Congressional Stock-in-Trade Should Not Be Stock Trading

Last month, I noted House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s flabbergasting opposition to legislation that would restrict or ban stock trading by members of Congress.  Her comments came in the wake of a startling Business Insider report documenting how 54 senators and congresspeople violated the lax existing rules, which simply require disclosure of trades by elected officials or family members within a certain window of time.

For a variety of reasons, banning or severely restricting stock trading on Capitol Hill should be a no-brainer.  So color me not surprised to read last week that Republicans, including House minority leader Kevin McCarthy, are considering turning restrictions on congressional stock trading into a campaign issue to use for winning back the House in November.  This potential GOP strategy validates criticism of Pelosi’s somewhat contemptuous dismissal of the need for better stock trading rules. After all, public opinion runs strongly against the practice, which can’t hurt the party that adopts it as a campaign issue.  More than this, though, stock sale reform provides a perfect opportunity for the Republican Party to wield of fig leaf of ethical modesty in front of the vast apparatus of corruption the party embodies.  Why not talk a good game about banning stocks, if it will help the party distract the public from the GOP’s far-ranging attacks on fair elections and embrace of slow-motion insurrection, not to mention its entanglement with possibly the most corrupt politician in America, Donald Trump?

It’s the vast corruption of the dearly departed Trump administration in particular that made my head reel when I first read about Pelosi’s nonchalant take on corruption, or least its appearance, among congressional representatives.  To have experienced the Trump years, but then failing to conclude that ethical behavior would need to be at the center of the Democrats’ claim to be the party that could wash away the stench of Trumpism, is frankly a mind-boggling political (and moral) miscalculation.  Much of the horror of the Trump administration flowed from the replacement of the public interest with Donald Trump’s personal avarice and lust for power.  THIS is the true, larger context for Pelosi’s lack of enthusiasm for ethical reforms.  And now we are seeing the political fallout of this miscalculation begin to threaten Democrats — in this case, failing to act decisively earlier, in the wake of the Business Insider report, has allowed the GOP not only to pretend that it's interested in cleaning up politics, but to highlight an issue that makes it seem that both sides are equally corrupt and in need of a good hose-down.  Left to fester, it has now been weaponized by the GOP into a way to provide cover for the party’s broader corruption, and as a method for indicting Democrats as fellow travelers in trough-wallowing — all completely predictable, and both politically tone deaf and morally wrong.

The fact that various political odd couples and surprise embracers of ethics are joining the fight in favor of trading restrictions also highlights the bizarreness of Pelosi’s initial cold water response and the damage further foot-dragging by congressional leadership might inflict on the party.  In the House, Virginia Democrat Abigail Spanberger has joined with Republican Chip Roy of Texas to sponsor legislation that would require lawmakers and their immediate family to put their stock holdings in a blind trust.  In the Senate, not only Democrat Jon Osoff but Josh “fist bump your respect for the insurrectionists” Hawley are both pushing legislation to clean up this mess.

But now for some good news.  Last week, the Speaker seemed to moderate her position, stating that she now would be open to moving stock-trading legislation forward if her caucus were to support it — though she still felt compelled to note that, “I just don't buy into it.”  (Yikes.) More encouragingly, there are reports that the effort to move forward on restrictions has gained momentum in recent weeks — ironically enough, in part because of Pelosi’s initial derisive comments.   According to Representative Roy, “The news of the speaker’s comments blew the lid off the issue,” while Spanberger noted that, “Even if she disagrees or thinks it’s unnecessary, I think there was a dismissiveness of the question that I think caught a lot of attention and certainly has propelled this issue a bit more.”

Getting such legislation passed before the midterms should be a high priority for Democrats.  Not only do they need to do the right thing, they need to deny the GOP an easy cudgel to wield in the upcoming midterms.  Any energy spent defending themselves on this easily-resolved issue is energy that could have far better spent taking the fight to the GOP.

Say Its Name, Part 100

These last couple of weeks have felt like a particularly bleak period in U.S. politics, not just for their own sake but in the way they cast shadows and danger far into the future.  The Build Back Better Act has run into a Joe Manchin-shaped wall, while the Democrats’ ensuing strategic pivot to voting rights has run into a Joe Manchin AND Kristen Sinema-shaped wall; the economy seems stable enough, but inflation concerns haunt the citizenry (and Joe Biden’s approval ratings); federal roll-outs of free at-home covid test kits and N95 masks are haunted by questions of why it took so long to provide such no-brainer basics; and we’ve been gifted with a seemingly unending stream of stories about Dems in disarray, circular firing squads, and a White House that lacks a strategy for the midterms.  We’ve even seen the Supreme Court get in on the fun, striking down the OSHA policy requiring that all companies of 100 or more employees require covid vaccinations or testing — a decision that will surely contribute to thousands more needless deaths, not to mention serving the GOP’s partisan goals of kneecapping the economy and with it, Democratic election prospects.  

So it might seem perverse that I’m about to ask you to stare even further into the political abyss — but let’s try to think of this as a sort of shock and awe therapy, where confronting our worst nightmares also holds the key to setting us free (or at least moving us towards an actual strategy for defending and retaining American democracy).  I’m always eager to find writing that gets to the heart of America’s political dilemmas, and this past week has brought some real humdingers.  There are few chroniclers of the structural impediments and cultural conflicts driving our political crisis as good as Ronald Brownstein; he’s consistently accessible and insightful, and has a pair of articles out this week that serve as the latest installments of his democracy-in-crisis coverage. He zeroes in on the voting rights fight, and how the failure of federal legislation to protect voting rights is both catalyst and symptom of an anti-democratic collection of Republican power, which consists of “the axis of Republican-controlled state governments, the GOP-appointed majority on the Supreme Court and filibusters mounted by Senate Republicans,” which in combination are “limiting Democrats' ability to set the national agenda, even as they hold unified control of the White House, House and Senate for the first time since 2010.”  None of these sources of GOP power on their own would be sufficient to block the Democratic trifecta of White House, Senate, and House of Representatives; together, though, they seem to be more than sufficient.  Brownstein describes the Republicans as essentially conducting a “revolution from below,” using state initiatives to challenge federal policy.  Where the wrenching importance of the voting rights rollback comes into view is not just in our embattled present, but moving forward, with voting suppression and a sympathetic Supreme Court very likely leading to a reversal of basic civil rights like abortion access across red states unencumbered by federal protections.

The particular power of Brownstein’s articles is in their persuasive description of dynamics that have long been in motion but are now reaching their logical conclusion, as if they were following rules of political dynamics akin to laws of physics.  A far-right Supreme Court with nearly half its members appointed by presidents who lost the popular vote but still made it to the White House; a Senate disproportionately favoring conservative states; and voter suppression efforts aimed at negating the Democratic majority, and indeed making it impossible for that majority to ever change the rules back to fairness: all have congealed into an anti-democratic roadblock for the American polity.

Next to Brownstein’s excellent analysis of how America’s political structures have been manipulated in the service of the GOP’s quest for minority rule, a piece by historian Thomas Zimmer provides a parallel perspective on why the Republicans have embarked on a journey that has turned the GOP into an explicitly authoritarian party, with Zimmer writing that:  

For several decades, the Republican party has been focused almost exclusively on the interests and sensibilities of white conservatives who tend to define “real America” as a predominantly white, Christian, patriarchal nation. America, to them, is supposed to be a place where white Christian men are at the top.  [. . .]

Due to political, cultural and most importantly demographic changes, Republicans no longer have majority support for this political project – certainly not on the federal level, and even in many “red” states, their position is becoming increasingly tenuous. [. . .]

No one understands this better than Republicans themselves. In a functioning democratic system, they would have to either widen their focus beyond the interests and sensibilities of white conservatives, which they are not willing to do; or relinquish power, which they reject. They have chosen a different path – determined to do whatever it takes to protect their hold on power and preserve traditional hierarchies.

Zimmer notes that the GOP is actually correct that the United States has indeed been moving, over the last several decades, towards becoming a “multiracial, pluralistic democracy”; like Brownstein, Zimmer sees the attack on voting rights as central to the GOP’s authoritarian project, which involves a repudiation and reversal of whatever progress the United States has so far made towards multiracial democracy.  Similarly, he sees a dark path ahead if the GOP project succeeds, with the advent of an authoritarian state well within the realm of plausibility.

Together, this trio of pieces helps us see our current political situation in stark, necessary terms — the only terms that will allow us to confront and overcome it.  I feel more strongly than ever that there is simply no way for Democrats, or any supporters of democracy, to succeed if they do not begin describing our current situation to their fellow Americans in just such an accurate and pointed fashion.  First, that the GOP is gunning, through the “axis” of state power, the Senate filibuster, and a Supreme Court majority, to institute minority rule in this country; and second, that this GOP vision is deeply rooted in a vision of white supremacism.  This anti-democratic, racist agenda needs to be made central to the political conversation in this country.  

On the first point, thinking about the long-term consequences of potential one-party rule by the GOP is also deeply clarifying, and must be mainstreamed into public discussion.  Brownstein points out the rights that are already under threat, including the right to abortion and of course voting rights.  But I think even this understates the depth of the danger.  If the Republican Party can gerrymander and suppress its way to a lock on all three branches of the federal government (in addition to control of many or most states), then the sky is literally the limit — not just on “culture war” issues, like a reversal of gay Americans’ right to marry, but with a whole range of economic and political sabotage and extremism becoming possible.  Higher taxes for blue states and lower (or no) taxes for red states — why not?  Further restrictions on voting rights ensuring that even the greatest of blue waves won’t win back power for Democrats — a no brainer!  Legislation requiring that recipients of federal contracts can’t be companies with unions — is the conservative and corrupt Supreme Court really going to stand in the way? Without the right to vote and have your vote counted, unchallengeable, unending one-party minority rule is the logical outcome, with guaranteed exploitation and degradation of the majority of Americans.

Along these lines, Brownstein and Zimmer have also left me more convinced than ever that Democratic rhetoric and efforts that treat the right to vote as an abstract assault on individual civil rights is woefully inadequate to the reality of our moment and of voting itself.  Without question, each of our right to vote should be treated as sacred and non-negotiable.  At the same time, though, our individual vote —our individual power — is only meaningful in combination with hundreds, thousands, millions of votes by similarly-minded or allied citizens.  And this power, in turn, comes not from abstractly voting, but by voting for something — specifically, the politicians, policies, and ideas we support.

Both Brownstein and Zimmer make this connection explicit, by reminding us that the GOP is not just subverting and blocking voting rights as a political power play, but as a means to achieving a certain reactionary project that places the morality of conservative, patriarchally-minded whites as the guiding light.  (To this, I would add that this conservative project also includes the advancement of corporate, anti-worker interests and the denigration of the state’s ability to address not just issues of social justice, but economic fairness as well.)  I think President Biden started to approach such a strategy in his voting rights speech last week, in things like references to “Jim Crow 2.0.”  However, this rhetoric needs to be greatly expanded, to explicitly address the reasons the GOP is now so very motivated to roll back voting rights: the collective threat the party perceives from a populace that is growing browner and more liberal every year.  Biden and other Democrats need to do three things: remind the American majority that the threat posed by voter suppression is actually a threat to whether we can live in the kind of society we want to, remind Americans that we have already long been working towards such a society, and mobilize Americans in defense of this vision.  

The elements of awareness and mobilization are all the more important in the face of likely unstoppable voting restrictions in the coming years.  In the first place, pro-democracy forces in the United States must ensure that a maximal number of voters at least attempt to make their voices heard, in the hopes of overcoming restrictions and gerrymandering aimed at diluting majority rule.  Alongside this, given the failure of the current Democratic Party leadership to prevent the GOP from attaining the means to a grand reversal of political and social progress, it will fall to state and local organizers and individuals to create strategies to counter the GOP’s subversion of voting and democratic governance.  Whether it takes mass protests, statewide strikes, supercharged union organizing, or civil disobedience, the answer to attacks on democracy inevitably involves a massive democratic counter-movement.  While one of the people Brownstein interviews suggests that the GOP’s minoritarian tactics in favor of unpopular positions make a backlash inevitable, the big question is whether this backlash can be channeled into actual reform and undoing of this reactionary movement: simply relying on voters to vote the bums out when those votes won’t count, or can’t even be cast in the first place, is not a strategy at all.

Having said all this, though, let’s not assume that all is lost in the coming election cycle.  The Democrats need to run like hell to hold the line in the 2022 midterms, so as to build their Senate majority and finally pass democracy-protecting legislation.  As observers like Brian Beutler have suggested, in the absence of large-scale achievements like the Build Back Better Act, there’s nothing wrong with trying to make the midterms about Republican perfidy; from Trump idolatry and the party’s murderous pro-covid policies and accompanying efforts to undermine the economic recovery, from opposition to popular Build Back Better policies like paid family leave and the child tax credit to complicity in the January 6 insurrection and cover-up, there’s plenty of ammunition for making the case that returning the GOP to power would be a stepping stone to the return of Donald Trump to the White House.  And as I argued above, the GOP’s quest for unassailable one-party rule and embrace of a white nationalist vision for American must be part of the mix.  “If Republicans win, your vote will never count again” is not much of an exaggeration, if at all.  

January 6ths All the Way Down

As we roll past the first anniversary of January 6, it’s crucial that we recognize the infamy of that day while also understanding that the attack on the Capitol was only one element of a larger coup  that preceded and followed that act of violence.  We know so much more now than we did a year ago — specifically about efforts by Donald Trump and his allies to discredit and throw out the election results in key swing states.  

But equally important for anyone who is trying to make sense of American politics and believes in a democratic future, we all need to come to grips with the reality that the insurrection exemplified by January 6 never actually ended.  The majority of Republican Party officials have either embraced Trump’s Big Lie that Democrats stole the election, or, even more importantly, support various legislative and rhetorical subversions of the American electoral system aimed at ensuring that Republicans will prevail in future elections.  And so across the land, GOP legislatures are not only making it harder for Democratic-leaning citizens to vote and to have those votes count, but making it possible for Republican legislatures to throw out election results and replace them with their own choices, particularly in presidential elections.  Meanwhile, thousands of rank-and-file Trump loyalists are flocking to join local election boards, with the goal of putting a thumb on the scales, or worse, in the running and counting of future elections; in states like Georgia, this effort to undermine election mechanics is abetted by state laws disempowering local election boards in favor of state intervention.  Alongside this, right-wing extremists engage in a spectrum of violence and intimidation, from disruptions of school board meetings to the lurking menace of political gangs like the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers.

That much of the current GOP effort is non-violent and conducted through legal machinations makes it no less an attack on American democracy than the January 6 Capitol assault.  We are all living through a slow-motion insurrection against the republic, in which a political party representing a minority of Americans seeks permanent power over the majority.

We also need to recognize the larger struggle going on, the substantive reasons why the Republican Party has declared war on American democracy, as opposed to this simply being a power grab for its own sake, a case of hardball politics gone too far.  The GOP’s efforts are ultimately aimed at promoting the interests of white, Christian Americans against the diverse, expanding majority — an effort to turn back the clock to a time when white supremacy was the basis for American society.  Simultaneously, the GOP effort at seizing unassailable power also seek to raise powerful corporate interests beyond the scope of government regulation and subordination to the public interest.  The goal, then, is not simply to destroy democracy for the sheer thrill of power, but to institute a vision of American society and American capitalism deeply at odds with the interests of most Americans.  This reactionary movement also encompasses the right-wing Supreme Court and its subversion of the rule of law, civil rights, and the capacity of the federal government to work in the public interest; striking examples of this include its reversal of abortion rights, undermining the federal government’s ability to regulate the economy, and today’s striking down of the Biden administration vaccine mandate for large American businesses to combat the covid pandemic.

In this sense, then, we face not just a political insurrection, but a reactionary movement that understands that the only way to achieve its goals is to destroy both the American political system’s ability to serve the majority as well as any semblance of an egalitarian, tolerant society.  The question the rest of us now have to answer, from the Democratic leadership through ordinary Americans, is what we’re going to do about it.

At the mass level, it seems to me that the best defense of democracy is more democracy, from citizens getting engaged in local politics, to talking with friends about their concerns, to of course voting for candidates who defend American government.  But this last obvious point brings us back to the nature of the Republican insurrection, which crucially aims to ensure that as few Democratic voters as possible are actually able to vote or have those votes count.  And this means that Democratic elected officials need to do their part, now, to defend America.  God knows that President Biden and the congressional Democrats have their hands full with razor-thin majorities and the Build Back Better bill hanging by a thread, and with the filibuster currently blocking any possibility of democracy-protecting legislation — I don’t want to underestimate the very real challenges of this situation.

But at a bare minimum, what Democrats can do is actually talk, and behave, as if this country actually does face an insurrection.  A year into Biden’s presidency and the current Congress, it should be crystal clear that appeals to bipartisanship are folly.  Since January 6, the GOP has only continued to radicalize, not moderate, and at this point behaving as if major legislation is possible with the help of Republicans only serves to mislead the American people as to the true nature of this authoritarian party.  The country finds itself in a horrifying and dangerous place, and there is nothing to be gained by pretending that this reality does not exist, as if pretending might magically make it not so.

President Biden’s January 6 speech was a good start, but as others have noted, whether it marks a real change in his rhetorical and political stance toward the GOP will depend on whether he maintains a position consistent with his remarks moving forward.  At some point, if he is indeed stymied by senators Manchin and Sinema in the push to pass democracy legislation, then maintaining a posture of pointed antagonism to the GOP will only become more important.  At that point, in the absence of legislation, alerting and mobilizing the American people to the dangers of one-party Republican rule will be the Democratic Party’s primary way to defend democracy leading up to the 2022 election.  Democrats must make the case that January 6 was but the most violent expression of an ongoing mass insurrection against American democracy.

That said, retaining a great deal of focus on January is necessary, as it constitutes not only a tremendous crime in and of itself, but also represents an effective way to help make the case that we are experiencing a general attack on our political order.  Even GOP politicians who did not participate in the planning and actions of that day have retroactively made themselves party to it, either by parroting the Big Lie or by pressing for election restrictions the Big Lie is meant to justify.   Stressing the continuity between the intentions of the violence of January 6, and the intentions of legislation meant to subvert democracy, can be a righteous and effective cudgel in defense of democracy.  In an essay on the January 6 attack, historian Joanne Freeman argues that drawing a bright line against violence in American politics is essential:

All these months after the attack, the seemingly bare-minimum response has not happened: There has been no full-throated group statement from the congressional bully pulpit stating that the attack was out of bounds, no strong, clear line in the sand naming the events of Jan. 6 an unforgivable assault on the democratic processes and principles of our government that must never happen again. This astounding omission could prove fatal.

[. . .] Although accountability won’t single-handedly end our current crisis, its absence virtually guarantees more of the same. With no clear line in the sand, the attack on democracy will continue, unchecked and empowered, with the worst yet to come.

Even if the January 6 attack had not been part of a larger Republican insurrection, it would still require a forceful, unambiguous response.  It is time for the Democrats to realize that the Republican Party will never be part of a true accounting and reckoning with that day, and that January 6 must form a key piece of their broader indictment of an authoritarian GOP in the years ahead.  Televise the January 6 hearings; distribute daily talking points to Democrats so that they are singing from the same choir book; rinse and repeat through the November midterms, and beyond.  They can at least count on the GOP to keep feeding the indictment, such as with the mass refusal to attend the congressional commemoration of January 6 (save Lynne Cheney), constant assertions by many that January 6 was no big deal, and crazy talk from Donald Trump that the actual insurrection occurred on Election Day 2020.  Democrats must embrace the necessity of irreconcilable conflict with the GOP, and win this fight both in the court of public opinion and at the polls.  

Democrats Need to Tie Public School Battles to Broader Defense of a Free and Equal Society

Over at The Plum Line blog, Paul Waldman has accurately identified the deeply strange and insufficient Democratic response to the Republican Party’s current onslaught on public education.  As the GOP’s hysterical anti-critical race theory rhetoric is now leading to actual policies and laws that threaten to profoundly change the nature of American education, he describes the Democrats as being in a state of “paralyzed confusion,” without any concerted effort to counter this tide of awful that Republicans see as a winning issue going into the 2022 midterms. 

This is indeed a baffling and infuriating stance by Democrats, given the essential racism of the GOP’s anti-CRT crusade and the essential rightness of promoting school curricula that are based on truth and reality, not white supremacist propaganda.  Waldman zeroes in on a Democratic tendency as underlying the deer-in-the-headlights routine: “Devoted as they are to facts and rational argumentation, liberals can’t help themselves from responding to Republican attacks first and foremost with refutation, which allows Republicans to set the terms of debate.” Instead of getting sucked into a back and forth with an opponent that doesn’t care about facts, he suggests that the Democrats simply hit back, with something like, ““Republicans want to subject our kids to fascist indoctrination. Why do they want to teach our kids that slavery wasn’t bad? Why are they trying to ban books? Who’s writing their education policy, David Duke? Don’t let them destroy your schools!””  Concludes Waldman: “Maybe Democrats need to begin not with a response to Republican lies about what happens in the classroom, but an attack on what Republicans are trying to do to American education.”

The Democrats’ acceptance of Republican framing here is indeed glaring, and I couldn’t agree more with Waldman’s suggestion of a counter-attack.  But beyond the issue of framing, the current inaction also strikes me as a somewhat inexplicable Democratic alienation from basic values that would seem to form the moral center of the party — among them, commitment to civil rights, to facts, and ultimately, to a vision of the public good.  Republicans are proposing outlandish and racist changes to American public education that are aimed not simply at providing a winning issue in 2022, but at actually changing how American schoolchildren are supposed to think about their country and their fellow citizens, in ways directly opposed to ideas of the United States embraced by both Democratic politicians and voters.  It makes zero sense to me that Democrats would feel insecure about asserting that schools should teach such basic values as racial equality and the evils of slavery.  If the GOP is profiting from lies about history classes teaching white kids to hate themselves, then the solution is to oppose the lies, not tacitly assent to them.

But the Democrats’ disarray on this issue at least helps us grasp a broader disarray in confronting the authoritarian, amped-up GOP.  Confronted with an opponent that is able to effectively and comprehensively articulate its illiberal values and its perverted vision for American society, Democrats remain unwilling or unable to counter with their own vision of a progressive American society.  This is not to say that we don’t see glimpses of it here and there, from the social safety net-strengthening features of the adrift Build Back Better Act to President Biden’s energetic and pointed January 6 speech vowing to fight authoritarian politics — but there is a general lack of investment in making this vision explicit.  I’m not saying I want a 100-point enumeration of Democratic Party values, but I do think it’s reasonable for the party to, at a minimum, explicitly, repeatedly make clear that it’s in favor of transforming the United States into a full multi-racial democracy with equality for all.  After all, the underlying reality of this vision is well understood even by the Republican Party, many of whose efforts are explicitly aimed at rolling back these Democratic aims while painting them in the most ominous light possible to white Americans.  To bring this back to the conflict over schools — it is not at all hard to imagine Democrats putting the various GOP school initiatives in the context of the larger GOP assault on American political institutions and free society (not least because this happens to be true).  An aggressive response on this particular issue would also be an opportunity for Democrats to articulate their larger vision for a free and fair American society, if they dared to take it.  

The Democratic disarray in responding to the GOP’s war on schools is also reflected at the level of basic emotional appeal.  The Republican Party has no qualms about inciting its base into rage and action to promote a white supremacist backlash against liberal educational offenses.  The upside for the GOP, of course, is that this will motivate its voters to go to the polls, as well as inspire Republican rank-and-file to get involved in local politics.  Democrats, meanwhile, aren’t publicly showing the very reasonable anger and righteousness which should be the natural reaction to the opposition party declaring that America’s number 1 problem is not covid, climate change, or economic equality, but that a teacher somewhere might tell her students that the South started the Civil War or that Jim Crow made the lives of African-Americans a living hell.  It is also deeply offensive for the GOP to pretend to care about public education when its decades-long project has in fact been to defund and privatize our nation’s schools, viewing them as a corporate profit center.  If the stakes weren’t so high, the Republicans’ sudden professed interest in the minds of students would be laughable.  The overall effect of Democrats’ apparent lack of outrage is to signal to their base voters that they’re not willing to fight for basic democratic values in education, helping to further demobilize the Democratic base from either voting in the next election or getting excited about involvement in local politics.

As Walden notes, the GOP has chosen to make education an issue, so to that degree the Democrats can’t simply ignore it.  Moreover, the anxiety over covid’s impact on schools is playing into the potency of Republican demagoguery on the make-believe CRT front, so that Democrats would also be well-advised to take this opportunity to reiterate their long-standing commitment to public education.  Many teachers are badly burned out, if they haven’t already left the profession, and the post-covid era will require massive investments in hiring new educators and ensuring schools are prepared for the hard work of catching up a generation of kids who have seen their learning interrupted.  Such an initiative would help both neutralize and overwhelm the GOP’s bogus concerns, while offering real solutions to actual problems.  To echo Walden’s message: what are Democrats waiting for?

Obscene But Not Heard

Before you start popping the champagne over Donald Trump’s decision to back down from a January 6 press conference, I’d urge you to read this post from Josh Marshall over at Talking Points Memo.  Marshall pulls back the camera to observe the larger phenomenon of Donald Trump’s relative disappearance from mainstream coverage and appearances, and the news is not great.  Left to bluster and grow in the hothouse atmosphere of right-wing media, Trump’s utterances have only grown more extreme over the last year, even as most consumers of mainstream media would have little or no idea of this fact.  Rather than being an abstract issue with little real-world consequence, though, Marshall nails exactly what’s wrong with this picture (at least for those who prefer the continued existence of American democracy):

This hasn’t made Trump any weaker. His hold over the institutional and electoral GOP has only intensified since leaving office. The very small number of elected officials who refused to support the Big Lie have mostly been drummed out of the party. Trump’s Big Lie propaganda has become unassailable in heavily state-legislative-gerrymandered states where it will matter most. In short, the “don’t amplify” doctrine has allowed Trump to speak freely to his supporters and intensify his hold over the GOP, while keeping the incendiary messages that mobilize a majority of the country against him largely off mainstream airwaves.

All of the upside and none of the down. [italics added for emphasis]

God knows I talk about the crisis of American democracy often enough, but if we were to drill down to examine the various crises-within-crises that make up this collective meltdown, far up this Russian-doll-within-another-Russian doll food chain would the disparity that Marshall gets at.  On one side, Donald Trump has the ear of literally millions of Republican voters, unfiltered, able not simply to inform them of what propaganda he chooses, but, more specifically, to radicalize this base with his cracked ideas.  Meanwhile, the mass repugnance such ideas previously elicited from the American majority — repugnance that fueled a mass mobilization against Trump over the course of his presidency — has been cooled and diluted by the sense that Trump has left the building.  As I’ve banged on about many times before, we’re left in a very bad place where the GOP is not just energizing its base, but increasingly radicalizing its voters, while simultaneously the Democrats are demoralized by the lack of major legislation in Congress.  For Trump, this lopsided state of affairs is perfectly captured by Marshall: “All of the upside and none of the down.”  

As the Biden economic agenda and democracy-preserving legislation continue in a state of suspended animation, the danger of this enormous imbalance between the Republican base and the Democratic/persuadable mass of voters is increasing.  The solution, absent more media coverage of what Trump’s been up to (coverage, I’d hasten to add, that would ideally draw from the many lessons learned about amplifying and legitimizing Trump previously), would be for the Democratic Party to provide periodic reminders of the menace waiting offstage.  This would both provide a public service of letting citizens know valuable information about the authoritarian in exile, but as importantly would help energize Democratic voters and remind them of the stakes around the midterm elections and beyond.

It seems we have gone from one untenable extreme to another, from too much uncritical amplification of Donald Trump to an unhelpful suppression of the reality of his continued presence in American political life.  Marshall notes that the media’s “don’t amplify” attitude toward Trump is based on a certain “myopia,” and constitutes a “misunderstanding of how both journalism and political power work” by thinking it will help drown out Trump’s ideas or make it seem they don’t even exist.  Again, I think this point is echoed by much of the Democratic Party’s current stance toward Donald Trump, where at least in public, not much is made of the very real possibility Trump will be the GOP’s 2024 presidential candidate or that he’s still stomping around re-making the Republican Party in his own image.  It does seem to be a world-historic misapplication of the notion that if you ignore a problem, it will go away.

War on Democracy, Meet War on Society

Whether you call it an incipient American fascism or Trumpist authoritarianism, a reactionary, anti-democratic movement has seized hold of the Republican Party and many millions of Americans.  It’s a movement that Donald Trump catalyzed, but whose ambitions and power reach far beyond the former president’s wrecking ball appeal, drawing on the darkest strains of American history and society.  White supremacism and perceptions that white Americans are losing their privileged status in American society; chronic economic hardship for too many middle- and lower-income Americans, fueled by an extreme, unrestrained form of capitalism; a militant and un-Christian Christianity that provides moral, even theological justifications, for battling America’s democracy and imposing its views on others; a war on terror that has supercharged fantasies of an America under siege by dark-skinned infidels; a right-wing media apparatus dedicated to propaganda and incitement against fellow Americans and immigrants alike: all these and more are long-term pathologies that have helped bring us to this dystopian but very real age of danger.

Many of us hoped that the defeat of Donald Trump last year would shut down the hideous movement that he had come to represent, but the reality is that we gained only a temporary respite, if that.  In defeat, the authoritarian movement around Donald Trump showed its true nature in unambiguous terms, as the former president attempted a coup to remain in power, and then persuaded the bulk of Republican Party politicians to parrot his Big Lie that the election was stolen from him.  In the year since, this Big Lie has been adopted by a majority of Republican voters, and GOP politicians have used it as a basis for a determined attack against democracy at the state level.  From voter suppression and gerrymandering, to bills allowing state legislatures to decide who wins elections, the Republican Party has substituted a lust for power over the most basic democratic principles or loyalty; the January 6 coup never ended, but only transformed into a slow-rolling insurrection.

So this authoritarian menace has only continued to grow over the last year, to encompass a broader attack on the rule of law and a reactionary cultural assault on the nation.  As political scientist Jason Stanley writes in a chilling and essential assessment that traces the rise of what he terms an American fascist movement, it includes creating a sense of menace posed by outsiders like immigrants and minorities; legitimization of political violence in the form of right-wing militias like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers; fanning the flames of racism and creating a sense of a true American culture under assault via the made-up threat of critical race theory; and denigrating the rights of women, and asserting the primacy of males, by a full assault against legal abortion.

Stanley describes the United States as being in “fascism’s legal phase,” with the Republican Party moving from fascist propaganda to attempting to enact laws and policies based on these extremist ideas, so as to ensure they are part of the legal and social framework we are all forced to live and breathe.  In other words, we’re past the point where the GOP has declared war on democracy and a free, egalitarian society — it’s already well on its way to enforcing this twisted vision on all of us.  Even as Democrats control the presidency and Congress, the GOP is implementing these changes in multiple states, transforming the daily, lived reality of million of Americans to the point that in some states, like Wisconsin, we can no longer even say that American citizens there actually live in a democracy, or in others, like Texas, we can no longer say that women have anything close to equal rights under the law.

In describing this legal assault on basic pillars of American society, Stanley highlights the basic fact that Republican authoritarianism constitutes far more than just an attack on our election systems (as profoundly, existentially a dangerous as that attack is).  This movement includes an evolving but very real substantive agenda that includes denigration of women and minorities, the infliction of violence on political opponents, the rejection of science in public health, and the promulgation of a misleading vision of American history that substitute myth for reality.  It’s not just a movement to illicitly gain power at the expense of the American majority — it’s also a movement with ideas of what it will do with the illicit power it wields, to the point that we might more accurately describe it as an assault on American society itself.  

Stanley departs from what has been the default way of talking about Republican authoritarianism, both by the media and by the Democratic Party, in which the GOP’s assault on democracy is treated as both the primary challenge, and as somehow separate from what the GOP would do once in power.  Yes, it is a very good thing that GOP election subversion has increasingly (and rightly) begun to receive a level of media attention commensurate with the threat it poses.  And while it hasn’t yet resulted in countervailing, corrective legislation, the Democratic Party has likewise identified the GOP’s election-sabotaging legislation as a direct threat to democracy and Democrats.   But by treating the question of GOP means as somehow separate from GOP ends, and focusing on election subversion as separate from the substance of Republican governance, such rhetoric inadvertently downplays the full extent of the threat posed by this authoritarian movement.  It makes it sound as if the GOP is “merely” gaming the electoral system, when the reality is much darker and of equal threat to the lives, livelihood, and basic dignity of American citizens.  It constitutes a wholesale effort to reshape American society based on white supremacism, a perverted version of actual Christianity, misogyny, contempt for the natural world, and unbridled exploitation of American workers.

I understand why reporters and others in the media would focus on the GOP’s assault on democracy — this is obviously a huge story, and a key element of what’s going on here.  But after having read many, many excellent recent articles on this topic, a persistent theme of abstraction prevails.  The articles all too often assume an objective, political science perspective in which the actual, substantive consequences of the GOP establishing a one-party state are somehow kept out of view — as if the GOP were trying to gain illicit power simply for its own sake.  This may strike some as a perverse critique — can’t we just be happy that the media are finally talking about the GOP’s assault on democracy!, you might be saying to yourself right now — but this phenomenon points to the limits of relying on the media to fully limn our present crisis.  The incentive for most journalists is to appear value-free, to not take sides on substantive issues; to draw the line between the Republicans’ assault on democracy and its assault on American society may be a bridge too far for most to make.

But make no mistake: behind the GOP war on democracy lies a war on a free and egalitarian American society, and this is also what needs to be talked about, by as many people as can make their voices heard.  If journalists can’t do so, then opinion writers and others must talk about this basic reality of our situation.  The Republican assault on liberal, humanitarian values and a society based on them needs to be relayed in concrete, everyday terms, because this is where millions of Americans will be suffering if this authoritarian effort succeeds. 

As an example of what such coverage and analysis can look like, this Ronald Brownstein article in The Atlantic looks at how Republicans are employing their ill-gotten political power to roll back decades of civil rights gains by women, minorities, and the LGBTQ community.  But there’s plenty more at stake beyond Brownstein’s excellent survey.  This reactionary movement takes aim not only at Americans’ rights, but at the federal government’s ability to regulate the economy, our health system, environmental protections, and more.  A woman’s right to an abortion; a child’s ability to breathe free air and grow up on a planet not ravaged by climate change; the ability of the economy to operate without the crippling effects of cronyism and corruption; the freedom of teachers to teach science and fact-based history; the right of all of use to go to the supermarket without worrying about being gunned down by an extremist with an AR-15; our ability to go to the doctor or take time off work when we’re sick — in short, our collective ability to live lives of dignity, collective empowerment, and meaning is now in the crosshairs.

So there is much more that the media can do to explain the dangers American society faces.  However, there is also no substitute for Democratic politicians rising to the occasion and articulating the true stakes of our moment — not just in drawing out the substantive horrors of the GOP’s vision for America, but, equally importantly, in proposing a countervailing, superior vision of American life in the 21st century.  There is no reason to be in a defensive crouch against the authoritarian GOP, whose war on democracy signals above all else its basic unpopularity and inability to win majority support in this country.  This is ultimately not just a conflict over particular policies, but over basic societal values.  A fundamental imbalance between Democrats and Republicans is that the GOP is doing a much better job in communicating its larger vision to its voters.  While the Democrats will never be able to match the diabolical coherence of the GOP’s authoritarianism — white men should be at the top of the social hierarchy, with the rest of the population to be exploited and kept in check by force if necessary — a Democratic legislative agenda should reflect basic humanitarian, egalitarian values supported by a clear majority of Americans.  If the GOP is attempting to remake American society based on a reactionary, immoral template, then Democrats have a responsibility for engaging in the fight at such a societal level, as a basic matter of alerting Americans to the stakes of this conflict and rallying them to political involvement.

In turn, Democratic politicians can draw on the existence of vast progressive social forces and trends to make their case for a more egalitarian, inclusive society.  From women’s rights to gay rights, from the labor movement to the environmental movement, progressive, forward-thinking ideas have found great purchase among the American people over the last few decades — part of the reason we’re now experiencing this reactionary backlash.  But the existence of backlash speaks to the strength, not weakness, of these progressive forces in American society, as counter-intuitive as that can feel at times.  The underlying trend is an increasing embrace of equality, tolerance, and mutual respect, which is clearly at odds with the white supremacism and misogyny of the authoritarian GOP.

And underlying this trend, in turn, is a faith — democratic in nature, but reaching far beyond the limits of our political system — that we can basically trust our fellow Americans to treat us as we’d like to be treated, that we’re bound by basic human values and are subject to the same universal human challenges, and, crucially, that there is an ongoing need to improve our social order by fighting against racism, sexism, homophobia, and other anti-human elements of our shared world.  This is the faith and the reality that the majority of Americans have been practicing and living for many years now — a society-wide democratization whose continuation is the only way forward if we are to ever become a truly just and democratic nation.  In this time of peril, the American majority united by humane, progressive values needs to become aware of itself, needs to understand that we have a broad set of beliefs to which we subscribe, and that make all of us better and stronger for doing so.  Creating such self-awareness needs to be a top priority for pro-democracy activists and politicians, in order to catalyze the mass political mobilization and democratic action needed to defeat the authoritarian challenge.

I’m sure that others can come up with far more expansive and persuasive accounts of the underlying beliefs that unite most Americans.   The far more important thing than arriving at some sort of doctrinaire definition of majority opinion, though, is to actively discuss and articulate these values, in order to make clear that they do exist, and to recognize the degree to which Republican authoritarianism is a refutation of these broadly-held values and an assault on the society that holds them.  To bring this back to the point I made earlier, it’s the difference between emphasizing that Republicans want to take aware your right to vote, and emphasizing that Republicans want to take away your right to vote so that they can replace our collective, humane but imperfect effort to build a better country with a deranged vision based on exploitation, white supremacism, and violence.  It means engaging on grounds that will rally the American majority by reminding us what’s good about our current society (including our collective ability to try to improve what’s immoral or unproductive), and that the GOP seeks to replace our open society with a reign of racism, suppression of women, crony capitalism, and yet more gun violence by criminals and domestic terrorists alike.  These are the true stakes of the GOP assault on democracy — it’s ultimately an assault on our ability to live our daily lives as we see fit, to undo an American consensus based on mutual respect, equality, and progress.  It’s a movement that seeks to replace actual, lived freedom with intrusion into our workplaces, our intimate relations, and our personal autonomy.  We don’t just need to fight against this foul movement; we also need to fight for a superior moral and democratic American society that is already within our grasp, and perhaps closer than we think.

The Manch Who Stole Christmas

Senator Joe Manchin’s declaration last weekend that he “cannot vote to move forward on” the Build Back Better Act is a tough pill to swallow for anyone who supports the myriad of critical programs the bill contains, from green energy infrastructure to child tax credits.  The existential threat of climate change in particular makes this news reverberate with the weight of collective doom — with the polar caps melting and the West Coast burning, will the U.S. still not do the bare minimum to protect our collective future?  This is to say nothing of the needless kneecapping of working families and the larger economy — Goldman Sachs has already downgraded its forecast of U.S. growth in 2022 due to Manchin’s declaration — not to mention the political prospects of Manchin’s fellow Democrats in 2022 and beyond.

But it is exactly because the stakes are so high that everyone who has an interest in the BBB’s substance, if not this specific legislation, needs to take a beat and not succumb to doomsaying and hair-rending.  There’s no getting around the agony of being one recalcitrant senator short of getting this over the finish line, but this can’t blind us to a near-miraculous unity among Democratic legislators.  Whatever its many shortcomings, this is not a party in disarray, but rather one discovering once again that being on the cusp of either victory or defeat often looks nearly indistinguishable.

On the economic front, this Zachary Carter piece that I discussed last month remains persuasive.  Increasingly progressive economic thinking has won the day among Democrats, and Manchin represents a dwindling, rear-guard effort within the party to say otherwise.  Of course, his power is magnified immensely by the Democrats’ extremely narrow Senate majority, but it’s a mistake to confuse a position of leverage with anything like the strength of Manchin’s political ideas.  The fact that he has resorted to easily disprovable lies in his opposition to measures like green energy incentives drives home the point.

The stakes are so high right now, and the collective anguish among Democrats and supporters of democracy so intense, because there is a basic perception that Democrats really only have one shot at passing the collection of policies folded into the BBB Act: fail on this (and on voting rights legislation), and the Republicans will sweep into permanent power in 2022 and beyond.  I share these fears — but the fact that Democratic leadership signaled an immediate pivot to voting rights legislation in place of a tabled BBB bill highlights their basic mishandling of the very dangers to democracy they seem to understand.  All along, legislation that protects democracy should have been given equal priority to passing the BBB Act.  They are flip sides of the same coin — efforts to defend America against an authoritarian GOP onslaught by reinvigorating American democracy and our economy in progressive, egalitarian ways — and should never have been decoupled.  Rather than being a distraction from economic reforms and policies, foregrounding threats to democracy by pushing actual legislation would have a synergistic effect with the BBB Act, raising the true stakes that both types of legislation need to pass in order to address a common challenge.

This is not to say that such a strategy would have, or will, change Joe Manchin’s mind, but I think it would have led to the Democrats being much better-positioned to weather Manchin’s sabotage than they currently are.  Manchin’s position would have appeared even more extreme and disloyal not just to the Democratic Party but to the United States itself, and the Democratic Party would have elevated the stakes of failure in the eyes of the American people.  We also can’t lose sight of the basic fact that exactly zero Republicans support the BBB Act, and that no more than a thimbleful (if that) support democracy-strengthening legislation.  Anything that would maximize the Democrats’ position as appearing reasonable, and the GOP’s position as appearing extremist, would be to the Democrats’ benefit — as more deeply advertising the BBB Act as having democracy-saving benefits would do.

The good news is that it’s not too late for Biden and the Democrats’ congressional leadership to change course.  Ultimately, they need a strategy that will both maximize the chances of getting Manchin’s no vote turned around, but also the ability to communicate clearly the stakes of getting the BBB and pro-democracy legislation passed for the survival of our democracy.  After a certain point, spending so much of your firepower working over a single antediluvian member of your party (however truly gratifying that can feel!) instead of the entirety of an obstructionist authoritarian GOP doesn’t make a hell of a lot of sense.  Here we can reach out for the grain of truth Manchin himself has offered — if Democrats want more Democratic legislation, they’re going to have to elect more Democrats.  Any party strategy from this point forward needs to be aimed at maximizing the chances of getting those extra votes in 2022 — even in the absence of the BBB legislation.  By gradually whittling down the BBB Act, only for Manchin to declare none of it worthwhile, the unsuccessful effort to woo Manchin has inadvertently downplayed the urgency of this moment — even as the efforts to woo Manchin were indeed rooted in this very urgency.

At the same time, the Democrats seem not to have simultaneously pursued democracy legislation at least in part because it would bring them into direct conflict with a GOP that it desperately wanted to sign onto the bipartisan infrastructure bill.  In other words, the Democrats have been at cross-purposes with themselves, projecting disunity to the public while giving unwarranted breathing room to a Republican Party hell bent on sabotaging the economy, the fight against covid, and American democracy.  Again, some of this was unavoidable — it made sense to try to get Manchin’s crucial vote — but in retrospect we can see the harm this strategy did, a harm only compounded by Manchin’s apparent, final “no.”  My bottom line — if the BBB Act and democracy legislation aren’t going to get by Manchin, make the next year about how Republicans are stymying progress, not Joe Manchin, and figure out a way to leverage this into Democratic victories in 2022.

Pelosi Comments Send Democratic Stock Down

By voicing her opposition to a ban on stock trading by members of Congress, despite a recent report showing that nearly 50 senators and representatives have recently violated the weak existing laws around stock disclosures, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has demonstrated a basic misunderstanding of our current political crisis and a troubling vision for the Democratic Party.  After a Trump presidency in which corruption and self-dealing replaced any sense of the public interest, the logical, ethical, and indeed self-interested path for Democrats would be to ensure their party promoted and lived by the highest ethical standards possible, so as to draw the greatest possible contrast with a GOP that objected not at all to the former president’s betrayals of the public trust.  After witnessing a four-year plundering of the public purse (think of all the Secret Service and other funds spent at Trump properties during his many, many visits to them) and foreign policy subordinated to Trump’s re-election strategy (think the Ukraine quid pro quo demand that led to his first impeachment), you would think that Democratic leaders would see rooting out and preventing corruption as a winning strategy for the party — an issue that ties together both financial shenanigans and acts of political malpractice.

Apparently, though, the virtues of clean government and drawing a razor-sharp contrast with the Republican Party are not so clear to Speaker Pelosi.  While opposition to stricter laws on stock trading on congresspeople appears to be shared by a strong majority of House Democrats, and a charitable read on Pelosi’s position would be that she is simply voicing the sentiment of this majority, such abject surrender to a self-defeating position is the opposite of actual leadership.  Banning stock trading by congresspeople is, simply put, the lowest of low-hanging fruit.  The idea that members of Congress can buy and sell stocks in companies whose fortunes could be affected by the legislation they themselves pass sounds like a textbook definition of corruption.  I would frankly be shocked if a majority of Americans would even believe that this is currently legal.

The STOCK Act, in place since 2012 and under which members of Congress are required to report the trades of themselves and family members within a certain time period, is obviously not working, if so many are failing to comply with it, and this lack of compliance with laughably lax requirements feeds the public’s fears of politicians not bound by the same rules as everyone else.  But you could make the case that even if the STOCK Act were fully adhered to, it would actually still represent a form of legalized corruption — a flimsy substitute for truly ethically-minded laws that would protect voters from the risk that their representatives might confuse personal gain with public purpose.

Pelosi also told reporters that, “We’re a free-market economy.  They should be able to participate in that.”  Ironically, this comment captures the scale of the corruption at the heart of the current arrangement. As Pelosi well knows, many aspects of our free-market economy are in fact governed by laws that Congress passes, whether they affect individual companies (as with spending bills) or whether they address the actual structure of the overall economy.  The idea that politicians are free agents able to enjoy the fruits of a free economy, rather than stewards of this economy and working to make sure their constituents are the ones who benefit from it, inverts the way things are supposed to work in a democratic society.  

Pelosi’s comments couldn’t come at a worse possible time, but at least they have the virtue of being clarifying.  With the Democrats apparently shelving the Build Back Better act after it had dominated their agenda through much of the last year, the idea that the leader of the House Democrats has decided to emphatically embrace a corrupt stock trading setup for members of Congress strikes me, at least, as profoundly demoralizing.  I guess it’s OK if Democrats don’t pass any laws to help the American people, as long as they can make money on the stock market based on their insider knowledge of rules, regulations, and pending legislation?  That does not sound like a winning midterm strategy to me, and the fact that Democrats might feel insulated from GOP attacks on this front because Republicans, too, benefit from this unethical arrangement only highlights the Speaker’s breathtaking cynicism and failure to grasp the political moment. Pelosi’s statements yesterday are deeply offensive and troubling for anyone who supports a Democratic Party that fights for the common man, not the uncommonly lucky legislator.

Right-Wing Violence is a Cudgel for Delegitimizing the GOP

It’s been a couple weeks since it was making headlines, but I wanted to flag a couple excellent articles about the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict and the larger threat of right-wing political violence in the United States.  Zach Beauchamp and Adam Serwer both place Rittenhouse’s acquittal in the larger context of a radicalizing right wing, with Serwer delving deeper into the white supremacist mindset at the heart of the gun rights ideology. Both make the essential point that the Rittenhouse case, in Beauchamp’s words, “has revealed a scary convergence between the fringe and the mainstream on the wisdom of turning guns against their political enemies. Its resolution validates that belief in ways that challenge the basic nonviolent compact at the heart of democratic political life.” He continues:

Rittenhouse is a powerful symbol for the right because he acted out a long-held fantasy — a man with his gun, standing up to the liberal hordes. That he was found not guilty is validation that fantasy could be made reality, a godsend to genuine extremists.

But his acquittal’s celebration across a much broader spectrum of the right is perhaps even more troubling. It threatens the mainstream consensus that political violence has no place in a democratic society — and the related notion that Americans need to share a country with people who disagree with them.

Of all the parlous recent developments in American politics, the right’s effort to normalize violence against its opponents takes the cake as the single most ominous one — after all, it’s not much of a free society or democracy when the rule of law succumbs to the rule of the gun. There are plenty of failed states around the world to let us know what that looks like, and the fact that we have to contemplate such a possible future for the United States is something of a waking nightmare. But as disorienting as it is, we need to look at the most frightening and disheartening aspects of our situation unflinchingly, because it is only by acknowledging them that we can properly confront them.

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With right-wing actors willing to kill their imagined political enemies, and a Republican Party increasingly comfortable with accommodating this mindset, the future of our democracy lies not simply in stopping the spread of violence, but in creating an overwhelming backlash to such depraved attitudes and actions in order to delegitimize both the insurrectionist right and the GOP. These murderous tactics are intended to strike fear and disarray into Democratic and pro-democracy voters. In response, Democrats and defenders of democracy must work to ensure that the violence and intimidation directed against our democracy arouses not just anger, but rage against those who would replace the rule of law with the law of the jungle. As crucial as it is that journalists and news outlets cover right-wing violence and GOP complicity in order to inform Americans of the danger, it is simply not enough that writers like Beauchamp, Serwer, and Eric Boehlert are communicating to the public the dangerous dynamics at play; we need Democratic politicians to talk about this threat to their voters and to the public at large, to make the moral and emotional case that anyone who uses, or encourages, violence in this country to gain political power should be considered persona non grata in the public sphere, and that supporters of democracy need to make their voices heard at all levels of society, from civic institutions like election boards to casting votes for politicians who defend our form of government. Such a hard line is essential in the face of right-wing efforts to blur the lines and to insist on a sick continuity between the bullet and the ballot box.

The right-wing movement towards violence rests partially on a fantasy that it is actually the left that is responsible for political violence in America; witness the many outlandish stories of murderous antifa and city-burning Black Lives Matter protestors that are a staple of right-wing outlets like Fox News and OANN. Against this, Democratic politicians need to say plainly what right-wing violence actually aims at: the injury and murder of innocent Americans, whether they’re exercising their rights to protest, to worship, to carry out their duties as elected officials, or to simply go shopping at a mall in El Paso. The horrific imbalance between deranged right-wingers bent on killing, and innocent Americans living their lives, must always be kept in view — right-wing violence aims at murder and mayhem, and has zero connection to legitimate political action.

Though there have been numerous incidents of right-wing violence and intimidation over the last several years — including the Rittenhouse shootings, the Tree of Life synagogue murders, and the occupation of the Michigan capitol building and plot to kidnap that state’s governor, to name a few — it is the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol that most powerfully demonstrates the linkages between the Republican Party and a growing propensity on the right to deploy violence to achieve political ends. A Republican president incited a bloody-minded mix of militia types, white supremacists, and radicalized individuals to storm the Capitol and keep him in power by whatever means necessary, including the violent intimidation and near-murder of U.S. senators and representatives (and this is to say nothing of the many corrupt, non-violent machinations Trump employed in the weeks prior to January 6 to attempt to remain in office). We literally have hundreds of hours of video evidence of the derangement and danger of far-right insurrectionists smashing apart the Capitol, assaulting and maiming Capitol police officers, and shouting for the deaths of U.S. elected officials; the public record could not be clearer. It could also not be clearer that in the weeks and months following the assault, the bulk of the Republican Party made itself complicit in the violence of that day by continuing to support the former president’s false claims of a stolen election — the very cause for which the perpetrators of January 6 acted. We are still learning about the extent of coordination between the White House, Republican congresspeople, and the violence at the Capitol, but even what we know already is sufficient to stain the GOP at large with the infamy and violence of that day.

So there is no path forward that doesn’t include condemnation of GOP-Trumpist violence and intimidation as part of the Democratic Party’s claim to be America’s sole major party of democracy, and to discredit the GOP in the eyes of American voters. It is not enough to decry political violence; Democrats need to explicitly make the case that any support of political violence, such as when GOP representatives offer a congressional internship to the poster child for recent political vigilantism, is a demonstration of the GOP’s unfitness for power. They cannot treat this a some sort of side issue — it is a looming threat to American democracy, and they can communicate this by acting like it, not only in their words but also through their actions, such as legislation that clarifies and expands laws around political intimidation. Ultimately, it’s up to the GOP’s political opposition to mobilize such public sentiment, to actually do something about the dangers we face, and to inflict as severe a political price as possible on the Republican Party. Without political pushback, there are no conceivable impediments to the right-wing tendency towards violence. And as I suggested above, a powerful starting point would be intensified Democratic focus on the January 6 insurrection and Donald Trump’s incitement of right-wing violence against the U.S. government, which can illuminate the broader bloody-minded assault on American voters and institutions even as it constitutes an unspeakable political crime in its own right.

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The right-wing effort to legitimize violence requires lies about Democrats and the left, seeking to shift responsibility for initiating violence on to them. This goes beyond lies about the threat posed by antifa; as Beauchamp and Serwer both suggest, the Big Lie that Democrats stole the 2020 election serves as justification to take back America by any means necessary. The effort seeks to blur the lines between democracy and violence, to make it seem as if they can coexist, when the truth is that violence is the enemy of a democratic society. The Democrats must hold this line, and persuade as many Americans as possible that those who use violence and intimidation to achieve their political ends are democracy’s enemies. While the right wing would love to believe that they are fighting a heroic battle against armed adversaries, what they actually envision is violence and murder directed at unarmed innocents. This is not a rhetorical fight that the Republican Party can be allowed to win, to say nothing of allowing actual violent acts to subvert and destroy our democracy.

Moreover, such pushback isn’t just needed for its own sake — going as hard as possible against right-wing violence and intimidation can also play a key role in unraveling the rest of the GOP’s anti-democratic agenda, as such violence exists on a continuum with other anti-democratic attacks. Here’s Serwer again:

The party finds the apocalyptic fear of impending leftist tyranny useful not only for turning out its supporters, but also for rationalizing legislative attempts to disenfranchise, gerrymander, and otherwise nullify the votes of Democratic constituencies. Engineering the American political system so that Republicans’ political rivals are unable to contest their power is a less forceful solution than killing people, but the political goal is similar: to never have to share power with those they disagree with.

The propensity towards violence is on a spectrum with the desire to undo American elections, rooted in the same rotten authoritarian soil; turning actual violence into a rhetorical weapon to bludgeon the GOP for their entire anti-democratic justice would be poetic and necessary justice.

Finally, it’s also important for the Democrats to engage anew with the lack a regulatory or moral regime that could stem the tide of everyday gun violence that slaughters thousands of American annually — a bloody phenomenon that, as Ruth Ben-Ghiat argues, has played a role in America’s slide towards authoritarianism and further bloodshed:

The scale and scope of gun violence in America doesn’t just desensitize us to violence. It also cheapens the value of life. It fosters political, social and psychological conditions that are propitious for autocracy. The omission of gun law reform from discussions of democracy protection is symptomatic of our normalization of this tragic situation. The Jan. 6 insurrection shows us how dangerous that blind spot has become.

From this perspective, the eagerness of some on the political right for outright violence partakes of a broader national illness in which we are already accustomed to firearms disrupting the social peace and destroying countless lives. Citizens are more prepared to commit violence, and others are prepared to tacitly accept it, when criminal gun violence already wracks the nation. Likewise, this mayhem fosters the authoritarian mindset that leads to acceptance of authoritarian rule and the enactment of political — that is, anti-democratic — violence. As others have noted, Democrats, by supporting gun control and sending the unmistakable message that gun violence is a crisis for our country, can make clear that they are the party of law and order, against the GOP’s indifference to mass death, fear, and vigilantism. To defeat GOP authoritarianism, both the right-wing embrace of violence and the generalized gun violence of American society require direct, unwavering confrontation.

Fantastic But Ominous New Coverage of the Coup Attempt That Never Ended

The Atlantic has published an in-depth story by Barton Gellman about Donald Trump’s coup attempt and ongoing efforts by the Republican Party to ensure that the next such effort succeeds.  This is probably the best single piece I’ve read about the authoritarian crisis this country is experiencing.  Gellman conveys both the foulness of Trump’s scheme to throw out the November 2020 elections results, the horrors of the January 6 insurrection, and the ongoing abomination of Republican legislators working to subvert election mechanisms and rules so that a future Republican presidential candidate can fully escape the intent of American voters.  He also captures the mix of racism, resentment, and delusion at the heart of the most extreme Trump supporters, and their frightening openness to violence as a means to secure undemocratic future power for the Republican Party.  To give you a flavor and some enticement to read more, here’s an excerpt from the opening:

For more than a year now, with tacit and explicit support from their party’s national leaders, state Republican operatives have been building an apparatus of election theft. Elected officials in Arizona, Texas, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, and other states have studied Donald Trump’s crusade to overturn the 2020 election. They have noted the points of failure and have taken concrete steps to avoid failure next time. Some of them have rewritten statutes to seize partisan control of decisions about which ballots to count and which to discard, which results to certify and which to reject. They are driving out or stripping power from election officials who refused to go along with the plot last November, aiming to replace them with exponents of the Big Lie. They are fine-tuning a legal argument that purports to allow state legislators to override the choice of the voters.

The piece is dense with information and insights, but I want to draw out a few points that relate to posts I’ve written over the past year.  First, Gellman’s examination of the participants in the January 6 storming of the Capitol provides yet more evidence that a combination of white supremacism and white fear of demographic change is the motor behind much of the ongoing right-wing rebellion.  Discussing the search to find common threads among the participants, he writes:    

“Only one meaningful correlation emerged. Other things being equal, insurgents were much more likely to come from a county where the white share of the population was in decline. For every one-point drop in a county’s percentage of non-Hispanic whites from 2015 to 2019, the likelihood of an insurgent hailing from that county increased by 25 percent. This was a strong link, and it held up in every state.” 

[. . .] Respondents who believed in the Great Replacement theory, regardless of their views on anything else, were nearly four times as likely as those who did not to support the violent removal of the president.”

In other words, the same basic white resentment that’s now at the core of the Republican Party’s appeal is also driving some of the Republican base to violent extremes.  Among other things, this helps us understand that rather than being an attack by organized groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, the violence of January 6 was indicative of a much larger group of Republican-aligned Americans who see violence as necessary to preserve political power.  As one expert told Gellman, “This really is a new, politically violent mass movement.  This is collective political violence,” rather than the work of isolated individuals.

Gellman also makes a strong case that GOP efforts across the nation to subvert the nation’s election machinery are probably even more of a threat to American democracy than the attempts to gerrymander and disenfranchise voters.  State legislatures are going so far as to enshrine their ability to reject election results that they don’t like, a direct attack not just on majority rule but democracy itself.  But Gellman’s interviews with right-wing Republicans who’ve fully embraced the lies about a stolen election and the need to take the country back by any means necessary may be the most arresting aspect of the article.  More than anything, I was struck by the off-the-chart levels of delusion, resentment, and narcissism of these predominantly white, male Americans who have essentially decided that to save this country, they will need to destroy it.  At bottom, the idea that they have everything to lose if all Americans, regardless of skin color, race, gender, or national origin, are recognized as fully equal members of the nation, is white supremacism in all its crapitude, and cannot be reasoned with, only defeated.  Likewise, the paranoid belief that it is the left, and minorities, who are the ones threatening the nation with violence is a classic case of projection and self-serving propaganda.  The rush to justify violent resistance, to open the door to killing their purported enemies, speaks to a soul sickness that endangers us all. 

In the face of this continuing radicalization of millions of right-wing voters in favor of overturning American democracy — by violence, if they think necessary — Gellman indirectly shines an even brighter light on the Democrats’ failure to protect democracy — a failure that hardly ends with their refusal so far to attempt the obvious strengthening of our election mechanisms, like eliminating gerrymandering.  By refusing to act like we face a crisis, Democratic leaders are effectively demobilizing their base even as the GOP is radicalizing its own voters.  The Democrats are also failing to perform the basic task of alerting the public to vitally important political developments that pose catastrophic dangers to our collective good. This disparity in attitudes goes beyond maddening, into the realm of self-sabotage and fantasy levels of denial.  For instance, just this week, Greg Sargent reports at The Plum Line blog, President Biden’s team is hosting the Summit for Democracy, but appears unwilling to actually concede the depth of the U.S.’s own democracy problem and the need for actual action, rather than overoptimistic words about bringing Americans together.  If Democrats don’t understand that what they face is an inevitable and necessary confrontation with democracy’s internal enemies, they’ll never bring to bear the urgency and focus that this moment requires.

Return of the Republicans From Planet Omicron

National Public Radio has taken an in-depth look at covid mortality rates across the country, and has reached the dismaying conclusion that that there’s a direct correlation between political affiliation and one’s chances of dying in the coronavirus pandemic.  This might not seem surprising given our general understanding that the Republican Party has a higher proportion of vaccine-resistant individuals than the Democrats, but the starkness of the numbers hit like a punch in the gut:

NPR looked at deaths per 100,000 people in roughly 3,000 counties across the U.S. from May 2021, the point at which vaccinations widely became available. People living in counties that went 60% or higher for Trump in November 2020 had 2.7 times the death rates of those that went for Biden. Counties with an even higher share of the vote for Trump saw higher COVID-19 mortality rates.

In October, the reddest tenth of the country saw death rates that were six times higher than the bluest tenth, according to Charles Gaba, an independent health care analyst who's been tracking partisanship trends during the pandemic and helped to review NPR's methodology. Those numbers have dropped slightly in recent weeks, Gaba says: "It's back down to around 5.5 times higher.

Death rates in Trump-supporting counties that are between 2.7 and 5.5 times higher than those of Biden-supporting counties constitute a disastrous and shocking disparity in health outcomes, and should strengthen Democratic resolve to go on the offensive against a GOP that continues to sabotage the national fight against the covid pandemic.

As I discussed a couple weeks ago, this prevailing Republican strategy is rendered even more unforgivable by the party’s simultaneous effort to blame Joe Biden for not getting the coronavirus under control.  If this is not a clear example of a party having blood on its hands, I really don’t what is.  Republican politicians are opposing commonsense health policies, and promoting fantasies like the efficacy of herd immunity in place of vaccinations, that have helped turned this pandemic into a literal culling of Republican voters.  If the GOP is going to promote policies and fake science that result in mass death, then turn around and blame Joe Biden for the inevitable mass death, then this is a matter on which Joe Biden has not choice but to engage more strongly, both for the sake of bringing the pandemic to an end and for his own party’s political future.

Today, we have the latest indication that the GOP is only doubling down on its pro-covid polices, with The Washington Post reporting that, “Congressional Republicans are planning to ratchet up their attempts to repeal President Biden’s vaccine and testing mandates, seeking to unwind policies that the White House and top public health officials see as critical to combating the coronavirus.” In the next day, Republicans in the Senate, backed by one or two conservative Democrats, are expected to pass legislation aimed at blocked the Biden administration’s vaccine and testing mandate for large businesses. And this comes less than a week after GOP senators almost forced a government shutdown as part of their war on mandates.

Crucially, beyond the supremely important public health upside, escalating the rhetorical fight against GOP covid insanity offers two powerful political advantages.  First, it could help drive a wedge between some Republican voters and their GOP representatives; after all, how often can you truthfully say in politics that a party's officials are pursuing policies that are killing off their voters in vast numbers?  Joe Biden is the president of all Americans, and has a duty to protect citizens when their elected representatives are acting against their most basic interests, like life and health, even when those citizens didn’t vote for him. Second, it will help energize Democratic base voters by reminding them why they elected Joe Biden and a Democratic majority in the first place — to protect them from the depredations of right-wing extremists, who, among other things, refuse to embrace basic medical advice and long-standing precedent on how to battle a pandemic.

The Great Unrousing, Revisited

Last week, I shared my perception that media coverage of America’s democracy crisis seems to have been improving lately, even as the Democratic Party remains in a state of catatonic denial about the GOP’s accelerating anti-democratic extremism — a split phenomenon that, for me at least, only heightens the sense of a collective nightmare transpiring and a nation unable to wake itself up out of it.  The past several days have only brought more mixed blessings on the coverage front, as several tocsin-sounding pieces have been published by a trio of acute chroniclers of our authoritarian precipice.  

First, Jamelle Bouie describes the GOP effort to prepare the ground for Donald Trump’s return to power in 2024, linking the campaign to undermine state-level election administration with the push for one-party legislative rule in battleground states that could help the GOP win or subvert the 2022 and 2024 contests.  Crucially, Bouie captures how this whole vast effort is being conducted very much in the open — a conspiracy hiding in plain sight, to quote the title of the piece:

Increasingly untethered from any commitment to electoral democracy, large and influential parts of the Republican Party are working to put Trump back in power by any means necessary. Republicans could win without these tactics — they did so in Virginia last month — but there’s no reason to think that the party will pull itself off this road.

Every incentive driving the Republican Party, from Fox News to the former president, points away from sober engagement with the realities of American politics and toward the outrageous, the antisocial and the authoritarian.

None of this is happening behind closed doors. We are headed for a crisis of some sort. When it comes, we can be shocked that it is actually happening, but we shouldn’t be surprised.

Of everything I’ve seen lately, for me this piece best captures the unreality of our political situation — one of America’s two political parties openly making war on democracy, its roadmap to illicit power signaled loud and clear for anyone willing to hear it.

But as I also argued last week, the GOP push to seize minority power against the majority will is shadowed by a parallel crisis: that of the Democratic Party and much of the center-left to either acknowledge this slow-motion coup is happening, or to act to counter and defeat it.  On matters of the Democrats’ self-defeating tendencies as we move further and further towards an authoritarian hellscape, there’ve been few analysts better than Brian Beutler, and his latest column uses recent indications that Roe v. Wade will soon be gutted or overturned to explore the Democrats’ democracy-defense crisis.

Skeptical that a banning or near-banning of abortion would automatically redound to the Democrats’ electoral benefit, Beutler digs into the contradictions at the heart of the party’s apparent strategy to defend a right that a great many of its voters believe is non-negotiable.  As he sees it, even aggressive efforts by the Democrats to defend abortion rights would run up against a Republican opposition whose powers to thwart the Democrats are extremely strong, if not impregnable, because of the way the GOP has already made itself able to withstand majority opinion due to its various anti-democratic maneuvers.  The Democrats, on the other hand, are in a best-case scenario left telling their voters to “simply” vote for Democrats in greater numbers than ever in 2022 and beyond, when the Democrats are simultaneously unwilling or unable to pass legislation that would undo voter suppression and gerrymandering that blocks the Democrats from translating these votes into actual congressional seats and power.  (An additional enormous downside for Democrats being unable to defend their voters’ interests, despite the best efforts of these very voters, is that it can lead to demoralization among the party’s base, making it even harder for Democrats to win the decisive popular vote margins they would need to possibly overcome Republican subterfuge).

So why won’t the Democratic leadership do what they need to do not just to defend American democracy, but to defend themselves from being relegated to oblivion, like the domestic political equivalent of AFC Richmond?  Beutler describes a party that prefers to “[float] above the fray,” an approach that “doesn’t work because it’s incongruent to the realities staring them in the face. It’s how you wind up responding to a coup attempt with an infrastructure bill while the fascists convince more voters that you’re the real threat to democracy.”

But though he doesn’t sound optimistic that this will likely change, Beutler makes a point that had been floating in the back of my own mind recently: “The only nice thing about staring doom in the face is it focuses the mind. Democratic leaders are clearly not prepared to accept what I wrote above as their fate today, but the sooner they do, the sooner they might get their act together, if only to save themselves. As I’ve written before, there’s still the tiniest of openings for them to do what currently seems impossible, and the only reason to think they might is that they must.”  I actually believe this is a stronger incentive than Beutler may think, insofar as if politicians are about anything, it is their own political survival.  But more than this, I also think that we can’t look at Democratic politicians’ incentives to take action in isolation.  It may be delusional, but I do think that grassroots pressure can make a decisive difference here.  This is particularly true because on something like abortion, as with many other issues, the otherwise abstract stakes of “defending democracy” are given precise, urgent dimension.  If enough of the Democratic base sees that the Democrats will only be able to defend abortion rights if democracy-strengthening legislation gets passed, and what’s stopping that is the filibuster, then I can promise you that you’re going to have a hell of a lot more people calling their senators demanding that the filibuster be reformed (whether that would be enough to catalyze change is admittedly another question — and yes, I realize that a single senator (cough cough, Joe Manchin!) could still derail filibuster reform).  Indeed, the ability of actual voters to mobilize and exert pressure on their elected representatives is going to be a key part of any revitalization of American democracy, above and beyond the question of whether Democratic officials choose to do what’s necessary to defend the interests of their constituents.

What gives me a bit of optimism these days is that the majority of the American people and the Democratic Party have literally not yet begun to fight, to coin a phrase.  The reality is that the American majority is in the process of having the power of its votes dissipated and nullified by an increasingly fanatical right-wing movement whose hero is a sociopath, and whose vision for women is subservience, for non-white Americans is degradation, and for the planet is exploitation to the point of collective suicide.  I believe part of the Democrats’ problem is the failure to articulate a countervailing, egalitarian, life-affirming vision for America — but the good news is that such a vision already exists in large part, and much of the work needed to get us out of this mess revolves around articulating that vision and how Democrats and progressives can instantiate it through policy and good governance.

Conversely, the right may be energized right now, but its anti-democratic animus ultimately comes from a place of fear and weakness, not strength.  The historian Thomas Zimmer has a great Twitter thread that touches on this important, and under-discussed, aspect of our present crisis:

The silver lining is that the political order the Right prefers no longer has majority support - which is exactly why conservatives are exploring avenues to erect authoritarian minority rule.  That’s the paradox at the heart of the political situation right now: Yes, democracy is in grave danger – but not because it’s weakened recently, but because it’s actually gotten stronger, or to be more precise: closer to the promise of multiracial, pluralistic democracy.  The reactionary counter-mobilization from the Right is not coming from a place of strength – conservatives are radicalizing because they feel their backs against the wall, convinced to be confronted with near-overwhelming forces of liberalism, leftism, wokeism.

Zimmer’s reference to “the paradox at the heart of the political situation” really resonates for me, and gets at the frustrations and outrage I keep trying to articulate myself: it’s maddening for Democrats and other defenders of democracy to be playing defense right now, when those who oppose it are essentially lashing out because they know they can no longer win under democracy’ rules.  To not make this basic insight central to how the Democratic Party talks about the need to defend democracy, and to promote its many policies that would do so (including the stalled-out voting rights acts and the economically transformative Build Back Better Act) continues to strike me as a completely unnecessary act of self-sabotage, and a shying away from a necessary confrontation with an illegitimate, anti-democratic movement that seeks to pervert the country in its own frightened, delusional image.

When Will Democrats Finally Rouse Themselves to Defend Democracy?

The biggest story in American politics for the last several years has been the Republican Party’s increasing turn to authoritarian politics.  The GOP’s movement toward outright opposition to democracy had been evident for years, in its campaigns of extreme gerrymandering and voter suppression and efforts to stack the courts with right-wing judges who might insulate GOP priorities from majority will, but the Trump presidency fully catalyzed the shift.  To the GOP’s existing tendencies, Trump fused a classic model of the authoritarian strongman leader around whom the party could rally.  Donald Trump believed in this vision so much, in fact, that he even attempted a coup in his remaining months in power, culminating in the violence of January 6.

With the majority of GOP leaders and rank and file embracing the Big Lie that Democrats stole the presidency from Trump, the party has prioritized a raft of state-level legislation and rhetoric designed to subvert future elections and cement permanent Republican power.  On the gerrymandering front, The New York Times summarizes the situation thus: “In Texas, North Carolina, Ohio and Georgia, Republican state lawmakers have either created supermajorities capable of overriding a governor’s veto or whittled down competitive districts so significantly that Republicans’ advantage is virtually impenetrable — leaving voters in narrowly divided states powerless to change the leadership of their legislatures.”  If voters cannot change their leaders, even if a majority vote for the opposition party, then we cannot say that those voters are living in a democracy.  And when you add atop this voter suppression measures aimed specifically at traditionally Democratic constituencies like African-Americans and students, the anti-democratic vise grip becomes even more of a stranglehold.

Alongside this, Republicans who lie that the 2020 election was stolen are now taking over election boards around the country.  This chilling Washington Post report captures the dark spirit of their effort, which is pretty clearly aimed at putting in place a body of Trumpist apparatchiks who will throw out future ballots that don’t support their preferred candidates.  The previous chair of the Michigan GOP tells the Post that, “This is a great big flashing red warning sign.  The officials who fulfilled their legal duty after the last election are now being replaced by people who are pledging to throw a wrench in the gears of the next election. It tells you that they are planning nothing but chaos and that they have a strategy to disrupt the certification of the next election.”  The head of a nonpartisan voting group neatly summarizes the situation: “Having election deniers run elections is like having arsonists take over the fire department.”

Parallel to efforts to block majority rule and fair elections, the GOP has begun to incorporate threats of violence and intimidation into its politics.  The New York Times reports that:

From congressional offices to community meeting rooms, threats of violence are becoming commonplace among a significant segment of the Republican Party. Ten months after rioters attacked the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, and after four years of a president who often spoke in violent terms about his adversaries, right-wing Republicans are talking more openly and frequently about the use of force as justifiable in opposition to those who dislodged him from power.

GOP leaders signal their comfort with these tactics by their silence, and by refusing to condemn the perpetrators — including Representative Paul Gosar, who just weeks ago tweeted violent images depicting a cartoon version of himself killing Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and threatening to do the same to President Joe Biden.  As the Times notes, the threats have already had concrete effects, with literally hundreds of election workers and health officials leaving county and states posts over the past year.  The GOP has no incentive to stop employing and condoning these tactics because they are working — they are inciting the GOP base to greater and greater rage and bloodlust, and driving good people out of public service, to be replaced by partisan hacks who will serve the party’s will in place of the public interest.

Taken together, these GOP efforts aimed at the basic foundations of our democracy arguably constitute a slow-rolling coup that is slowly but surely accelerating.  Throw in the GOP’s opposition to common-sense measures to end the pandemic, such as its fight against vaccine mandates, and what comes into view is a party that is essentially war with American democracy and society in the pursuit of power and dominance. 

* * *

But alongside the crisis of Republican authoritarianism, we’re experiencing an intertwined, parallel crisis that becomes more inexcusable and infuriating by the day: the general refusal of Democratic Party leaders and elected officials to explicitly confront the GOP’s descent into anti-democratic madness.  This Democratic failure encompasses the party’s inability to act legislatively against the GOP assault — such as by passing vitally important voting rights legislation that might undo the GOP’s severe gerrymandering and voter suppression efforts — but is not limited to the lack of substantive action.  Just as damningly, the Democrats are failing to describe to the public and to the media the nature of the GOP threat, or to rally decent Americans into fervent opposition against this anti-democratic juggernaut.  By falling so very short on both the substantive and rhetorical fronts, they are helping create the very political conditions that allow the GOP’s assault on democracy to thrive.  When the Republican Party enacts policies and endorses violent rhetoric without its opposition adequately responding, the Democrats tacitly help to normalize the GOP’s tactics and strategies as fair play in our democratic system, even when those tactics and strategies are aimed at destroying our democracy.

The fact of the matter is that we are already well past the point when promotion of the norms and structures of democracy, and a full-throated fight against democracy’s domestic enemies, should have shot to the top of the Democratic agenda.  While protecting democracy was a major theme of the Democrats’ anti-Trump rhetoric during his administration — after all, the appeal to vote for Democrats to stop the depredations of a want-to-be strongman were key to their 2018 and 2020 wins — this strategy has failed to evolve into legislation to back it up, or to evolve to encompass the radicalized GOP in its indictment.

It is somewhat unbelievable that this needs to be said, but also a perfect encapsulation of the Democrats’ mind-boggling torpor: President Trump attempted to stage a coup against the American government, culminating in an assault on the Capitol; in the wake of the coup attempt, not only did the great majority of Republican senators and representatives oppose efforts to impeach and convict the president for his attempted violent overthrow of American democracy, but have since then coalesced into a near-uniform embrace of the contention that Democrats stole the presidency from Trump.  And yet, the Democrats have so far failed to make this a central talking point for why Americans should vote for them instead of Republicans.  They’ve also failed to prioritize passing laws that might counter not only GOP gerrymandering, but the Republicans’ multi-layered effort to gum up and subvert the conduct of elections themselves, not to mention ensure that those who engage in violent political intimidation are legally sanctioned.  Beyond this, where are the new laws that would ensure that the corruption and self-dealing of another president like Donald Trump (or, god forbid, another Trump presidency) could never happen again?

Somewhat ironically, the sense of crisis has only been deepened by recent efforts by the media to sound the alarm, such as in the articles I noted above.  In part, this is because the detailed reporting of the Republican anti-democratic efforts portrays more fully than ever a breathtakingly brazen and multi-faceted effort to gain power without majority support.  But in turn, such a portrayal only further highlights the Democrats’ relative lack not only of urgency, but of basic strategy and commitment to defeating the GOP onslaught.  For me, it’s also driven home the absolute necessity of the Democrats taking the initiative in defense of democracy — because the reporting and other media analysis, as good as some of it is, cannot adequately convey the urgency and arouse the mass indignation that Democratic politicians can and must.  It is one thing for the The New York Times to report that several U.S. states are now only democracies in name only; it is another thing entirely for one of the United States’ two major political parties to declare that the GOP is attacking our right to govern ourselves in service of a twisted vision of plutocratic power, white supremacy, and a perverted, militant Christianism.

The various threads of the GOP’s anti-democratic strategy are mutually reinforcing, making it essential that Democratic politicians pull them together to make a case against GOP authoritarianism and for supporting a pro-democracy Democratic Party, rather than relying on the media to do so for them.  Voter suppression makes gerrymandering more effective; violent threats mean that not just Democrats but moderate Republicans are intimidated out of public office, or from joining public demonstrations that might show mass opposition to GOP policies and governance.

Again, it is amazing to me that the Democrats would have any hesitation on this point, or that anyone would need to push their leadership to action.  The GOP is basically working to ensure that the votes of most Americans essentially don’t count, so that a Republican minority can take power, and is increasingly comfortable with inciting violence to get its way — the very definition, to put it mildly, of an extremely unpopular political position.  The GOP is opposed to America, so much so that they can’t really even renounce the coup that the former president attempted!  They hate America so much, they’re still trying to make that coup happen by a slow-motion insurrection against U.S. democracy!  Do the Democrats really think that defending democracy against its domestic enemies is some sort of controversial or high-risk political stance? And this is just to speak of the situation in purely political terms, which of course is not nearly the case.  Not only do Democrats have an overwhelming need to call out and oppose GOP authoritarianism for the sake of the party’s survival and serving its voters, the party has a responsibility, equal if not even more pressing, to defend American democracy for its own sake.

I don’t have a comprehensive theory of why Democrats seem to be choking in this moment, although the most charitable explanations include elements of shock, intimidation, and disbelief at how quickly and thoroughly the GOP has turned into an authoritarian party.  Another major reason is that the Democrats, starting from the Biden administration on down, continue to prize the appearance of bipartisanship as a central party goal.  As Jeet Heer puts it, “Biden failed to make the link between Trump and the party’s increasing extremism in the 2020 election. Like Hillary Clinton before him, he tried to distinguish between the toxic Trump and a redeemable GOP. But this sop to moderate Republicans effectively prevents Democrats from describing what’s actually happening.”

But the GOP is only growing more radicalized as the months pass, giving the lie to simplistic notions that “the fever will break” or that moderates will rebel and take back the party.  Extremism now feeds extremism within the GOP, and the only way it will stop is for another party to stop it.  As has been pointed out elsewhere, the Republican strategy is working for them — they are gaining impregnable power and intimidating opponents — without paying any political price.  But of course they’re not paying any political price, because the Democrats, again for reasons not entirely clear to me, have chosen not to make an actual assault on American government, up to and including a coup attempt by a Republican president, a central issue in their case for why American should support them and reject Republicans. What will it take to move the Democrats?

The Republicans From Planet Omicron

Last week, The New York Times published an article highlighting Republican efforts to blame President Biden for the persistence of the covid pandemic while opposing the very measures that could bring this crisis to an end.  To its credit, the piece acknowledges the basic cognitive dissonance of the GOP’s attacks, but fails to reach the obvious and logical conclusion: that the GOP is actively undermining the fight against covid as a way to sabotage the Biden presidency and win back political power.  That is, the GOP strategy is not absurd, but sinister and murderous.  Instead, the article frames GOP criticism as founded in good-faith disputes about how best to fight the coronavirus, when in fact Republicans advocate approaches to ending the pandemic that have no basis in either science or basic logic.

We need look no further than the final year of the Trump administration for proof that the party’s leaders are comfortable with inflicting mass death and suffering on the American people in the name of preserving their political fortunes.  President Trump openly embarked on a strategy of downplaying the threat and damage of the coronavirus out of a belief that doing so would prevent the sort of sharp economic downturn that could harm his re-election chances.  This strategy received broad support from GOP elected officials, and so we were treated to a barrage of propaganda, originating in the White House but echoed by his political allies, that American workers must sacrifice their health and their lives in order to keep the economy humming along.  All this in the pre-vaccine era, when masks and social distancing were our sole protections.  This cynical strategy was our reality, and is a matter of public record. 

With a Democrat in the White House, the script has flipped, but the immorality remains the same.  Now, a primary Republican goal is to prevent an economic comeback, and key to that is prolonging the pandemic.  The Times notes that the GOP has made this obvious connection between the health of the economy and the state of the pandemic: “Republican strategists believe Mr. Biden’s approval ratings on the economy — the key to his party’s prospects in next year’s midterm elections — cannot improve until voters are more satisfied with his performance on the pandemic.”  And so we have Republicans in Congress and state houses continuing to spout the familiar nonsense about masking and vaccine mandates — but this time, not in the name of pretending the pandemic is no big thing, but to help ensure America’s economic recovery is hobbled as much as possible.

Further evidence that the motivations for doing so are deeper than just reflecting mistaken arguments about “freedom” generated by the Republican base is that GOP politicians continue to oppose vaccine mandates and bleat on about natural herd immunity despite the clear evidence that vaccination opposition is killing and sickening Republican voters in unconscionable numbers.  The Times reports that, “The most Republican counties have 2.78 times as many new cases than the most Democratic counties, down from three times as many a month ago [. . .] The death rate in those Republican counties is nearly six times as high as the death rate in the Democratic counties.”  The links to vaccine resistance are clear: two months ago, “90 percent of adult Democrats had been vaccinated, compared with 58 percent of adult Republicans."  A force more powerful than protecting its own constituents is at play here — the desire to destroy a Democratic presidency at all costs.

But even if you disagree with this assessment (and if you’re not persuaded, I would encourage you to read Brian Beutler’s powerful indictment of the GOP on this front from mid-summer, as well as Amanda Marcotte’s more recent piece making a similar case), if you can’t bring yourself to believe such cold-blooded calculation by the GOP, I would argue that the necessary Democratic response remains the same: to publicly identify GOP obstructionism as the single largest obstacle to America getting free of a pandemic that is ravaging the public health and undermining the economy with high inflation and uncertainty.  It is somewhat heartening that the Times got responses from the White House along these lines, but of course this has not nearly been a consistent, emphatic line from the Biden administration in the way it needs to be.

Now, though, with the emergence of the omicron variant and escalated GOP efforts to blame Biden for the pandemic, it’s political folly as well as health policy malpractice not to up the Democrats’ refutation and denunciation of Republican pro-covid policies.  As with other matters where the Democrats have ceded the initiative to the GOP, this is clearly a matter of great political advantage and moral high ground for the Democratic Party.  Every day, more and more people receive vaccinations, and the anti-vax message becomes increasingly revealed as outlandish and extreme.  The GOP finds itself standing on thinner and thinner ice, its anti-vax attitudes a sign of desperation as well as cruelty.

It’s understandable that Biden and Democrats wouldn’t want to further politicize the covid response in ways that threaten our ability to get more people vaccinated, or that could reinforce the idea that it’s a stamp of political resistance among the right to defy vaccine recommendations and mandates.  But this attitude doesn’t make a lot of sense when the GOP is actively trying to further politicize the issue (and again, this is putting aside the case that the GOP is not just politicizing but outright attempting to sabotage the covid fight).  Democrats can’t simply assume that most Americans will know the GOP is full of shit and malice.  Our efforts to get past the pandemic and get the economy going full steam are being actively sabotaged by the GOP — but even if the Democrats do not want to call it sabotage, they have a profound duty to push back on the GOP’s willingness to propagate junk science and magical thinking.  This is a legitimate political issue, on which the GOP is extremely vulnerable, and it would be foolish on both fronts — public health and political self-interest — not to hammer the GOP’s pro-covid policies and rhetoric. Alongside this, Biden surely needs to keep pushing on the vaccination front — among other things, it’s far past time to mandate vaccinations for U.S. air travel.

I will agree with the Republicans on one thing — the American people will definitely, and rightly, judge Joe Biden on whether or not he ends the pandemic, and that he and the Democrats will suffer mightily at the polls if they judge his work a failure.  President Biden has a fundamental responsibility to defend the American people against a pandemic that constitutes a threat to our lives and livelihoods; and as the omicron variant demonstrates, the coronavirus is not yet done with us.   When the opposition party is actively opposing the most basic, commonsense measures that will get us out of this crisis — is indeed arguably the primary reason why we are still caught up in this pandemic — then defense of the United States necessarily involves a full-throated denunciation of the anti-science, pro-covid policies of the GOP.  Make the GOP the face of the extreme anti-vax resistance, and Biden can both protect America and help remind people why the country voted the Democrats into power at this perilous time.

Democrats Need to Go on Offense Against GOP Racism and White Nationalism

One rule I’ve tried to follow in sharing my thoughts about American politics is a basic humility — by exposing my reasoning, not just my opinions, I’m happy to let my contradictions, bad assumptions, and hasty conclusions hang out for all to see.

That said, there are a few things I feel confident in proclaiming without too many reservations.  One of those is: in politics, it’s generally a foolish thing not to use the biggest tools available to defeat your opponents.  And it’s the Democratic Party’s violation of what should be an obvious principle that’s got me rending my hair and returning again and again to certain notions.

By my reckoning, over the last five years, the GOP has engaged in such a mix of anti-democratic politics, white supremacist behavior, and deadly incompetence that a case can and should be made for driving it out of existence, at least in its current incarnation, as one of America’s two major political parties.  What remains mind-boggling to me is that the Democratic Party, as a whole, still refuses to conduct its political campaigns and messaging to highlight the catastrophic failures and authoritarian intent of the Republican Party.  Here is a non-exhaustive indictment:

  • Republican legislatures around the country are passing laws to ensure that Democratic-leaning voters are disenfranchised and disempowered, with particular aim taken at minority voters.  Even as I write this, Republican politicians and pundits continue to claim with zero evidence that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump, using it to justify an interlocking series of voter restrictions, gerrymandering, and subversion of electoral machinery to permanently lock Democrats out of power in state after state, and with a goal of taking federal power in 2022 and 2024 even if rejected by a majority of voters.  What should we call this but a party that no longer believes in democracy and majority rule?

  • GOP politicians continue to deny the severity or even existence of human-caused climate change, in the process crippling not just America’s but all of humanity’s future out of a deadly dedication to the profits of fossil fuel companies and an indifference to the natural world that makes human flourishing possible.  What should we call this but a party that no longer believes not just in science but reality itself?

  • GOP leaders continue to denounce and defy basic medical advice on fighting the covid pandemic, opposing not just vaccine mandates that could end this pandemic, but even the most basic measures like the wearing of masks in public to prevent transmission of a disease that has already killed more than 750,000 in the country.  What should we call this but a party that fails to value human life?

  • Republican strategists aim to make the teaching of “critical race theory” in public schools a major issue in future elections, even as CRT is not actually taught in public schools, but serves as a convenient stand-in for white Americans’ fears about losing status and power in a diversifying America.   Alongside attempts to nullify the votes of African-American and other minorities at the state level, what should we call this but a party that puts white supremacism into action?

  • Republican politicians decry the supposed shiftlessness of American workers who ask for a living wage and better prospects, and continue a war on unions and worker power that makes a mockery of the party’s claims to represent blue collar Americans.  What should we call this but a party that hates American workers?

Again and again, the common thread is a tendency towards extremism in the name of greed, racism, and power, with a simultaneous effort to hide and deflect perceptions of this extremism.  A central task of Democrats should be to expose this extremism and deny the GOP the ability to use it to motivate base voters while also peeling off independents and supercharging Democratic constituencies.  I cannot overemphasize that this is not a case of slurring the GOP, or making stuff up.  It is about hammering home basic facts about the party.

Let me focus on one front that has become newly salient, in the wake of the Democrats’ disappointing loss in the Virginia governor’s race.  Whatever role it did or did not play in Glenn Youngkin’s victory, some Republican strategists believe that the candidate’s attacks on critical race theory were key to his success, and aim to make appeals to “parental rights” a part of their 2022 congressional strategy.  Based on the fact of the Democrats’ losses in the state, it also seems that the Democrats are arguably vulnerable on this front.

But even if it turns out that the anti-CRT rhetoric didn’t push the GOP over the top in the Virginia race, I think we need to turn the critique around, and ask: How was it possible that the Democratic candidate, Terry McAuliffe, wasn’t able to use the GOP’s cloaked appeals to white supremacism to clean the floor with his opponent?  From what I’ve seen, the answer is that the McAuliffe camp did not take the threat seriously enough, or at least not soon enough, and was not willing to make explicit the white supremacism that Youngkin employed to rile up the Republican right-wing base.

With the Virginia race in the rearview mirror, though, we are seeing tentative evidence that whatever balance Youngkin was able to maintain — energizing the Trump base with anti-CRT language while holding on to plausible deniability for more moderate voters that he really, truly was only interested in kids getting a quality education — will be increasingly difficult for other Republican candidates going forward.  Because it turns out that lots of Republicans are not nearly as disciplined at Youngkin, and are happy to acknowledge what should be obvious to any but the most naive political observers — that Republicans have been using opposition to “critical race theory” (which, again, is not actually taught in elementary and high schools) as a way to say that they don’t think American schoolchildren shouldn’t be taught that racism is bad — which, in turn, is a roundabout way of saying to voters that they don’t think that racism itself is bad, and that white supremacism should rightly be the political and social order of the nation.

This article from The Washington Post takes the Republican bad faith at face value, suggesting that there’s a slippery slope from anti-CRT rhetoric to outright opposing teaching about racism in schools, but this reverses the logical order — opposing CRT was from the start a way to oppose the teaching of racism, and let’s face it, the importance of civil rights, in schools.  What is actually happening now, and as the Post story documents well, is that the metaphorical Klan mask is coming off, and is being replaced by an actual Klan mask, as multiple Republican politicians and school board members are now feeling free to make clear their opposition is not to the academic theory of CRT, but indeed to any teaching of America’s racist past and the way this past has warped the present.  And so it was inevitable that novels by the great Tony Morrison would now be in their sights, the supposed aspersions of CRT meant to tar and feather her artistic efforts to explicate the legacy of slavery in such novels as Beloved and The Bluest Eye.  Also not surprisingly, the offensive against improper fiction has grown to encompass objections to books that involve LGBTQ themes; some enthusiastic board members in one Virginia county are ready to go to the logical end of this witch hunt, and have proposed burning the offending books to purge the schools and nation of their influence.  The extremity of Republican solutions betrays the extremity of Republican beliefs.  (Conversely, Democratic leaders who don’t think they can win a fight against book burning probably should not be Democratic leaders.)

The forces which the GOP has encouraged with its fig leaf of anti-CRT talk are too primal, too full of hatred, not to make themselves more fully known, to erupt in geysers of open racism.  But many GOP candidates, particularly those for national office, are likely to continue to use the anti-CRT language, even as it’s clear that it’s a stalking horse for banning the teaching of any racial issues in schools.  This requires the Democratic Party to explicitly and unceasingly explain to the American people what the GOP means when they talk about CRT, and to enlist in their service the many GOP politicos who are not so disciplined in their messaging as evidence.  Democrats should not hesitate to use the bogus anti-CRT offensive as an opening to talk about the white supremacism that energizes and motivates much of the modern Republican Party.  What the GOP sees as a major strength, the Democrats must work to turn into a deadly weakness. I would even go a step further — I think it would be the right thing for Democrats to pick fights with Republicans over teaching about civil rights and the legacy of slavery in American schools, on the principle that no complete civic education is possible without teaching these topics.

But as I’ve said before, the flip side to critiquing such Republican attitudes is just as important.  Democrats must hammer home a positive vision for an equitable, just America in which all Americans, of all races, are treated as full members of our national community; that learning about our imperfections makes us better able to overcome them; that the use of racial hatred to divide us weakens the entire nation, makes us less than the sum of our parts, and only serves democracy’s enemies.

What strikes me as bizarre is that Democrats might be in any way flummoxed by the GOP’s use of racist strategies to try to win elections, whether in Virginia or in 2022 and beyond.  The blueprint Donald Trump provided was that by making white identity politics the central appeal of the Republican Party, the GOP could actually win the presidency through the perversions of the electoral college, even with a minority of voter support.  Likewise, he reinforced the GOP’s trend toward gerrymandering and suppressing votes so that the party can win state elections on a permanent basis, and have a good chance of winning congressional power even if it comes up millions of votes short.  For any Democrats to think that fighting for racial equality is any way a side issue, or a subject that can be ducked or deferred, amounts to an unforgivable form of magical thinking.  There will be no winning the democracy fight without winning the fight against white supremacism.  And with the GOP descending into greater and greater extremism on matters of race and its vision for America’s future, the path forward is open for a Democratic Party willing not just to beat the Republican Party, but to discredit the GOP as a national political force.