June-July 2017 -
Volume 38, No.
3
Who
are they, and what do they
want?
Steven Strauss
June 2017
June 2017
“We
must fight them!” tweeted
President Trump angrily on
March 30. Who?
ISIS?
The North Koreans?
Not
this time. The target of this
Trump tweet was the right-wing
Freedom Caucus, a group of
about thirty House Republicans
who played a key role in the
March 2017 defeat of his
American Health Care Act, a
bill which would have replaced
Obama’s misnamed Affordable
Care Act.
The
Caucus opposed Trump’s bill
because it didn’t go far
enough in protecting the
health insurance industry. It
kept the inclusion of people
with pre-existing illnesses,
and still covered maternity
care and preventative testing.
So House Republicans added
more odious measures to the
bill and in May, Trump’s
second try passed with Caucus
approval.
Until
the defeat of Trump’s first
bill, most Americans had heard
little if anything of the
Freedom Caucus. But now the
capitalist media is paying it
more attention. Pundits are
saying there is a divide in
the Republican ranks. That
Caucus Republicans are
“captors” of the rest of the
party. That they have the
power to block Trump’s
agenda.
But
are they really that powerful?
Just who are they anyway?
Who’s really in charge?
Caucus
origins. The Freedom
Caucus was formed in January
2015 by nine particularly
conservative Republican
congressmen. Though they claim
to support “open” government,
their meetings are closed and
their full membership list is
kept secret.
But
the Pew Research Center has
identified them — all white
men by the way. And, as Pew
has shown, Caucus members
score far to the right on a
widely used measure of liberal
vs. conservative politics.
More
important than the liberal vs.
conservative label is what
these politicians actually
stand for. They are
for repealing
workforce safety and
environmental regulations,
denying reproductive rights to
women, slashing social
services, and overflow-funding
of the military.
Fearful
of the working class, they
preach that they are only
trying to create jobs and a
better standard of living.
That’s a lie told by all
apologists for the system.
They are promoting their
program for corporate
America.
Where the clout comes
from. When first
formed in early 2015, during
the Obama administration, the
Freedom Caucus took up the
issue of immigration across
the Mexico-U.S. border. Caucus
members opposed Obama’s plan
for a limited form of amnesty.
They demanded even greater
immigration enforcement and
wanted any border bill to
defund sanctuary cities.
With
the 2016 Republican electoral
victory the Caucus acquired
significant leverage. The
invitation-only club correctly
calculated that if it had
about thirty members who were
sworn to vote as a bloc, it
could push fellow Republicans
to the right by threatening to
otherwise not support their
non-Caucus legislation.
That’s
precisely how they blocked
Trump’s first healthcare
bill.
Freedom Caucus
agenda. Exploiting
its current power, the Caucus
is aggressively pushing its
program. It opposes Trump’s
Mexico-U.S. border plan, but
only because it wants Trump to
commit himself to paying for
the $15 billion wall with deep
cuts elsewhere. The group’s
members are on record for
targeting funds for Social
Security, Medicare, and
Medicaid. They are adamant
that “any appropriations bills
do not contain funding for
Planned Parenthood.”
These
thirty House politicians want
to repeal the federal Silica
Rule, which protects workers
from breathing silica dust.
They want to abolish the
federal law which requires
tracking workplace
injuries.
Caucus
co-founder Mark Meadows of
North Carolina opposes public
funding for abortions. While
this hardly distinguishes him
from the average Republican,
he also cosponsored
H.R.816/S.2464, a bill which
would extend the 14th
Amendment equal protection
clause to every “preborn human
person.”
Co-founder
Jim Jordan of Ohio got a 100
percent approval rating from
the Competitive Enterprise
Institute, an anti-union
outfit. He has voted to defund
the National Labor Relations
Board, prohibit collective
bargaining at the
Transportation Security
Administration, and forbid
employees of the Federal
Aviation Administration from
using any part of the workday
for union activities.
And
South Carolina co-founder Mick
Mulvaney quipped that “The
only way to get truly
universal care is to throw
people in jail if they don’t
have it.”
The emperor’s new
clothes. The Caucus’s
politics sound virtually
identical to Trump’s campaign.
So why all the fuss? Because
recently Trump has been
receding somewhat from his
previous rhetoric. And that’s
because the big corporations
are getting to him.
An
April 14, 2017 Wall Street
Journal article made it
crystal clear that CEOs from
major corporations have told
Trump in no uncertain terms to
back off on Mexico, China, and
NATO. Whistling a different
tune, Trump now says, “We’re
doing very nicely with
Mexico,” that China is no
longer “manipulating its
currency,” and that NATO is no
longer “obsolete.”
Candidate
Trump insisted he’d stay out
of Syria. Now he has launched
$60 million dollars’ worth of
cruise missiles at the
country. He insisted that
Mexico would pay for a
separation wall along its U.S.
border, but now is looking to
Congress to help fund it. He
is now willing to renegotiate
the NAFTA trade agreement
instead of abandoning it
altogether. And he is courting
the Chinese government in an
alliance against North
Korea.
But
whereas Trump is modifying his
positions to satisfy Wall
Street, the right-wing guys in
the House are sticking to the
line Trump himself
propagated during the
campaign. They just want him
to be who he said he was.
Yet
Trump is hardly shunning the
Freedom Caucus. Politically,
they are close. His budget
director, for example, is
Caucus founding member Mick
Mulvaney.
So who’s in
charge? Perhaps the
real political difference
between the President and the
Caucus is that the corporate
world is leaning on Trump,
pressuring him to not sabotage
their years of global
investments, treaties, and
imperialist planning. This has
left a small group of Caucus
ideologues still agitating for
the domestic program he ran on
as presidential candidate — a
program which the ruling class
as a whole is
presently unwilling to fight
for.
Trump
the individual may be
president, and the Freedom
Caucus may have some clout,
but it’s the ruling capitalist
class who’s really in power.
And doesn’t that mean that the
mission of the resistance
movements needs to broaden out
to anti-capitalist
offensives?
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