https://newpol.org/the-2020-elections-in-the-united-states-a-socialist-view-from-afar/

The 2020 Elections in the United States: A Socialist View from Afar
By: Rohini HensmanDecember 11, 2020

While votes were being counted after the November 2020 U.S. elections,
despots from around the world—in Iran, Russia, China, Venezuela, and
Brazil—crowed over the delay in announcing results.[1] It is easy for
rulers in countries where opposition leaders are disqualified, killed, or
hounded into exile to mock the time taken to count votes meticulously.
However, many of us watching with envy from afar—“envy” because the
persecution of minorities, crushing of dissent, domination of the media,
and destruction of democratic institutions has gone much further in our
countries—have nothing but admiration for the way in which a would-be
dictator has been peacefully overthrown.

But what about claims by the Trump campaign that the election was stolen?
It is clear to us that there have been systematic efforts to steal this
election … by Trump and his diehard supporters. That became evident well
before the election when he declared, in the midst of a deadly pandemic in
which many feared the risks of in-person voting, that he opposed extra
funding for the Postal Service because mail ballots encouraged voter fraud.
At the same time Republican mega-donor Louis DeJoy, who was appointed
postmaster general by Trump on June 15, began making changes to the U.S.
Postal Service—like a reduction in employee overtime hours and the
elimination of postal sorting machines—that would sabotage the timely
delivery of mail ballots.[2] We saw reports of polling locations being shut
down and African Americans complaining about the long distances they had to
travel in order to vote. With Trump instructing his supporters to come out
and vote on election day, and several states counting mail-in ballots only
after in-person ballots had been counted, the scene was set for his
post-election claim that he had won. He expected the case to go to the
Supreme Court and explicitly stated that he was nominating Amy Coney
Barrett to the court because he believed she would vote in his favor.[3]

If this wasn’t enough, there is evidence that the Republican Party’s voter
suppression efforts targeting minorities picked up after Obama came to
power in 2009.[4] Greg Palast has provided plenty more evidence in a book
entitled How Trump Stole 2020. Among his findings were that 16.7 million
people were removed from the voter rolls between 2014 and 2016 and that you
are 900 percent more likely to have your vote spoiled if you are Black than
if you are white.[5] To an outsider, it seems incredible that Democrats are
allowing Trump to dominate the narrative with his allegation that they are
trying to steal the election when in fact it is he and the Republicans who
are doing so. Palast’s explanation? As Charlotte Dennett reports, ‘“The
Russians-fixed-the-election story line,’ he writes, ‘is a lot more
acceptable to Americans than explaining that Trump was elected by an
endemic racial apartheid in America’s voting system constructed by the GOP
and made possible by their cringing enablers, the see-no-evil
Democrats.’”[6] If this didn’t work in 2020, it is only because grassroots
activists, including laid-off workers, worked incredibly hard to register
and bring out voters of color.

There is much that we in other countries can learn from this election. One
thing is the importance of paper ballots. They can be checked and recounted
if there is any question about their validity or the margin is small.
Elections conducted with paper ballots can be rigged, but the rigging is
more obvious. Not so with Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs), which are
becoming a favored tool of dictators who want to maintain a façade of
democracy. Neither before nor after an election has it been possible to
check every EVM for manipulation, even after random checks have shown that
some machines are programmed to give every vote to the ruling party
regardless of which button is pressed. Dictators may use crude methods
(winning by huge margins) or more subtle ones (winning by slender margins),
but the result is the same: They stay in power. Countries that have
rejected EVMs on the grounds that they preclude transparency in elections
are absolutely right: It is time to make it clear internationally that the
integrity of elections using EVMs cannot be guaranteed and that the use of
these machines entails a high risk of vote-rigging. Of course, an election
can be rigged with any kind of ballots if election officials are under the
thumb of the ruling party, and the U.S. electorate is lucky that their
election officials have retained their independence.

The other lesson is the way in which, despite hard-fought primaries,
everyone opposed to Trump came together to ensure he was defeated, with the
Green Party, which helped Trump to win in 2016, failing to gain traction in
2020. In some of our countries, by contrast, a plethora of opposition
parties and independents makes it almost impossible to stitch up an
alliance. But the wrangling that broke out after the Democrats did less
well in the elections than they had expected made it clear that there are
at least two factions in the party—commonly referred to as “moderates” and
“progressives”—and possibly a third faction on the right that are not easy
to hold together. One complaint from the right was that left-wing members
of the party had cost it votes by referring to themselves as “socialists”;
another, that the party had neglected “meat and potatoes” issues in favor
of “cultural issues” like gun control, abortion rights, and the rights of
LGBTQ+ people and other people the party “looks after”;[7] support for
Black Lives Matter and the Green New Deal was also blamed.

It was certainly Trump’s intention to put people off from voting for Biden
by his McCarthyite accusation that Biden is a Trojan horse for socialists
and by his Cold-War rhetoric depicting socialism as totalitarianism. It is
true that some socialists apply the term “socialism” to the
ultra-authoritarian Stalinist state, and a few support Putin. There is also
a more diffuse set of people who think socialism can be introduced by a
political party claiming to represent working people rather than being
built from below by working people themselves, although there is also a
long tradition of “socialism from below.” Today there is a growing
consensus that democracy is intrinsic to the definition of socialism, and
there are powerful arguments to that effect.[8] Popularizing this
definition would surely be more fruitful than telling socialists to pretend
that they are not what they are!

There was a strong reaction against allegations that support for gun
control, abortion rights, LGBT+ rights, Black Lives Matter, and the Green
New Deal cost the party votes. One objection was that a majority of the
electorate supports these measures and that BLM alone brought a million new
registered voters for the party. Another objection came from people who
strongly contested the claim that the party “looked after” them, when they
had won rights for themselves in numerous struggles; they pointed out that
for them, these supposedly cultural issues were actually existential ones.
They also made the point that support for human rights doesn’t preclude
campaigning on economic issues; it is entirely possible—and necessary—to do
both. This is surely a matter of principle: A party that abandons human
rights and equality issues, even if espousing them costs votes, cannot
claim to be fighting for democracy.

The irony is that the same position finds an echo on the left. The language
is different—identity politics versus working-class politics rather than
cultural issues versus meat and potatoes—but the substance is the same,
arguing that “particularist” demands of one section of the working class
should be eschewed in favor of “universalist” demands of the whole working
class.[9] In other words, a demand that doesn’t directly benefit straight
cis white male workers is not a demand worth fighting for, even if it’s a
matter of life and death for some other section of the working class. Such
a stance contradicts the principle of “an injury to one is an injury to
all.” People with disabilities and indigenous peoples also suffer specific
forms of exclusion and discrimination; are their struggles for social
justice not worth supporting?

This position blurs the distinction between demands for human rights and
equality on one side, and identity politics—based on the belief that people
who have the same ethnicity, gender, or sexual preference all have the same
interests—on the other; it ignores the fact that discrimination, exclusion,
and violence can result in blocking the access of some sections of the
working class to supposedly universal benefits; and it refuses to
acknowledge relationships of oppression within the working class. People
who have grown up accepting authoritarianism in their families and
communities and believing that women must be subordinate to men,
ethno-religious minorities to the majority, and that LGBT+ people shouldn’t
exist at all, do not automatically give up these attitudes if they get
decent jobs and health care. Indeed, it seems that many white Trump
supporters already have well-paid jobs and suffer less from economic
distress than from anxiety about the progress of people they feel should
remain subordinate to them.[10] Similar attitudes confront socialists in
other countries, and they are undoubtedly difficult to tackle, but
acknowledging them is the first step in doing so. Nor does supporting
struggles for equality entail putting an intolerable burden on a small
number of socialist activists, because there are already countless
grassroots activists working on human rights and equality issues; all that
is required is to work with them rather than pouring scorn on them as, for
example, Melissa Naschek does on the Combahee River Collective.[11]

If it’s a mistake to blame progressives—who played a stellar role in
ousting Trump—for the failure of a “blue wave” to materialize, some on the
left seem equally mistaken in blaming the nomination of Joe Biden as the
Democratic presidential candidate for the same failure,[12] given that he
polled more votes than any other U.S. president in history. Indeed, his
reputation as a moderate might just have tipped the balance in some
battleground states and enabled him to get enough Electoral College votes
to make it difficult for a Trump-friendly Supreme Court to overturn the
results.

The problem is not that the electorate failed to vote for Biden; the
problem is that Trump won well over 70 million votes, many more than he
polled in 2016. What does this mean? In 2016, Trump was relatively unknown
to many voters, although the left should have recognized the threat he
posed. In 2020, his white supremacism, misogyny, despotism, dishonesty,
anti-science irrationality, and callous incompetence in handling the
coronavirus pandemic were known to all. The millions who voted for him,
like the millions who voted for Hitler, may not all be fascists (although
some of them are), but if he had won, they would have enabled an
increasingly fascistic ruler to consolidate his grip on power. And they may
yet do so in the future, with his dedicated supporters believing the big
lie (that he won the election) repeated umpteen times. In the 1930s, the
German Communist Party’s concentration of its fire on the Social Democrats
while underestimating the danger posed by the Nazis allowed Hitler to
consolidate absolute power. In the United States, a united front between
moderates and socialists defeated Trump, but dismantling it now risks
allowing him or a surrogate to come back to power. That doesn’t mean
reining in socialist activists or holding back on trying to push the
Democratic Party to the left—not at all. But isn’t it a case of skewed
priorities to concentrate one’s fire on Biden in the midst of an attempted
coup by Trump, backed by much of the Republican Party and millions of
supporters, some of them armed and dangerous?[13]

Many of us have learned from bitter experience that we can win a battle
against a dictatorial far-right regime but then lose to an even more
fascistic regime if the coalition that ousted the earlier regime falls
apart. In some cases, this is inevitable—if, for example, a different
far-right party jumps on the bandwagon of opposition to the dictatorial
regime. Far more common is a united front between centrists/neoliberals and
socialists/social democrats, where tensions are rife and may lead to
disintegration. If socialists attack centrists too aggressively, the latter
may not vote for the alliance (or vote at all) in the next election;
conversely, if neoliberals are given a free hand, voters relying on
social-democratic reforms could be so disgusted they don’t vote for the
alliance (or vote at all) in the next election. Trying gently but firmly to
push the center to the left is the only way to avoid this.

Another reason why a center-left coalition may lose to a right-wing party
it earlier ousted is if it is seen as ineffective, and this in turn is
often due to sabotage from remnants of the far-right regime that remain in
positions of power. This suggests that the Democrats would do well to
remove Trump loyalists from public service posts, go all out to win the two
Senate seats in Georgia in order to minimize roadblocks from the Senate,
and expand the Supreme Court until it has a liberal majority. The mid-term
elections too would be important.

The far right can also weaponize allegations of corruption, which may be
deserved but are more likely to be wildly exaggerated or even fabricated.
The response has to be absolute transparency—admitting wrong-doing or
mistakes if there are any—and constant firefighting against disinformation.
It is exhausting, and it feels like such a waste of time when there are
more important things to be done, but neglecting this task can lead to a
return of the far right.

Finally, leaving the crimes of an authoritarian regime unpunished is also a
mistake. In some of our countries these include crimes against humanity and
massive corruption, but even lesser crimes are worth prosecuting in order
to prevent the criminals from coming back to power.

Despite manifold flaws in U.S. democracy, the melodrama after the elections
has revealed that election officials and members of the judiciary resisted
concerted attempts by the ruling party to make them discount valid votes,
testifying to their integrity—a situation that doesn’t exist in many of our
countries. A section of the mainstream media consistently made it their
business to debunk the ruling party’s disinformation, again something we
don’t see in our countries. Perhaps this is partly because in the United
States the investigative and law enforcement agencies cannot simply be used
by the executive to threaten, frame, jail, torture, or kill anyone opposing
it, as it can in many of our countries. This situation might well have
changed if Trump had won a second term, making the path back to democracy
that much steeper—as it is in many of our countries.

The U.S. elections have demonstrated yet again that so-called “bourgeois
democracy” is not a gift of the bourgeoisie and that even one of the most
basic democratic rights—the right to vote and have your vote counted—has to
be fought for and defended by mass struggles, otherwise large swathes of
the population will not have it. Liberal democracy, even if it is flawed,
constitutes the terrain on which struggles against capitalism—defined
broadly as private capitalism, state capitalism, and any combination of the
two—can be successful. Without it, workers’ struggles are pushed back, not
least because their organizations are either swallowed up by the state or
crushed. So Trump was right to say that his defeat would be a victory for
socialists; it is, because it strengthens democracy. Of course, the idea
that under Biden, U.S. democracy will become a shining example for the rest
of the world is fanciful: There are still many serious flaws that will not
be easy to address. But this is a step forward.

Since capitalism is international, the fight against it has to be
international too, and therefore socialists who provide any kind of support
for authoritarian regimes in other countries are guilty of pushing back the
anti-capitalist struggle in those countries and thereby in their own.
Instead, socialists should be providing solidarity in any way they can to
pro-democracy activists in other countries. By the same logic, the defeat
of Trump in the United States is a victory in the global struggle against
authoritarianism and capitalism, and therefore a victory for socialists
worldwide: something we can all celebrate, while extending our solidarity
to U.S. pro-democracy activists in their struggles ahead!

Notes

[1] Andrew Roth and Tom Phillips, “‘What a spectacle!’ US adversaries revel
in post-election chaos,” The Guardian, Nov. 6, 2020.

[2] “Who Is Louis DeJoy? US Postmaster General in Spotlight Ahead of 2020
Election,” NPR, Aug. 21, 2020.

[3] Noah Feldman, “Trump’s Supreme Court Comments Put Barrett in a Bind,”
Bloomberg Quint, Nov. 6, 2020.

[4] Terry Gross, “Republican Voter Suppression Efforts Are Targeting
Minorities, Journalist Says,” NPR, Oct. 23, 2018.

[5] Charlotte Dennett, “How to Rig an Election: an Interview with Greg
Palast,” Counterpunch, Aug. 21, 2020.

[6] Dennett, “How to Rig an Election: an Interview with Greg Palast.”

[7] Lauren Gambino, “Democrats left to sift through aftermath of ‘blue
wave’ that never crested,” The Guardian, Nov. 8, 2020.

[8] A good collection can be found in Gregory Smulewicz-Zucker and Michael
Thompson, eds., An Inheritance for Our Times: Principles and Politics of
Democratic Socialism (New York: OR Books, 2020).

[9] Melissa Naschek, “The Identity Mistake,” Jacobin, Aug. 28, 2018.

[10] Benjamin Wallace-Wells, “Arlie Russell Hochschild’s View of Small-Town
Decay and Support for Trump,” The New Yorker, Sept. 20, 2016.

[11] Melissa Naschek, “The Identity Mistake.”

[12] Naomi Klein, “We were told Joe Biden was the ‘safe choice.’ But it was
risky to offer so little,” The Guardian, Nov. 8, 2020.

[13] Julian Borger, “Trump’s coup failed—but US democracy has been given a
scare,” The Guardian, Nov. 25, 2020.

Posted Electoral Politics, Left Politics, United States

About Author
ROHINI HENSMAN is a writer, independent scholar, and activist who comes
from Sri Lanka and lives in India. She has written on workers’ rights,
feminism, minority rights, globalization, and struggles for democracy. Her
most recent books are Workers, Unions, and Global Capitalism: Lessons from
India and Indefensible: Democracy, Counter-Revolution, and the Rhetoric of
Anti-Imperialism.
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Peace Is Doable

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