Like
most State of the Union addresses, much of Trump’s speech on
Tuesday night was focused on empty platitudes (we share the same
flag, veterans are heroes) designed to get Congress members from both
parties on their feet and create a fanciful image of national unity.
And as usual, there was the spectacle in which victims of official US
enemies — gangs or North Korea — were trotted out to elicit
maximum sympathy for the president’s agenda. However, Trump is
still far from being able to unite even his own party, let alone the
establishment as a whole, despite his attempts in Tuesday’s speech.
Polls
currently put Trump at between 35 and 45 percent support among the
public (the higher figure seems too generous), meaning that the
president delivered his first SOTU with a record low-approval rating.
It is not hard to imagine why. None of the populist proposals that
catapulted him past the other Republican contenders in the primaries
have materialized, a fact that is eroding a good deal of his
working-class support.
Contrary
to Trump’s claims, there is little evidence that any of the
good-paying jobs that were promised a year ago have been “brought
back.” The labor force participation rate of around 63 percent is
about equal to what it was during Obama’s second term and
significantly lower than it was before the recession. Trump has not
withdrawn the U.S. from NAFTA although he may try to tinker around
the edges of it to gain some advantages for American businesses.
Wages have been more
or less flat despite the stock market records.
Perhaps
in an attempt to make up for the damage done among working class
voters by the tax bill, Trump returned to some of the populist
proposals that he had abandoned after the campaign, and even added a
few new ones. Trump issued fresh calls for paid family leave,
building new roads and modern infrastructure, creating “reciprocal”
trade agreements, lowering the cost of prescription drugs, reforming
the prison system, and giving former inmates “a second chance.”
But given that the same divisions exist now as did during the
Obamacare Repeal-and-Replace attempts a few months ago, it is
unlikely that any of these proposals ever see the light of day.
On
the whole, conciliation with the establishment seemed to be a
leitmotif. Trump’s “drain the swamp” rhetoric was conspicuously
missing from the speech. He did not mention “radical Islamic
terror” once, a phrase he seemed contractually obliged to use in
every speech a few months ago. He even resisted taking his
characteristic swipes at the Democrats, recognizing that some measure
of cooperation with his rivals from both parties will be necessary to
advance his agenda.
So
far however, this cooperation has generally eluded him. The Obamacare
Repeal-and-Replace project was undone by both “moderates” and
“extremist” figures in the GOP and the nagging Russia-gate
scandal has so far kept the traditional figures of the party at arm’s
length. The tax reform has bought him some time with the capitalist
class, since the rich, almost without exception, will profit
immensely. However, the bill has relatively little popular support
and is unlikely to offer any meaningful benefit to most working
people. In other words, Trump will still face the same problem as
much of the GOP — a lack of a solid base.
The
former Marine Corps general John Kelly has put some order in the
White House since becoming Chief of Staff this past summer. But we
cannot forget that in Trump’s first year, a Communications
Director, a Press Secretary, a National Security Advisor, a Chief
Strategist, Two Chiefs of Staff, and the Secretary of Health and
Human Services have been fired or resigned. General Kelly was likely
the only one standing in the way of Trump axing top Cabinet members
Rex Tillerson and Jeff Sessions along with them.
But
the crisis affecting the Trump Administration or the two parties as a
whole should not make us complacent. Most of the proposals raised by
the president last night were nothing less than terrifying. Should he
be able to implement any of his reactionary projects, even partially,
working-class and poor people will suffer tremendously.
Trump’s
discourse was mainly focused on Wall and Wars, potentially signalling
a new imperialist offensive, in contrast to the soft imperialism of
Obama. One right-populist proposal he not ratcheted a bit is his
campaign against “illegal immigrants”. During at least two points
in the speech, Trump attempted to link to the violence of street
gangs to the country’s immigration “loopholes” and the arrival
of refugee children from Central America. “Many of these gang
members,” he claimed “took advantage of glaring loopholes and our
laws to enter the country as illegal, unaccompanied, alien minors.”
Under
the direction of the 45th president, over 225,000 immigrants have
been deported and more than 140,000 have been detained. ICE has
unveiled new plans to expand the number of immigrant detention
centers and last week, it was revealed that the agency will be
granted access to a nationwide
database of license plates photographs. The number of
deportations is still far from the record of 400,000 “achieved”
by Obama in 2012. But new powers to ICE will allow the agency to
escalate efforts to round up and deport ever more immigrants.
Trump
officially unveiled his plan to grant legal status to Dreamers but
with so many poison pills included, that the plan is unlikely to ever
pass through Congress. These included fully funding a border wall,
hiring thousands of new border patrol agents, ending the diversity
visa program, ending all family sponsorships other than minor
children and spouses, and most likely, deporting all immigrant
children who arrived as part of the waves of refugees from Central
America in recent years. Democrats like Chuck Schumer briefly
considered supporting a plan like this but the repercussions among
their base have since caused them to back away from it.
Perhaps
most alarming of all is Trump’s call “modernize and rebuild our
nuclear arsenal,” already the world’s second largest (lagging
just slightly behind Russia.) Currently, the U.S. has 6,800 nuclear
warheads, with 1,800 of them deployed. This comes less than a month
after taunting North Korea’s leader on Twitter that the “Nuclear
Button is on [his] desk at all times,” and “is a much bigger &
more powerful” than that of Kim Jong Un’s. The recent
sabre-rattling by Trump put the Doomsday Clock, maintained by the
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists at two minutes to midnight, the closest
it has been since the height of the cold war.
This
proposal goes hand-in-hand with Trump’s demand to expand the
military — “fully fund” the armed forces, in his words — and
maintain a permanent military presence in the Middle East. Already
the longest war in U.S. history, Trump proclaims he has no intention
of withdrawing from Afghanistan in the near future. “Our military
is no longer undermined by artificial timelines.” Unable to unite
the various GOP factions behind a common program, much less the
establishment as a whole, Trump is increasingly leaning on the
military, in bonapartist fashion.
Less
than two weeks before his speech, the Department of Defense unveiled
a new National
Defense Strategy. Two things are most noteworthy from the
strategy. The first is a call to fight the budget cuts to the
military imposed by the sequester. Mattis declares that “ no enemy
in the field has done more to harm the readiness of the U.S. military
than the combined impact of the Budget Control Act’s defense
spending cuts.”
The second is an admission that world powers, not
terrorist groups, constitute the greatest threat to U.S. hegemony.
“Though we will continue to prosecute the campaign against
terrorists that we are engaged in today, but great power competition,
not terrorism, is now the primary focus of U.S. national security.”
Trump
touted his achievement of ending “more regulations in our first
year than any administration in the history of our country.” What
Trump refers to here is, of course, restarting construction of the
Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines, which will add additional
tens of millions of metric tons of CO2 to the atmosphere each year.
At at moment in which nearly every week brings new and tragic
findings about the state of our environment, the president claims “We
have ended the war on American energy. And we have ended the war on
beautiful, clean coal [sic].”
As
for the Democrats, the most they could counter with was a forgotten
member of the Kennedy family. Having failed at achieving a new family
dynasty this decade, they are apparently now trying to resurrect an
old one. The party’s brand names like Hillary Clinton and Barack
Obama were nowhere to be found following Trump’s speech. In fact,
neither has made more than a few appearances in the media at all in
the past 12 months. The Clinton camp must still wrestle with the fact
that her popularity remains — somehow — lower than that of Trump.
The
difficult truth confronting Democrats is that their party is not in
much better shape than the GOP. Once the Democratic strategy to frame
the election as a result of “Russian hacking” fails, the party’s
total lack of an alternative program will be laid bare. Trump’s
plans to deport immigrants en masse would never not been possible
without a major expansion of ICE’s powers and funding under Obama.
Democrats failed to close the Guantanamo Bay concentration camp or
end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan during Obama’s eight years in
the Oval Office. And as recently as two weeks ago, the Democrats
faithfully supported new surveillance powers for National Security
Agency, at the urging of Trump.
Once
again, the crisis facing both parties of the rich offers an opening
for the working class. But we must seize the moment. If we do not
build an independent fight back among workers and oppressed people,
Trump’s plans will mean disastrous results for all of us.
>> The article above was written by Robert Belano, and is reprinted from Left Voice.
No comments:
Post a Comment