Sure you want to have your child's future in their hands? I don't think so. |
By Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
We published a piece on April
6th suggesting that the Predator in Chief was
being reined in a bit. Steve Bannon was demoted and McMaster stepped in as have others. Things seemed to be changing at the top.
It’s
becoming more evident that Trump’s shift and his break from his more
ideologically driven right wing base is clearly going ahead at full steam. “The Trump approach is starting to
look----dare we say it?---almost conventional.”, writes Gerald Seib in Tuesdays Wall
Street Journal. Seib goes through a host of complete
turnarounds, Trump’s campaign promises, are falling by the wayside, Seib points
out. “Campaign---season chumminess with
Russia….”, gone. Moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem. Gone. Trade war with
China. Gone. Trump even says he won’t accuse China of currency manipulation and
the dollar is too strong. The protectionist trade advisor Peter Navarro who
went after China aggressively has been shuttered along with Bannon. The missile strike in Syria and the warnings
to North Korea are “…another sign of
embracing rather than retreating from a global role” Seib adds.
Seib
writes, “Each of these moves might have
been made by a more conventional Republican president or even by Democrat
Hillary Clinton.”. We should recall that the overwhelming majority of the
US ruling class supported Clinton in the last election as Trump’s misogyny,
racism, unstable and unpredictable campaign rhetoric was a disaster for
business. The misogynists among the ruling elite put their prejudices aside in
the interests of profits and capital accumulation. Hillary was the best bet. The ruling class was forced to cough up universal suffrage feeling fairly confident as pretty much we only have their candidates to vote for. But when the system is in crisis as it is now and characters like Trump arise, the right to vote is not such a good deal as people don't always vote and when they do, they don't always vote for 1%'s front runner.
Seib
points out five major players that are now steering what he calls “….Trumps Diplomacy to Center.” He names Secretary of State Tillerson and
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis as two key players joined by national security
advisor H.R. McMaster, Wilbur Ross the billionaire Commerce Secretary, and
Trump’s advisor/ son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Seib,
attributes Trump’s turnaround to normalcy (from the bourgeois’ point of view)
to these five players and “…the simple
realities of office bearing.”
What
the latter statement means is that a dominant sector of the capitalist class
and its state machine is directing operations. They are not out of the woods,
but they are feeling more confident that Trump is prepared to behave like a
prominent member of their class rather than some maverick hotelier. The US
bourgeois doesn’t care about his racism or misogyny, they are completely behind
the attacks on workers that will be intensified under a Trump presidency. And
as the remark about Clinton shows, they will continue US imperialism’s violent
wars throughout the world no matter who is in the White House or Key Largo. My
guess is we’ll see Trump spending more time in the presidential abode as time
goes by.
Marx
talked about the state apparatus being the executive board or the executive
council of the capitalist class as a whole. In class society where different
groups of people occupy different roles in the production of society’s needs,
workers and capitalists in our world, the government is a government of the
people, but not all the people have the same economic interests. The feudal
lord exploited the peasant and the capitalist exploits the wage worker.
We
live in a capitalist state or what socialists (some of us anyway) also refer to
as bourgeois democracy. Ancient Greece was a democracy for the owners of
slaves; it was a slaveowners democracy.
So the state, or government as we refer to it, is not devoid of class content,
just the opposite, in the last analysis the state defends the interest of the
class that governs society and the system of production on which it rests. In
our case that means capitalism.
Seib’s
implication that Trump’s turnaround is the result of a power struggle between
individuals and the responsibilities of the job is intentionally vague on the
one hand, and a result of society operating behind the backs of the capitalist
class as Marx wrote in Capital. What we are witnessing is the state, the
executive body of the bourgeois, is asserting itself, is acting in the
interests of the capitalist class as a whole.
There
were warnings as we pointed out in the earlier commentary on this. Respected
strategists and theoreticians like Peggy Noonan, who wrote favorably of Trump
in the early days savagely attacked him in their most important paper, the WSJ.
The LA Times had a five or six part series attacking the president. We can say
with certainty that the unelected rulers of this country and their
theoreticians, the Kissingers, Bakers, Scowcrofts, Cheney’s and other major
bourgeois were discussing what could be done behind closed doors. They were not
going to let a buffoon wreck things.
The
fact that Trump got elected at all and that their two parties are in such
disarray, is a reflection of the political crisis of US capitalism. That is not
over. In the next recession or slump these crises will intensify and social
unrest will grow. Both China and the US
are in massive debt and that cannot continue forever. Globally the working class is stronger than
ever and major class conflict lies ahead.
What
is more, the global situation with regards to Russia, the Middle East and North
Korea is extremely volatile. But it is
most important that we recognize that we are not on the verge of fascism and
that the bourgeois still rules. But deals will be made, backs will be slapped,
the phony diplomacy of thieves will continue as will the predatory US corporate
wars and the violence and suffering as US, Russian, Chinese and US imperialism
plays the deadly game of global plunder and the influence and intrigue that
accompanies it.
While
it appears that the US capitalist class is bringing Trump to heel they are not
out of the woods yet. Trump’s behavior has been unpredictable and it is not
excluded that he is mentally unstable. If they had to, they will rid themselves
of him by other means.
Supporters
of this blog have discussed in our weekly phone conferences some of the issues
here. Would they assassinate Trump? We thought this unlikely given the
consequences and while Trump is an unpopular president, it is the system of
bourgeois democracy, the legitimacy of their rule that would be hurt by an
action of this sort.
However,
with Trump’s betrayal of his more ideological, right wing neo fascist base, the
possibility of an assassination attempt cannot be ruled out. These elements
have no loyalty to bourgeois legitimacy and they will be very angry he betrayed
them.
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