptions that these elite institutions are hopelessly self-interested,
toxic, and destructive and thus cannot be reformed but rather must be destroyed.
That, in turn, only ensures there will be many more Brexits, and Trumps, in our
collective future.
Beyond the Brexit analysis, there are three new points
from last night’s results that I want to emphasize, as they are unique to the
2016 U.S. election and, more importantly, illustrate the elite pathologies that
led to all of this:
(1) DEMOCRATS HAVE ALREADY BEGUN
FLAILING AROUND trying to blame anyone and everyone they can
find — everyone except themselves — for last night’s crushing defeat of
their party. You know the drearily predictable list of their
scapegoats: Russia, WikiLeaks, James Comey, Jill Stein, Bernie Bros, The
Media, news outlets (including, perhaps especially, the Intercept) which sinned
by reporting negatively on Hillary Clinton. Anyone who thinks that what
happened last night in places like Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa and Michigan can be
blamed on any of that is drowning in self-protective
ignorance so deep that it’s impossible to express in words.
When a political party is demolished, the principle
responsibility belongs to one entity: the party that got crushed. It’s the job
of the party and the candidate, and nobody else, to persuade the citizenry to
support them and find ways to do that. Last night, the Democrats failed,
resoundingly, to do that, and any autopsy or liberal think piece or
pro-Clinton-pundit commentary that does not start and finish with their own behavior
is one that is inherently worthless.
Put simply, Democrats knowingly chose to nominate a deeply
unpopular, extremely vulnerable, scandal-plagued candidate, who — for very good
reason — was widely perceived to be a protector and beneficiary of all the
worst components of status quo elite corruption. It’s astonishing that those of us who tried frantically to warn Democrats that nominating
Hillary Clinton was a huge and scary gamble, that
all empirical evidence showed that she could lose to
anyone and
that Bernie Sanders would be a much stronger candidate especially in this
climate — are now the ones being blamed: by the very same people who insisted
on ignoring all that data and nominating her anyway.
But that’s just basic blame-shifting and
self-preservation. Far more significant is what this shows about the mentality
of the Democratic Party. Just think about who they nominated: someone who
— when she wasn’t dining with Saudi monarchs and being feted in Davos by
tyrants who gave million-dollar checks — spent the last several years
piggishly running around to Wall Street banks and major corporations cashing in
with $250,000 fees for 45-minute secret speeches even though she had already
become unimaginably rich with book advances while her husband already made tens
of millions playing these same games. She did all that without the slightest
apparent concern for how that would feed into all the perceptions and
resentments of her and the Democratic Party as corrupt, status-quo-protecting,
aristocratic tools of the rich and powerful: exactly the worst possible
behavior for this post-2008-economic-crisis era of globalism and
destroyed industries.
It goes without saying that Trump is a
sociopathic con artist obsessed with personal enrichment: the opposite of
a genuine warrior for the downtrodden. That’s too obvious to debate. But,
just as Obama did so powerfully in 2008, he could credibly run as an enemy of
the D.C. and Wall Street system that has steamrolled over so many people, while
Hillary Clinton is its loyal guardian, its consummate beneficiary.
Trump vowed to destroy the system that elites love (for
good reason) and the masses hate (for equally good reason), while Clinton vowed
to more efficiently manage it. That, as Matt Stoller’s indispensable article in the
Atlantic three weeks ago documented, is the conniving choice the Democratic Party
made decades ago: to abandon populism and become the party of technocratically
proficient, mildly benevolent managers of elite power. Those are the cynical,
self-interested seeds they planted, and now the crop has sprouted.
Of course there are fundamental differences between
Obama’s version of “change” and Trump’s. But at a high level of generality —
which is where these messages are often ingested — both were perceived as
outside forces on a mission to tear down corrupt elite structures, while
Clinton was perceived as devoted to their fortification. That is the
choice made by Democrats — largely happy with status quo authorities,
believing in their basic goodness — and any honest attempt by Democrats to find
the prime author of last night’s debacle will begin with a large mirror.
(2) THAT RACISM,
MISOGYNY AND XENOPHOBIA ARE PERVASIVE in all
sectors of America is indisputable from even a casual glance at its history,
both distant and recent. There are reasons why all presidents until 2008 were
white and all 45 elected presidents are men. There can be no doubt that those
pathologies played a substantial role in last night’s outcome. But that
fact answers very few questions, and begs many critical ones.
To begin with, one must confront the fact that not only
was Barack Obama elected twice, but is poised to leave office as a highly
popular president: now viewed more positively than Reagan. America wasn’t
any less racist and xenophobic in 2008 and 2012 than it is now. Even stalwart
Democrats fond of casually branding their opponents as bigots are acknowledging
that a far more complicated analysis is required to understand last night’s
results. As the New York Times’ Nate Cohn put it: “Clinton suffered her biggest losses in
the places where Obama was strongest among white voters. It’s not a simple
racism story.” Matt Yglesias acknowledged that Obama’s high approval rating is
inconsistent with depictions of the U.S. as “county besotted with racism.”
People often talk about “racism/sexism/xenophobia” v.
“economic suffering” as if they are totally distinct dichotomies. Of course
there are substantial elements of both in Trump’s voting base, but the two
categories are inextricably linked: the more economic suffering people endure,
the angrier and more bitter they get, the easier it is to direct their anger to
scapegoats. Economic suffering often fuels ugly bigotry. It is true that many
Trump voters are relatively well-off and that many of the nation’s poorest
voted for Clinton, but, as Michael Moore quite presciently warned, those
portions of the country that have been most ravaged by free trade orgies
and globalism — Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Iowa — were filled with rage and
“see [Trump] as a chance to be the human Molotov cocktail that they’d like
to throw into the system to blow it up.” Those are the places that were
decisive in Trump’s victory. As the Washington Examiner’s Tim Carney put it:
Low-income rural white voters in Pa. voted for Obama in 2008 and then
Trump in 2016, and your explanation is white supremacy? Interesting.
It long has been, and still is, a central American
challenge to rid its society of these structural inequalities. But one way to
ensure those scapegoating dynamics fester rather than erode is to continue to
embrace a system that excludes and ignores a large portion of the population.
Hillary Clinton was viewed, reasonably, as a stalwart devotee, beloved agent,
and prime beneficiary of that system, and thus could not possibly be viewed as
a credible actor against it.
(3) OVER
THE LAST SIX DECADES, and particularly over the last fifteen
years of the endless War on Terror, both political parties have joined to
construct a frightening and unprecedentedly invasive and destructive system of
authoritarian power, accompanied by the unbridled authority vested in the
Executive Branch to use it. As a result, the president of the United States
commands a vast nuclear arsenal that can destroy the planet many times over;
the deadliest and most expensive military ever developed in human
history; legal authorities that allow him to prosecute numerous secret wars at
the same time, imprison people
with no due process, and to target people (including U.S. citizens) for assassination with no oversight; domestic law enforcement agencies that are
constructed to appear and to act as standing, para-militarized armies; a
sprawling penal state that allows imprisonment far more easily than most western
countries; and a system of electronic surveillance purposely designed to be
ubiquitous and limitless, including on U.S. soil.
Those who have been warning of the grave dangers these
powers pose have often been dismissed on the ground that the leaders who control
this system are benevolent and well-intentioned. They have thus often resorted
to the tactic of urging people to imagine what might happen if a president they
regarded as less-then-benevolent one day gained control of it. That day has arrived. One hopes that this will at least provide
the impetus to unite across ideological and partisan lines to finally impose
meaningful limits on these powers that should never have been vested in the
first place. That commitment should start now.
For many years, the U.S. — like the U.K. and other western
nations — has embarked on a course that virtually guaranteed a collapse of
elite authority and internal implosion. From the invasion of Iraq to the 2008
financial crisis to the all-consuming framework of prisons and endless wars,
societal benefits have been directed almost exclusively to the very elite
institutions most responsible for failure at the expense of everyone else.
It was only a matter of time before instability,
backlash and disruption resulted. Both Brexit and Trump unmistakably
signal its arrival. The only question is whether those two cataclysmic
events will be the peak of this process, or just the beginning. And that, in
turn, will be determined by whether their crucial lessons are learned — truly
internalized — or ignored in favor of self-exonerating campaigns to blame
everyone else.
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