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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Sid Shniad
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2011 11:12 AM
Subject: The End of New Deal Liberalism | The Nation


http://www.thenation.com/article/157511/end-new-deal-liberalism?page=full


The Nation
January 5, 2011 


The End of New Deal Liberalism

Society faces dreadful prospects and profound transformation. When both
parties are aligned with corporate power, who will stand up for the people?
Who will protect them from the insatiable appetites of capitalist enterprise
and help them get through the hard passage ahead? One thing we know for sure
from history: there is no natural limit to what capitalism will seek in
terms of power and profit. If government does not stand up and apply the
brakes, society is defenseless.


William Greider 


We have reached a pivotal moment in government and politics, and it feels
like the last, groaning spasms of New Deal liberalism. When the party of
activist government, faced with an epic crisis, will not use government's
extensive powers to reverse the economic disorders and heal deepening social
deterioration, then it must be the end of the line for the governing
ideology inherited from Roosevelt, Truman and Johnson.

Political events of the past two years have delivered a more profound and
devastating message: American democracy has been conclusively conquered by
American capitalism. Government has been disabled or captured by the
formidable powers of private enterprise and concentrated wealth.
Self-governing rights that representative democracy conferred on citizens
are now usurped by the overbearing demands of corporate and financial
interests. Collectively, the corporate sector has its arms around both
political parties, the financing of political careers, the production of the
policy agendas and propaganda of influential think tanks, and control of
most major media.

What the capitalist system wants is more—more wealth, more freedom to do
whatever it wishes. This has always been its instinct, unless government
intervened to stop it. The objective now is to destroy any remaining forms
of government interference, except of course for business subsidies and
protections. Many elected representatives are implicitly enlisted in the
cause.

A lot of Americans seem to know this; at least they sense that the
structural reality of government and politics is not on their side. When the
choice comes down to society or capitalism, society regularly loses. First
attention is devoted to the economic priorities of the largest, most
powerful institutions of business and finance. The bias comes naturally to
Republicans, the party of money and private enterprise, but on the big
structural questions business-first also defines Democrats, formerly the
party of working people. Despite partisan rhetoric, the two parties are more
alike than they acknowledge.

In these terms, the administration of Barack Obama has been a crushing
disappointment for those of us who hoped he would be different. It turns out
Obama is a more conventional and limited politician than advertised, more
right-of-center than his soaring rhetoric suggested. Most Congressional
Democrats, likewise, proved weak and incoherent, unreliable defenders of
their supposed values or most loyal constituencies. They call it pragmatism.
I call it surrender.

Obama's maladroit tax compromise with Republicans was more destructive than
creative. He acceded to the trickle-down doctrine of regressive taxation and
skipped lightly over the fact that he was contributing further to stark
injustices. Ordinary Americans will again be made to pay, one way or
another, for the damage others did to society. Obama agrees that this is
offensive but argues, This is politics, get over it. His brand of realism
teaches people to disregard what he says. Look instead at what he does.

With overwhelming majorities in Congress and economic crisis tearing up the
country in 2009, incumbent Democrats opted for self-protection first, party
principles later. Their Senate leaders allowed naysayers to determine the
lowest common denominator for reform—halfway measures designed not to overly
disturb powerful corporate-financial interests, and therefore not able to
repair the social destruction those interests had wrought. Senate Democrats
say they didn't have the votes. Imagine what Mitch McConnell would have done
if he were their leader: Take no prisoners. Force party dissenters to get in
line and punish those who don't. Block even the most pedestrian opposition
proposals.

Democrats are not used to governing aggressively. They haven't done so for
decades, and they may no longer believe in it. For many years, incumbent
Democrats survived by managing a precarious straddle between the forces of
organized money and the disorganized people they claim to represent. The
split was usually lopsided in favor of the money guys, but one could believe
that the reform spirit would come alive once they were back in power with a
Democratic president. That wishful assumption is now defunct.

Obama's timid economic strategy can be described as successful only if the
standard of success is robust corporate profits, rising stock prices and the
notorious year-end bonuses of Wall Street. Again and again, Obama hesitated
to take the bolder steps that would have made differences in social
conditions. Now it is clear that the bleeding afflictions experienced by the
overwhelming majority of citizens will not be substantively addressed
because Democrats, both president and Congress, have chosen to collaborate
in the conservative cause of deficit reduction: cut spending, shrink
government, block any healing initiatives that cost real money.

Republicans, armed with strong conviction, are resurgent with what amounts
to ideological nihilism. Leave aside their obvious hypocrisies on fiscal
rectitude and free markets. Their single-minded objective is to destroy what
remains of government's capacity to intervene in or restrain the private
sector on behalf of the common welfare. Many of government's old tools and
programs are already gone, gutted by deregulation, crippled by corporate
capture of the regulatory agencies originally intended to curb
private-sector abuses and starved by inadequate funding. The right wants
smaller government for the people, but not for corporate capitalism. It will
fight to preserve the protections, privileges and subsidies that flow to the
private sector.

* * *

Once again, Republicans are mounting an assault on liberalism's crown jewel,
Social Security, only this time they might succeed, because the Democratic
president is collaborating with them. The deficit hysteria aimed at Social
Security is fraudulent (as Obama's own experts acknowledge), but the
president has already gravely weakened the program's solvency with his
payroll-tax holiday, which undercuts financing for future benefits. Obama
promises the gimmick won't be repeated, but if employment is still weak a
year from now, he may well cave. The GOP will accuse him of damaging the
economy by approving a "tax increase" on all workers. Senate Democrats are
preparing their own proposal to cut Social Security as a counter to the
GOP's extreme version. In the end, they can split the difference and
celebrate another great compromise.

This is capitulation posing as moderation. Obama has set himself up to make
many more "compromises" in the coming months; each time, he will doubtless
use the left as a convenient foil. Disparaging "purist" liberals is his way
of assuring so-called independents that he stood up to the allegedly far-out
demands of his own electoral base. This is a ludicrous ploy, given the
weakness of the left. It cynically assumes ordinary people not engaged in
politics are too dim to grasp what he's doing. I suspect Obama is mistaken.
I asked an old friend what she makes of the current mess in Washington.
"Whatever the issue, the rich guys win," she responded. Lots of people
understand this—it is the essence of the country's historic predicament.

To get a rough glimpse of what the corporate state looks like, study the
Federal Reserve's list of banking, finance and business firms that received
the $3.3 trillion the central bank dispensed in low-interest loans during
the financial crisis (this valuable information is revealed only because
reform legislators like Senator Bernie Sanders fought for disclosure). If
you were not on the list of recipients, you know your place in this new
order.

The power shift did not start with Obama, but his tenure confirms and
completes it. The corporates began their systematic drive to dismantle
liberal governance back in the 1970s, and the Democratic Party was soon
trying to appease them, its retreat whipped along by Ronald Reagan's popular
appeal and top-down tax cutting. So long as Democrats were out of power,
they could continue to stand up for liberal objectives and assail the
destructive behavior of business and finance (though their rhetoric was more
consistent than their voting record). Once back in control of government,
they lowered their voices and sued for peace. Beholden to corporate America
for campaign contributions, the Democrats cut deals with banks and
businesses and usually gave them what they demanded, so corporate interests
would not veto progressive legislation.

Obama has been distinctively candid about this. He admires the "savvy
businessmen" atop the pinnacle of corporate power. He seeks "partnership"
with them. The old economic conflicts, like labor versus capital, are
regarded as passé by the "new Democrats" now governing. The business of
America is business. Government should act as steward and servant, not
master.

This deferential attitude is reflected in all of Obama's major reform
legislation, not to mention in the people he brought into government. In the
financial rescue, Obama, like George W. Bush before him, funneled billions
to the troubled bankers without demanding any public obligations in return.
On healthcare, he cut deals with insurance and drug companies and played
cute by allowing the public option, which would have provided real
competition to healthcare monopolists, to be killed. On financial reform,
Obama's Treasury lieutenants and a majority of the Congressional Dems killed
off the most important measures, which would have cut Wall Street megabanks
down to tolerable size.

Society faces dreadful prospects and profound transformation. When both
parties are aligned with corporate power, who will stand up for the people?
Who will protect them from the insatiable appetites of capitalist enterprise
and help them get through the hard passage ahead? One thing we know for sure
from history: there is no natural limit to what capitalism will seek in
terms of power and profit. If government does not stand up and apply the
brakes, society is defenseless.

Strangely enough, this new reality brings us back to the future, posing
fundamental questions about the relationship between capitalism and
democracy that citizens and reformers asked 100 years ago. Only this time,
the nation is no longer an ascendant economic power. It faces hard
adjustments as general prosperity recedes and the broad middle class that
labor and liberalism helped create is breaking apart.

My bleak analysis is not the end of the story. Change is hard to visualize
now, given the awesome power of the status quo and the collapse of
once-trusted political institutions. But change will come, for better or
worse. One key dynamic of the twentieth century was the long-running contest
for dominance between democracy and capitalism. The balance of power shifted
back and forth several times, driven by two basic forces that neither
corporate lobbyists nor timid politicians could control: the calamitous
events that disrupted the social order, such as war and depression, and the
power of citizens mobilized in reaction to those events. In those terms,
both political parties are still highly vulnerable—as twentieth-century
history repeatedly demonstrated, society cannot survive the burdens of an
unfettered corporate order.

People are given different ideological labels, but Americans are not as
opposed to "big government" as facile generalizations suggest. On many
issues, there is overwhelming consensus that media and pundits ignore (check
the polls, if you doubt this). Americans of all ages will fight to defend
social protections—Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, among others.
People are skeptical to hostile about the excessive power of corporations.
People want government to be more aggressive in many areas—like sending some
of the financial malefactors to prison.

One vivid example was the angry citizen at a town hall meeting who shouted
at his Congressman: "Keep your government hands off my Medicare!" I heard a
grassroots leader on the radio explain that basically the Tea Party people
"want government that works for them." Don't we all? In the next few years,
both parties will try to define this sentiment. If they adhere to the
corporate agenda, they are bound to get in trouble, and the ranks of
insurgent citizens will grow. Nobody can know where popular rebellion might
lead, right or left, but my own stubborn optimism hangs by that thread.

Whatever people on the left may call themselves, they have a special burden
in this situation because they are deeply committed to the idea that
government should be the trustworthy agent of the many, not the powerful
few. Many of us believe further (as the socialists taught) that the economy
should serve the people, not the other way around.

The current crisis requires people to go back to their roots and re-examine
their convictions—now that they can no longer count automatically on the
helping hand of government or the Democratic Party. Obama's unfortunate
"hostage" metaphor led Saturday Night Live to joke that the president was
himself experiencing the "Stockholm syndrome"—identifying with his
conservative captors. Many progressive groups, including organized labor,
suffer a similar dependency. They will not be able to think clearly about
the future of the country until they get greater distance from the
Democratic Party.

I suggest three steps for progressives to recover an influential role in
politics. First, develop a guerrilla sensibility that recognizes the
weakness of the left. There's no need to resign from electoral politics, but
dedicated lefties should stake out a role of principled resistance. In the
1960s uncompromising right-wingers became known as "ankle biters" in
Republican ranks, insisting on what were considered impossible goals and
opposing moderate and liberal party leaders, sometimes with hopeless
candidates. They spent twenty years in the wilderness but built a cadre of
activists whose convictions eventually gained power.

Where are the left-wing ankle biters who might change the Democratic Party?
It takes a bit of arrogance to imagine that your activities can change the
country, but, paradoxically, it also requires a sense of humility. Above
all, it forces people to ask themselves what they truly believe the country
needs—and then stand up for those convictions any way they can. Concretely,
that may lead someone to run for city council or US senator. Or field
principled opponents to challenge feckless Democrats in primaries (that's
what the Tea Party did to Republicans, with impressive results). Or activist
agitators may simply reach out to young people and recruit kindred spirits
for righteous work that requires long-term commitment.

Second, people of liberal persuasion should "go back to school" and learn
the new economic realities. In my experience, many on the left do not really
understand the internal dynamics of capitalism—why it is productive, why it
does so much damage (many assumed government and politicians would do the
hard thinking for them). We need a fundamental re-examination of capitalism
and the relationship between the state and the private sphere. This will not
be done by business-financed think tanks. We have to do it for ourselves.

A century ago the populist rebellion organized farmer cooperatives, started
dozens of newspapers and sent out lecturers to spread the word. Socialists
and the labor movement did much the same. Modern Americans cannot depend on
the Democratic Party or philanthropy to sponsor small-d democracy. We have
to do it. But we have resources and modern tools—including the
Internet—those earlier insurgents lacked.

The New Deal order broke down for good reasons—the economic system changed,
and government did not adjust to new realities or challenge the
counterattack from the right in the 1970s. The structure of economic life
has changed again—most dramatically by globalization—yet the government and
political parties are largely clueless about how to deal with the
destruction of manufacturing and the loss of millions of jobs. Government
itself has been weakened in the process, but politicians are too intimidated
to talk about restoring its powers. The public expresses another broad
consensus on the need to confront "free trade" and change it in the national
interest—another instance of public opinion not seeming to count, since it
opposes the corporate agenda.

Reformers today face conditions similar to what the Populists and
Progressives faced: monopoly capitalism, a labor movement suppressed with
government's direct assistance, Wall Street's "money trust" on top, the
corporate state feeding off government while ignoring immoral social
conditions. The working class, meanwhile, is regaining its identity, as
millions are being dispossessed of middle-class status while millions of
others struggle at the bottom. Working people are poised to become the new
center of a reinvigorated democracy, though it is not clear at this stage
whether they will side with the left or the right. Understanding all these
forces can lead to the new governing agenda society desperately needs.

Finally, left-liberals need to start listening and learning—talking up close
to ordinary Americans, including people who are not obvious allies. We
should look for viable connections with those who are alienated and
unorganized, maybe even ideologically hostile. The Tea Party crowd got one
big thing right: the political divide is not Republicans against Democrats
but governing elites against the people. A similar division exists within
business and banking, where the real hostages are the smaller,
community-scale firms imperiled by the big boys getting the gravy from
Washington. We have more in common with small-business owners and Tea Party
insurgents than the top-down commentary suggests.

Somewhere in all these activities, people can find fulfilling purpose again
and gradually build a new politics. Don't wait for Barack Obama to send
instructions. And don't count on necessarily making much difference, at
least not right away. The music in democracy starts with people who take
themselves seriously. They first discover they have changed themselves, then
decide they can change others.

  _____  

 <http://www.thenation.com/article/157511/end-new-deal-liberalism> 




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