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Reader Supported News, RSN, politics, alternative news, news, opinion, Thomas Frank, Guardian, Democrats, Hillary Clinton, DNC, Bernie Sanders, inequality, democracy, anti-establishment, Donald Trump

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and former U.S. president Bill Clinton greet supporters during a primary night gathering on April 26, in Philadelphia. (photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and former U.S. president Bill Clinton greet supporters during a primary night gathering on April 26, in Philadelphia. (photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)


Hillary Clinton Needs to Wake Up. Trump Is Stealing the Voters She Takes for Granted

By Thomas Frank, Guardian UK

30 July 16

 

For the first time in living memory, the Republicans are outflanking the Democrats on the left. If they don�t rise to the challenge, they�ll be trounced

he Republican party wants my liberal vote. This was the most shocking wave to wash over my brain last week as I sat in the convention center in Cleveland. It was more startling in its way than the storm of hate that I saw descend on former GOP hero Ted Cruz, stranger than the absence of almost all the party�s recent standard-bearers, weirder than the police-state atmosphere that hovered over the streets of the city.

The Republicans were trying to win the support of people like me! Not tactfully or convincingly or successfully, of course: they don�t know the language of liberalism and wouldn�t speak it if they did; and most of the liberals I know will never be swayed anyway. But they were trying nevertheless.

Donald Trump�s many overtures to supporters of Senator Bernie Sanders were just the beginning. He also deliberately echoed the language of Franklin Roosevelt, he denounced �big business� (not once but several times), and certain of his less bloodthirsty foreign policy proposals almost remind one of George McGovern�s campaign theme: �Come home, America.�

Ivanka Trump promised something that sounded like universal day care. Peter Thiel denounced the culture wars as a fraud and a distraction. The Republican platform was altered to include a plank calling for the breakup of big banks via the reinstatement of Glass-Steagall. I didn�t hear anyone talk about the need to bring �entitlements� under control. And most crucially, the party�s maximum leader has adopted the left critique of �free trade� almost in its entirety, a critique that I have spent much of my adult life making.

It boggles my simple liberal mind. The party of free trade and free markets now says it wants to break up Wall Street banks and toss Nafta to the winds. The party of family values has nominated a thrice-married vulgarian who doesn�t seem threatened by gay people or concerned about the war over bathrooms. The party of empire wants to withdraw from foreign entanglements.

Trump is not going to receive my vote, of course. His bigotry, his racist statements about Mexicans, his attitude toward global warming, his love of authoritarianism, his hypocrisy, his ignorance, his untrustworthiness, and his years of predatory business practice all make such a thing impossible. He frightens me every time he opens his mouth.

But that�s not the point. The question we need to ask is this: what are the consequences of the violent disruption Trump has visited on our delicately balanced political system? Look what he has done. He has dynamited the free-trade consensus that dominated Washington for so many years, he has done it with force, and in the process he has made himself the choice of many millions of Americans who have watched their economic situation deteriorate and heard their concerns brushed off by the Thomas Friedmans and the Bill Clintons of the world.

Think about it this way. For years, Republican orthodoxy on trade made possible endless Democratic sell-outs of working people, with the two-party consensus protecting the D�s from any consequences. They could ram Nafta through Congress, they could do trade deals with China, they could negotiate the Trans Pacific Partnership, they could attend their conferences at Davos and congratulate themselves for being so global and so enlightened, secure in the belief that the people whose livelihoods they had just ruined had �nowhere else to go�.

In other words, it was only possible for our liberal leaders to be what they are � a tribe of sunny believers in globalization and its favored classes � as long as the Republicans held down their left flank for them. Democrats could only celebrate globalization�s winners and scold its uneducated losers so long as there was no possibility that they might face a serious challenge on the matter from the other party in the system.

Well, today all that has changed. The free-trade consensus lies in shards on the floor. The old Republican party has been smashed by this man Trump. It is a new political world out there. How will Democrats react to this altered state of affairs? How will they present themselves to voters now that the bipolar system of the last four decades has exploded, now that they can no longer count on free-trading Republicans to make their own passion for globaloney seem acceptable?

So far, Democrats are acting as though nothing has really changed. In speech after speech at the Philadelphia convention they are denouncing Trump as though he was just an outrageous extension of the familiar conservative demonology, rather than an altogether different monster.

And Democratic leaders seem to be preparing to run exactly as they have always run. Hillary Clinton is pivoting to the right just as other Democrats did before her because ... because, well, that�s what Democrats always do. Her first big move after securing her party�s nomination was to choose Tim Kaine as her vice-presidential candidate � a man who voted for fast-tracking the Trans Pacific Partnership and a supporter of his state�s right-to-work laws. He is, as a recent headline proclaimed, �a Democrat Wall Street can like�.

Appropriately enough, Wall Street personnel are reportedly flocking to the convention in Philadelphia, eager to be reunited with the party that, for a time during the primary season, seemed to be turning away from them. Other accounts suggest that Hillary intends to reverse course on trade as soon as it�s possible to do so.

Do Democrats and their supporters even glimpse the danger in such moves? On the contrary: they seem to think it shows statesmanlike gravitas. On Monday, Bill Scher wrote, of Hillary Clinton:

She tapped Sen Tim Kaine despite his support for the �fast track� law designed to ease ratification of multinational trade agreements. She�s reached out to anti-Trump Republican hawks by embracing the philosophy of American Exceptionalism, declaring that �if America doesn�t lead, we leave a vacuum, and that will either cause chaos or other countries will rush in to fill the void�. Her aides told the New York Times earlier this month that her governing strategy would be squarely based on bipartisanship, the antithesis of Sanders� vision of steamrolling Congress via grassroots revolution.

Let�s see: trade agreements, outreach to hawks, �bipartisanship�, Wall Street. All that�s missing is a �Grand Bargain� otherwise it�s the exact same game plan as last time, and the time before that, and the time before that. Democrats seem to be endlessly beguiled by the prospect of campaign of national unity, a coming-together of all the quality people and all the affluent people and all the right-thinking, credentialed, high-achieving people. The middle class is crumbling, the country is seething with anger, and Hillary Clinton wants to chair a meeting of the executive committee of the righteous.

When Democrats sold out their own rank and file in the past it constituted betrayal, but at least it sometimes got them elected. Specifically, the strategy succeeded back in the 1990s when Republicans were market purists and working people truly had �nowhere else to go�. As our modern Clintonists of 2016 move instinctively to dismiss the concerns of working people, however, they should keep this in mind: those people may have finally found somewhere else to go.

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+48 # ddd-rrr 2018-09-27 14:02
I listened to Dr. Ford's testimony this morning in the Senate,
and this afternoon (as I write this), Kavanaugh's sniffling
delivery of his "sales-job". One had nothing to gain
from what she said; the other has a life-time
VERY IMPORTANT post to occupy
if he is confirmed.

Which of these opposing stories would you tend to believe...?

And, WHY WERE THERE NO FBI INQUIRIES, NORMALLY DONE?
 
 
+50 # HarryP 2018-09-27 14:47
A minor point. Kavanaugh told Fox New he had perhaps acted immaturely at times while in high school, but his drinking had been legal since the minimum age in Maryland was still eighteen. But since he graduated when he was still seventeen, all his drinking (including his quest to drimk 100 kegs of beer during his senior year) had been in violation of the law.
The same was true of his drinking at Yale - the topic of this article. He arrived in 1982 as a seventeen year old and it was that year Connecticut raised the minimum age to nineteen - thus extending his illegal debauchery for another year.
Otherwise, he was a choir boy - as his parents and the Jesuits had taught him to be.
If the allegations of attempted rape and rape are true, Kavanaugh may be closer to a prison term that a seat on the Supreme Court. In Maryland, there is no statute of limitations for these crimes.
 
 
+65 # ddd-rrr 2018-09-27 15:18
Watching more of Kavanaugh's "performance", it does appear to me
that regardless of ANY other consideration, this candidate for
this important post is not temperamentally suitable
for holding a post as a judge on ANY court!
 
 
+41 # pmargaret7 2018-09-27 15:24
Wow, quite an impactful story - makes me very glad I went to a large public university where the elite could be avoided very easily! They always exist, alas, but you barely had to know each other because there were so many options for friends and/or company. I actually feel rung thru the ringer just imagining that washroom! The "haves" were probably used to having their messes cleaned up by someone much lower on the social/class order, and bigger problems cleaned up by money and their parents! Privilege is ugly, especially since the privileged feel no obligation to others who have not lived in their swirl! Boy I'm glad to be middle-classed!
 
 
+22 # pmargaret7 2018-09-27 15:27
BTW - how about all of you chipping in to help RSN! It is very nice to read all of our options without any blastings from the capitalist world of advertising! GIVE.
 
 
+22 # kgrad 2018-09-27 19:40
Quoting pmargaret7:
BTW - how about all of you chipping in to help RSN! It is very nice to read all of our options without any blastings from the capitalist world of advertising! GIVE.


I'm retired, living on a fixed income, but I've been making an automatic monthly donation for several years. RSN is my go-to for articles worth reading.
 
 
+8 # bird 2018-09-28 05:27
I'm retired, living on a fixed income, but I've been making an automatic monthly donation for several years. RSN is my go-to for articles worth reading


Me, also.
 
 
+6 # Jim Young 2018-09-28 14:44
My wife and I are retired and on fixed income, but she has been donating $30 a month every month we can afford it (not automatically).

It is very rare to ever miss a month, like we did last month, as we flew up north to help out in post-operation transportation and medical follow up.
 
 
+42 # DongiC 2018-09-27 18:16
Corrupt to the core, the Republicans on the Judiciary Committee backed their sniveling, rude, obstructionist nominee to the Supreme Court unanimously. Kavanaugh quakes at the idea of an independent FBI investigation. His belligerent attitude toward Democratic senators indicates he has much to hide. I can see why Trump finds him so loveable, he lies and seduced woman when he was young. Plus, he washes it all down with beer and god knows what else. Ford, on the other hand, was magnificent. She is a fine citizen well award of her civic duty. What a contrast.
 
 
+45 # Laura June 2018-09-27 19:28
ddd-rrr -
My thoughts exactly!!! Beyond the sexual allegations, this man is too emotionally fragile for the Supreme Court. He feels soooo sorry for himself
 
 
+4 # dquandle 2018-09-29 21:24
Once he gets in and gets the sadism machine fully up and running full swing, he won't feel sorry for himself, and his fragility will never again be tested. It'll all be hunky dory once he's back in the driver's seat.
 
 
+42 # CEB 2018-09-27 19:46
 
 
+18 # Good4Glenn 2018-09-28 07:39
I learned to drink beer in the USNavy in 1952 at age 21. A Christian, at that time, I also thought drinking was a sin. Drinking and sex that followed during 2 years in southeast Asia brought years of guilt and shame. Why is there no appearance of guilt, shame or remorse in the statements of Brett Kavanaugh? Drinking alcohol and having sexual intercourse, cunnilngus and fllatio are typically legal adult behaviors unless there is social conventions or age limits. Kavanaugh, at his age, was violating laws and social norms of morality while in High School and at Yale. If he can't admit to his illegal adolescent behavior, how can he be a respected judge?
 
 
+12 # lorenbliss 2018-09-28 15:22
Perhaps the most important aspect of these hearings is how they (again) reveal the arrogantly hateful moral imbecility of our white ChristoNazi overlords -- those obscenely wealthy, viciously misogynistic men Jeff Sharlet exposes as the real USian Ruling Class.

Wake up, people, and read your Marx: this is Class War in its ultimate U.S. form: the sadistic white ChristoNazi Capitalist aristocracy against all the rest of us, most especially women, LGBTQ people, people of color and let us not forget anyone else of any race or gender who dares resist Capitalism's final Nazification of our nation.

(Yes I believe Kavanaugh will be confirmed no matter what, and yes I believe the resultant outrage will at long last push hitherto-undeci ded USian women into becoming a truly revolutionary vanguard.)
 
 
+9 # NAVYVET 2018-09-29 11:13
Once again, I wish that the Repubs could be forced (with head pliers if necessary) to watch JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG in its entirety--an indictment of the failures of the German judiciary in the Nazi era, either through their own fascist leanings or fear.
A bunch of us, all junior Navy officers, saw it together and then most of us went to someone's room in the BOQ, where we all lived, and discussed every major and minor point of it. This film was a life-changer. It made me consider my own courage (or lack) and helped me decide to resign when the war in Vietnam grew bloodier and more futile.
 
 
+9 # elkingo 2018-09-29 14:28
The single thing that pissed me off the most, was when a network commentator - a woman no less - called Ford "girlish". I didn't see "girlish". I saw a mild mannered, conscientious, decent, intelligent highly accomplished woman, absolutely scared witness by her proximity to the "big boys" - the US Senate and by extension SCOTUS, and the ravages of the yob redneck fascist Nazi core of this country. Both can hurt you. She is a hero, a profile in courage, as someone suggested. A humanly attractive woman. If pig Kavanaugh gets crow-barred into the Court,God help all of us. Look for tanks in the street, and look to oppose them.
 
 
+2 # DongiC 2018-09-30 09:32
Wow, elkingo. I agree with you completely. Kudoes to you and to so many brave commenters on this thread.
 
 
+2 # suzyskier 2018-09-30 15:30
 
 
+3 # dquandle 2018-09-29 21:18
 
 
+4 # johnescher 2018-09-30 07:40
Hey Lindsey, I don't wanna boofer turning the Supreme Court into a vomitorium.
 

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