A quick comment:
We reprint this commentary below from the Wall Street Journal's Editorial Board. We will have more on this subject but this is a significant development coming from the most important journal of the US ruling class. It is important for workers to grasp the underlying forces at work here and the reason for the assault.
We reprint this commentary below from the Wall Street Journal's Editorial Board. We will have more on this subject but this is a significant development coming from the most important journal of the US ruling class. It is important for workers to grasp the underlying forces at work here and the reason for the assault.
Facts For Working People has pointed out in previous posts that while all the details about Trump's life and behavior are relevant, they are not what lies at the root of the growing disdain among the US bourgeois for the Administration or Trump himself. The fact that a paper like the WSJ or the mass media in general rarely, if ever refers to Trump as misogynist or racist, which is clearly what he is, proves this.
What has forced the dominant sections of the US capitalist class to take Trump to task through the medium of the WSJ editorial board is his continued and extremely dangerous undermining of the system they govern, of bourgeois democracy. Bourgeois democracy is the most favored form of governance for the capitalist class as opposed to military dictatorship.
In previous posts we pointed to Trump's threat during the debates with Clinton that he might not abide by election results were he to lose. This caused a furor. The propaganda is that bourgeois democracy is the only form of governance and the capitalist mode of production the only one that works. Trump's statements threatened this and the consequences it might have if such an idea takes root among significant sections of the working class is what concerns the unelected minority that run the country. The constant sexist and other ignorant remarks and the inability of the government to function, the non-stop leaks reflecting deep divisions within the state, is not just a domestic threat but also undermines US power and influence on the global stage at a time when US capitalism globally is threatened by the rise of China, Russia, and to a lesser extent Brazil and India. The constant insulting of important allies like Germany and other European states as well as S.Korea, and his antics in the Middle East also contribute the extreme concern about the damage his administration is doing to the system. Bourgeois democracy is supposed to work, it has to have legitimacy among the masses.
What the dominant US bourgeois have done here through its main journal is basically throw Trump to the wolves. The call for complete transparency would not be made if it were not that Trump's demise is far more preferable to the undermining of class rule in the form of bourgeois democracy. RM
The Trumps and the Truth
The best defense against future revelations is radical
transparency.
WSJ 07-18-17The Editorial Board Updated July 17, 2017 9:27 p.m. ET
Even Donald Trump might agree that a major reason he won the
2016 election is because voters couldn’t abide Hillary Clinton’s legacy of
scandal, deception and stonewalling. Yet on the story of Russia’s meddling in
the 2016 election, Mr. Trump and his family are repeating the mistakes that
doomed Mrs. Clinton.
That’s the lesson the Trumps should draw from the fiasco over
Don Jr.’s June 2016 meeting with Russians peddling dirt on Mrs. Clinton. First
Don Jr. let news of the meeting leak without getting ahead of it. Then the
White House tried to explain it away as a “nothingburger” that focused on
adoptions from Russia.
When that was exposed as incomplete, Don Jr. released his
emails that showed the Russian lure about Mrs. Clinton and Don Jr. all
excited—“I love it.” Oh, and son-in-law Jared Kushner and Beltway bagman Paul
Manafort were also at the meeting. Don Jr. told Sean Hannity this was the full
story. But then news leaked that a Russian-American lobbyist was also at the
meeting.
Even if the ultimate truth of this tale is merely that Don
Jr. is a political dunce who took a meeting that went nowhere—the best case—the
Trumps made it appear as if they have something to hide. They have created the
appearance of a conspiracy that on the evidence Don Jr. lacks the wit to
concoct. And they handed their opponents another of the swords that by now
could arm a Roman legion.
Don’t you get it, guys? Special counsel Robert Mueller and
the House and Senate intelligence committees are investigating the Russia
story. Everything that is potentially damaging to the Trumps will come out, one
way or another. Everything. Denouncing leaks as “fake news” won’t wash as a
counter-strategy beyond the President’s base, as Mr. Trump’s latest 36%
approval rating shows.
Mr. Trump seems to realize he has a problem because the
White House has announced the hiring of white-collar Washington lawyer Ty Cobb
to manage its Russia defense. He’ll presumably supersede the White House
counsel, whom Mr. Trump ignores, and New York outside counsel Marc Kasowitz,
who is out of his political depth.
Mr. Cobb has an opening to change the Trump strategy to one
with the best chance of saving his Presidency: radical transparency. Release
everything to the public ahead of the inevitable leaks. Mr. Cobb and his team
should tell every Trump family member, campaign operative and White House aide
to disclose every detail that might be relevant to the Russian investigations.
That means every meeting with any Russian or any American
with Russian business ties. Every phone call or email. And every Trump business
relationship with Russians going back years. This should include every relevant
part of Mr. Trump’s tax returns, which the President will resist but Mr.
Mueller is sure to seek anyway.
Then release it all to the public. Whatever short-term
political damage this might cause couldn’t be worse than the death by a
thousand cuts of selective leaks, often out of context, from political
opponents in Congress or the special counsel’s office. If there really is
nothing to the Russia collusion allegations, transparency will prove it.
Americans will give Mr. Trump credit for trusting their ability to make a fair
judgment. Pre-emptive disclosure is the only chance to contain the political
harm from future revelations.
This is the opposite of the Clinton stonewall strategy,
which should be instructive. That strategy saved Bill Clinton’s Presidency in
the 1990s at a fearsome price and only because the media and Democrats in
Congress rallied behind him. Mr. Trump can’t count on the same from Republicans
and most of the media want him run out of office.
If Mr. Trump’s approval rating stays under 40% into next
year, Republicans will begin to separate themselves from an unpopular President
in a (probably forlorn) attempt to save their majorities in Congress. If
Democrats win the House, the investigations into every aspect of the Trump
business empire, the 2016 campaign and the Administration will multiply.
Impeachment will be a constant undercurrent if not an active threat. His
supporters will become demoralized.
Mr. Trump will probably ignore this advice, as he has most
of what these columns have suggested. Had he replaced James Comey at the FBI
shortly after taking office in January, for example, he might not now have a
special counsel threatening him and his family.
Mr. Trump somehow seems to believe that his outsize
personality and social-media following make him larger than the Presidency.
He’s wrong. He and his family seem oblivious to the brutal realities of
Washington politics. Those realities will destroy Mr. Trump, his family and
their business reputation unless they change their strategy toward the Russia
probe. They don’t have much more time to do it.
Appeared in the July 18, 2017, print edition
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