Donald Trump, Empire, and Globalization: has Trump caved, or is he a diversion?
A couple days ago, I linked to Max Forte's January 2017article on The Dying Days of Liberalism How Orthodoxy, Professionalism, and Unresponsive Politics Finally Doomed a 19th-century Project, which included an excellent two-paragraph summary of Max Frank's latest book, Listen Liberal.
Now I'll provide a link to Forte's much longer article, Donald Trump, Empire, and Globalization: A Reassessment. Forte notes that no one predicted that after the election, "Trump would then move on to defeating Trump." Now that we've seen Trump repeatedly reverse himself and contradict his advisors, as well as abandon most of his major campaign pledges, Forte suggests that the best slogan for this regime is "“Trump Trumps Trump.”
But most important is that Trump has quickly transmogrified into an "establishment" figure:
There are now more Goldman Sachs figures in the Trump administration than in any previous administration.1 This is perhaps the most fundamental “reversal” of Trump’s course.... My thesis revolves around facts such as senior Goldman Sachs executives readily jumping aboard the engine of the “Trump train,” after being denounced in Trump campaign advertising, which suggests that they do not see Trump’s much touted nationalism as anything that needs to cause them any concern.
During the campaign, and for a while after the election, I had believed that Trump was hated and feared by Wall Street. Trump had crossed swords with bankers and financiers repeatedly as he put together his various deals, and reportedly detested them. In short, I beleived that Trump was indeed and outsider, and might actually "drain the swamp." Was I mistaken, or did something about Trump change? Forte notes:
While a candidate could win a presidential campaign, as an “outsider,” even as he was reviled by his own party elite, demonized by the mass media, shunned by the mass of corporate donors, and so forth, it also means that the status quo can win on the cheap. The establishment won, and all without the usual investments, and not so much as a single compliment to the winning candidate who would uphold their order—at little or no cost to them.
All that is said and done at these levels of power will never be known to the public or to historians. But in the context of TPTB enforcing their dominance, I think we should pay close attention to what Greek's former finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, reportedly has written in his just released memoirs:
Elected politicians have little power; Wall Street and a network of hedge funds, billionaires and media owners have the real power, and the art of being in politics is to recognise this as a fact of life and achieve what you can without disrupting the system. That was the offer. Varoufakis not only rejected it – by describing it in frank detail now, he is arming us against the stupidity of the left’s occasional fantasies that the system built by neoliberalism can somehow bend or compromise to our desire for social justice.
In this book, then, Varoufakis gives one of the most accurate and detailed descriptions of modern power ever written – an achievement that outweighs his desire for self-justification during the Greek crisis. He explains, with a weariness born of nights in soulless hotels and harsh-lit briefing rooms, how the modern power network is built.
.... close members of Varoufakis’s family were threatened with violence when, with the masses in control of the streets and squares, he began to line up with those denouncing the initial bailout as unworkable. It was in response to these threats – delivered via an anonymous phone call with oligarchic calm – that Varoufakis says he left Greece for the US.
Or is it just Trump naturally falling in line with the interests of his class? Forte writes:
That there is no accident in Trump’s choices has a lot to do with his class prejudices and his class ambitions. His choice of cabinet members, with a preference for billionaires (or generals), shows who he tends to trust and respect. Some historians have said that Trump’s cabinet is the richest in US history, with a combined worth estimated as ranging from $11 billion to $14 billion....
Trump may have reversed himself in terms of the opportunistic targeting of Goldman Sachs, as a symbol, but there is little point in evading the fact that he entered the electoral campaign as the owner of a large family corporation. What is more difficult to explain is why Trump, as a national capitalist, lent himself so quickly to supporting a transnational capitalist class with economic and financial interests different from his own, which was also ideologically opposed to his campaign. I see many taking matters for granted, by resorting to easy assertions that “they are all the one percent,” or “they are all oligarchs”. That is broadly accurate, but also facile, because such commentary focuses (knowingly or not) on capital, in broad terms, and not on the capitalist class which is divided into competing factions. The elite political class of experts, managers, technocrats and legislators, certainly remains more united than ever against Trump since his victory—but the capitalist class is seeing some remarkable reconciliation thanks to Trump (at least for now). So why did Trump choose to perform this service?
The answer Forte settles on is that Trump "wants to make a transition away from a position as a national capitalist in order to enter the transnational capitalist class, where the real global power lies." But this leaves out any consideration of how the various factions in the oligarchic classes are reacting to Trump. And, personally, I have no doubt that some of them are reacting in the way Varoufakis reveals.
Finally, in the next to last section, entitled "Saving Neoliberalism," Forte engages in some conjecture.
Has Trump saved neoliberal capitalism from its ongoing demise? Has he sustained popular faith in liberal political ideals? Are we still in the dying days of liberalism? If there had been a centrally coordinated plan to plant an operative among the ranks of populist conservatives and independents, to channel their support for nationalism into support for the persona of the plant, and to then have that plant steer a course straight back to shoring up neoliberal globalism—then we might have had a wonderful story of a masterful conspiracy, the biggest heist in the history of elections anywhere. A truly “rigged system” could be expected to behave that way. Was Trump designated to take the fall in a rigged game, only his huge ego got in the way when he realized he could realistically win the election and he decided to really tilt hard against his partner, Hillary Clinton? It could be the basis for a novel, or a Hollywood political comedy. I have no way of knowing if it could be true.
So, what do you think?
Comments
I wrote an essay a few weeks ago stating I didn't believe
Trump had caved to the "deep state", he was just a fucking liar. It was based off an essay I wrote in 2009 that said Obama had proven once and for all the oligarchy controls things, not the president.
Regarding Forte saying "that no one predicted that after the election, "Trump would then move on to defeating Trump." I would disagree with that. Many people predicted Trump was lying during his presidential campaign and that he would be just as evil as Clinton. I was one of them, writing a number of articles saying Trump was not a lesser evil, that he was an imperialist warmonger, global capitalist who would continue the show for the oligarchy.
We keep doing this over and over.
My prediction, as I predicted Trump would be an imperialist warmonger, is that we'll do it again. That's why the Who wrote that song, because they knew it would last forever.
It’s like the German Green party: “fundis” versus “realos”
[Edited to add: Oops! This was intended as a reply to Big Al’s comment in a different essay, here:
https://caucus99percent.com/comment/264050#comment-264050
Not sure how that happened.]
After reunification, the “realist-pragmatist” realo faction won out.
Although a focus on the environment is still there, the realos rule the roost. Is anything about the party still visionary, counterculture, or “Left”? Debatable.
Throughout the West, realos of all parties have de facto turned out to be neoliberal globalizers bent on sacrificing the 99%’s future to — what exactly? The market? Abstract ideals? A “New World Order” or “United States of Europe” mirage?
There need to be more fundis — in the sense of people willing to examine, analyze, challenge, shatter, and replace the prevailing foundational assumptions. Able to put aside personalities or the media-orchestrated emotional distractions of the day and see the whole system for what it is, from the ground up.
Learning the ins and outs of who exactly owns the media is as good a place to start as any.
Varoufakis confirms what we already suspected or simply
believed to be the case based on ample evidence and case studies of our day to day life. It's just an update of the Bill Hicks "they show you the Kennedy film" riff after you're elected or even while you're running.
Matt Taibbi said regarding regarding healthcare that we got all the reform we were "allowed to have". Why is Hillary so confident and adamant when she avers so forcefully that we will never ever have single payer healthcare? Not even if 70, 80, or 90% of the electorate demand it in some future election after masses of us have died or gone bankrupt in the intervening years?
What was the "leverage" on Bernie Sanders that was referred to in an email from Robby Mook to Podesta? Will someone or has someone asked Bernie straight out?
Meanwhile, has anyone ever been happier to rip off their 8 year old empathy hairshirt than Barack Obama? I mean he really went right for the gusto, didn't he? Straight off to Richard Branson's private island and then a sojourn in a $10,000 dollar a night resort in French Polynesia in order to have the proper environment in which to mull over his $60 million in advance memoirs (working title : You Hoped and I Got the Change) and to rest up before his grueling speaking schedule which is on track to make the Clintons and other past Presidents look like they're on the "puppet show and Spinal Tap" circuit.
The problem for all the oligarchs is that the plebes are now tuned into the game. Many of us are now hard and fast cynics after seeing our unicorns sold to the dogfood factory. We don't believe the Party lines anymore, and we are rejecting the existent Partys period for their 3 card monte con on our jobs, our health and our lives.
The other major problem for the oligarchs is the sheer raw numbers of 99% being larger than 1% or even 10%. Too many are escaping from the sheepfolds. We're not waiting for the next faux savior figurehead to appear to scam us with false hopes and enthusiasm for our little lives to then turn around and offer us the same day old crust and tell us that's the best they could do. Gosh, can't wait for the runs of Andrew Cuomo and/or Mark Warner and/or Cory Booker and/or Julian Castro and/or Terry MacAuliffe and/or the return of HRC, can you? (Elizabeth Warren will continue to be muscled out because only one diner placemat changer can run at a time).
(edit to correct Casto's first name)
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