I am baffled, as I was in 2016, as to why so many
liberals are still shocked by Trump’s victory—and why, in their efforts
to dissect what happened, they can’t get beyond their incredulity that
so many people would blindly back a venal, mendacious fascist peddling
racism, misogyny, xenophobia, ableism, and so forth, while cloaking his
anti-labor, anti-earth, pro-corporate agenda behind a veil of white
nationalism and authoritarian promises that “Trump will fix it.”
We don’t need to waste time trying to parse the differences between
the last three elections. In all three, he won—and lost—with historic
vote tallies. The message has been clear since 2016, when Trump, despite
losing the popular vote to Hilary Clinton, still won the electoral
college with nearly sixty-three million votes, just three million fewer
than what Obama got in 2012. Trump lost in 2020, but received
seventy-four million votes, the second-largest total in U.S. history.
For an incumbent presiding disastrously over the start of the Covid
pandemic, that astounding number of votes should have told us something.
And if we were honest, we would acknowledge that Joe Biden owes most of
his victory to the uprisings against police violence that momentarily
shifted public opinion toward greater awareness of racial injustice and
delivered Democrats an unearned historic turnout. Even though the Biden
campaign aggressively distanced itself from Black Lives Matter and
demands to defund the police, it benefited from the sentiment that
racial injustice ought to be addressed and liberals were best suited to
address it.
I’m less interested in conducting a postmortem of this election than trying to understand how to build a movement.
Yet in all three elections, white men and women still overwhelmingly
went for Trump. (Despite the hope that this time, the issue of abortion
would drive a majority of white women to vote for Harris, 53 percent of
them voted for Trump, only 2 percent down from 2020.) The vaunted
demographic shift in the 2024 electorate wasn’t all that significant.
True, Trump attracted more Black men this time, but about 77 percent of
Black men voted
for Harris, so the shocking headline, “Why did Black men vote for
Trump?” is misdirected. Yes, Latino support for Trump increased, but
that demographic needs to be disaggregated; it is an extremely diverse
population with different political histories, national origins, and the
like. And we should not be shocked that many working-class men,
especially working-class men of color, did not vote for Harris.
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor is right to point to the condescension of the
Democrats for implying that sexism alone explains why a small portion of
Black men and Latinos flipped toward Trump, when homelessness, hunger,
rent, personal debt, and overall insecurity are on the rise. The
Democrats, she explained
on Democracy Now, failed “to capture what is actually happening on the
ground—that is measured not just by the historic low unemployment that
Biden and Harris have talked about or by the historic low rates of
poverty.”
The Democratic Party lost—again—because it turned its back on working
people, choosing instead to pivot to the right: recruiting Liz and Dick
Cheney, quoting former Trump chief of staff John Kelly, and boasting of
how many Republican endorsements Harris had rather than about her plans
to lift thirty-eight million Americans out of poverty. The campaign
touted the strength of the economy under Biden, but failed to address
the fact that the benefits did not seem to trickle down to large swaths
of the working class. Instead, millions of workers improved their
situation the old-fashioned way: through strikes and collective
bargaining. The UAW, UPS, longshore and warehouse workers, health care
workers, machinists at Boeing, baristas at Starbucks, and others won
significant gains. For some, Biden’s public support for unions secured
his place as the most pro-labor president
since F.D.R. Perhaps, but the bar isn’t that high. He campaigned on
raising the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $15.00, but, once taking
office, quietly tabled the issue in a compromise with Republicans, choosing instead to issue an executive order raising the wage for federal contractors.
It is true that the Uncommitted movement, and the antiwar protest
vote more broadly, lacked the raw numbers to change the election’s
outcome. But it is not an exaggeration to argue that the Biden-Harris
administration’s unqualified support for Israel cost the Democrats the
election as much as did their abandonment of the working class. In fact,
the two issues are related. The administration could have used the $18
billion in military aid
it gave to Israel for its Gaza operations during its first year alone
and redirected it toward the needs of struggling working people. $18
billion is about one quarter of the Department of Housing and
Development’s annual budget and 16 percent of the budget for the federal
Supplemental Assistance Nutrition Program. They could have cut even
more from the military budget, which for fiscal year 2024 stood at
slightly more than $824 billion. Moreover, tens of thousands of
Palestinian lives would have been spared, much of Gaza’s land and
infrastructure would have been spared irreversible damage, and the
escalation of regional war in Lebanon and Iran would not have
happened—the consequences of which remain to be seen for the federal
budget.
Workers improved their situation the old-fashioned way: through strikes and collective bargaining.
Of course, detractors will say that the Israel lobby, especially
AIPAC, would not allow it. But the Democrats’ fealty to Israel is not a
product of fear, nor is it simply a matter of cold electoral calculus.
It is an orientation grounded in ideology. Only ideology can explain why
the Biden-Harris administration did not direct UN representative Linda
Thomas-Greenfield to stop providing cover for Israel’s criminal
slaughter and support the Security Council’s resolution calling for an
immediate ceasefire. And only ideology can explain why the
administration and Congress has not abided by its own laws—notably the
Arms Export Control Act and the Foreign Assistance Act, which prohibits
the use of U.S. weapons in occupied territories and the transfer of
weapons or aid to a country “which engages in a consistent pattern of
gross violations of internationally recognized human rights”—and stopped
propping up Israel’s military.
While candidate Trump had encouraged Netanyahu to “finish the job” in
Gaza, don’t be surprised if President Trump “negotiates” a swift
ceasefire agreement. (Reagan pulled a similar stunt when he secured the
return of U.S. hostages from Iran on the same day he was sworn into
office.) Such a deal would prove Trump’s campaign mantra that only he
can fix it, strengthen his ties with his ruling-class friends in the
Gulf countries, and permit the Likud Party and its rabid settler
supporters to annex Gaza, in whole or in part, and continue its illegal
population transfer under the guise of “reconstruction.” After all, the
Biden-Harris administration and the Democrats have already done all the
work of “finishing the job.” Gaza is virtually uninhabitable. Once we
factor in disease, starvation, inadequate medical care for the wounded,
and the numbers under the rubble, the actual death toll will be many
times higher
than the official count. And with nearly three-quarters of the
casualties women and children, the U.S.-Israel alliance will have
succeeded, long before Trump takes power, in temporarily neutralizing
what Israeli politicians call the Palestinian “demographic threat.”
The 2024 election indicates a rightward shift across the county. We
see it in the Senate races, right-wing control of state legislatures
(though here, gerrymandering played a major role), and in some of the
successful state ballot measures, with the exception of abortion. But
part of this shift can be explained by voter suppression, a general
opposition to incumbents, and working-class disaffection expressed in
low turnout. I also contend that one of the main reasons why such a
large proportion of the working class voted for Trump has to do with
what we old Marxists call class consciousness. Marx made a distinction
between a class “in itself” and a class “for itself.” The former signals
status, one’s relationship to means—of production, of survival, of
living. The latter signals solidarity—to think like a class, to
recognize that all working people, regardless of color, gender, ability,
nationality, citizenship status, religion, are your comrades. When the
idea of solidarity has been under relentless assault for decades, it is
impossible for the class to recognize its shared interests or stand up
for others with whom they may not have identical interests.
The Democratic Party lost—again—because it turned its back on working people.
So I’m less interested in conducting a postmortem of this election
and tweaking the Democrats’ tactics than trying to understand how to
build a movement—not in reaction to Trump, but toward workers’ power, a
just economy, reproductive justice, queer and trans liberation, and
ending racism and patriarchy and war—in Palestine, Sudan, Congo, Haiti,
and elsewhere, in our streets masquerading as a war on crime, on our
borders masquerading as security, and on the earth driven by the five
centuries of colonial and capitalist extraction. We have to revive the
idea of solidarity, and this requires a revived class politics: not a
politics that evades the racism and misogyny that pervades American life
but one that confronts it directly. It is a mistake to think that white
working-class support for Trump is reducible to racism and misogyny or
“false consciousness” substituting for the injuries of class. As I wrote
back in 2016, we cannot afford to dismiss
the white working class’s very real economic grievances. It is not a matter of disaffection versus racism or sexism versus fear.
Rather, racism, class anxieties, and prevailing gender ideologies
operate together, inseparably. . . . White working-class men understand
their plight through a racial and gendered lens. For women and people of
color to hold positions of privilege or power over them is simply unnatural and can only be explained by an act of unfairness—for example, affirmative action.”
There have always been efforts to build worker solidarity, in culture
and in practice. We see it in some elements of the labor movement, such
as UNITE-HERE, progressive elements in SEIU, National Nurses United,
United All Workers for Democracy, Southern Worker Power, Black Workers
for Justice, and Change to Win. Leading these efforts has been the
tenacious but much embattled Working Families Party (WFP) and its sister
organization, Working Families Power. Their most recent survey
found that growing working-class support for Trump and the MAGA
Republicans does not mean working people are more conservative than
wealthier Americans. Instead, it concluded, working people are
“uniformly to the left of the middle and upper classes” when it comes to
economic policies promoting fairness, equity, and distribution. On
other issues such as immigration, education, and crime and policing,
their findings are mixed and, not surprisingly, differentiated by race,
gender, and political orientation. Most importantly, the WFP understands
that the chief source of disaffection has been the neoliberal assault
on labor and the severe weakening of workers’ political and economic
power. Over the last five decades we’ve witnessed massive social
disinvestment: the erosion of the welfare state, living-wage jobs,
collective bargaining rights, union membership, government investment in
education, accessible and affordable housing, health care, and food,
and basic democracy. In some states, Emergency Financial Managers have
replaced elected governments, overseeing the privatization of public
assets, corporate tax abatements, and cuts in employee pension funds in
order to “balance” city budgets. At the same time, we have seen an
exponential growth in income inequality, corporate profits, prisons, and
well-funded conservative think tanks and lobbying groups whose
dominance in the legislative arena has significantly weakened union
rights, environmental and consumer protection, occupational safety, and
the social safety net.
And the neoliberal assault is also ideological; it is an attack on
the very concept of solidarity, of labor as a community with shared
interests. David Harvey, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, David McNally, Nancy
Fraser, Wendy Brown and many others have all compellingly articulated
this challenge. In response to the 1970s strike wave and the global
slump that opened the door for the neoliberal turn, the Thatcherite
mantra that “there is no such thing as society; there are individual men
and women” took hold. For decades unions have been disparaged as the
real enemy of progress, their opponents insisting that they take dues
from hardworking Americans, pay union bosses bloated salaries, kill jobs
with their demand for high wages, and undermine businesses and
government budgets with excessive pension packages. Remember Mitt
Romney’s presidential campaign talking points: workers are the “takers,”
capitalists are the “makers” who should decide what to pay workers.
Neoliberal ideology insists that any attempt to promote equality,
tolerance, and inclusion is a form of coercion over the individual and
undermines freedom and choice. Such regulatory or redistributive
actions, especially on the part of government, would amount to social
engineering and therefore threaten liberty, competition, and natural
market forces.
The idea of solidarity has been under relentless assault for decades.
Generations have grown up learning that the world is a market, and we
are individual entrepreneurs. Any aid or support from the state makes
us dependent and unworthy. Personal responsibility and family values
replace the very idea of the “social,” that is to say, a nation
obligated to provide for those in need. Life is governed by market
principles: the idea that if we make the right investment, become more
responsible for ourselves, and enhance our productivity—if we build up
our human capital—we can become more competitive and, possibly, become a
billionaire. Mix neoliberal logic with (white) populism and Christian
nationalism and you get what Wendy Brown calls “authoritarian freedom”: a
freedom that posits exclusion, patriarchy, tradition, and nepotism as
legitimate challenges to those dangerous, destabilizing demands of
inclusion, autonomy, equal rights, secularism, and the very principle of
equality. Such a toxic blend did not come out of nowhere, she insists:
it was born out of the stagnation of the entire working class under
neoliberal policies.
That diagnosis points toward an obvious cure. If we
are going to ever defeat Trumpism, modern fascism, and wage a viable
challenge to gendered racial capitalism, we must revive the old IWW
slogan, “An injury to one is an injury to all.” Putting that into
practice means thinking beyond nation, organizing to resist mass
deportation rather than vote for the party promoting it. It means seeing
every racist, sexist, homophobic and transphobic act, every brutal
beating and killing of unarmed Black people by police, every denial of
healthcare for the most vulnerable, as an attack on the class. It means
standing up for struggling workers around the world, from Palestine to
the Congo to Haiti. It means fighting for the social wage, not just
higher pay and better working conditions but a reinvestment in public
institutions—hospitals, housing, education, tuition-free college,
libraries, parks. It means worker power and worker democracy. And if
history is any guide, this cannot be accomplished through the Democratic
Party. Trying to move the Democrats to the left has never worked. We
need to build up independent, class-conscious, multiracial organizations
such as the Working Families Party, the Poor People’s Campaign, and
their allies, not simply to enter the electoral arena but to effectively
exercise the power to dispel ruling class lies about how our economy
and society actually work. The only way out of this mess is learning to
think like a class. It’s all of us or none.
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