(Note:
This commentary is excerpted from the introduction Mr. Wing's new
book Toward Racial Justice and a Third Reconstruction)
This
piece provides an overview of the bitterly polarized and
consequential political moment in which the United States, along with
many other countries, is embroiled in. It also suggests a strategic
approach for U.S. progressives and the left to maximize our
contribution to defeating the Trump and the far right, and advancing
toward racial and social justice.
BIG WORLD TRENDS STRENGTHEN THE RIGHT
Since
the mid-1970s I see four main trends shaping the world and the
country. Big capital in the U.S., for the most part, has moved to the
right in reaction to each of them. Each of these trends has also
invigorated rightwing populism.
First,
while the U.S. and Europe are still the most powerful bloc, political
and economic power is shifting to other parts of the world and
international and national capitalist competition has intensified.
These processes have been clear since the 1970s but have recently
reached a new tipping point: Symbols of this changing balance of
forces are the immediate as well as structural economic crisis of the
European Union, the displacement of the Group of 8 by the Group of 20
(which includes the BRICS) and the failure of U.S. militarism in the
Middle East. However, the U.S. is the still the only world superpower
and its competitors and opponents have many divisions among them.
Second,
since the 1970s the current system of financialized, high tech
capitalism has generated a dramatic increase in capitalist wealth and
economic inequality, a marked division between the wealthy and the
struggling sections of working and middle classes, growing economic
and political differentiation within those each of those classes and
an explosion of homelessness. The Great Recession exposed the deep
contradictions internal to contemporary capitalism.
Third,
there is a major demographic and migratory shift in the world,
transforming the racial and ethnic composition of the west itself.
Symbols of these demographic trends are Obama’s election and
reelection and the intense political polarization over immigration in
Western Europe and the U.S.
Fourth,
the danger of environmental crises, especially climate change, has
greatly increased just as more countries like China and India are
becoming enormous consumers of fuel and other natural resources. The
ongoing wars in the Middle East, other resource wars, increased
natural disasters and the international fight over global warming are
symbols of this trend.
In
this light it is no accident that for the last thirty-five years the
majority of the corporate class, along with the politicians who
represent them, has moved strongly to the right, grasping for even
more political and economic power for themselves by attacking the
standard of living of working people at home and opponents abroad. At
the same time, rightwing racist populism – the grassroots
rightward movement of working and middle-class sectors –
has grown more extreme and more powerful. Rightwing corporate capital
and rightwing populists are strongly allied, despite their obvious
differences and internal fights. Militarism, attacks on the living
standard of the working class, along with its organizations,
criminalization of Black people, the poor and immigrants, mass
incarceration, deregulation, financialization, privatization and
gross inequality have ruled the day.
And
now we have Trump and Trumpism.
TRUMPISM
AND POLITICAL POLARIZATION
We
are neck deep in one of the most consequential moments in our
history. The country, indeed much of the world, is veering towards
authoritarianism, war and even fascism. In the U.S., Trumpism—the
alliance of racist, rightwing populism with the most reactionary
sectors of corporate capital led by a cowardly, narcissistic bigot—is
undermining the gains we have fought for and won since the New Deal
and Civil Rights.
As
scholars
Steven Miller and Nicholas Taylor report in “White
Outgroup Intolerance and Declining Support for American Democracy,"
survey data shows that when “intolerant whites” fear that
democracy may benefit the growing numbers of people of color, many
may abandon democracy altogether.
The
Trumpists are endangering world peace and the most basic democratic
norms, freedoms and institutions, not to speak of the planet itself.
In
2016 Trump and his racist populists trounced the Republican corporate
elite that had ruled the country as a whole for most of the last 36
years and took control of the party. This reactionary Republican
Party now controls the presidency, both houses of Congress, the
federal judiciary, 33 governorships, and a record 68 of the 99 state
legislative bodies, including both houses in 32 states, not to speak
of most of the police and sheriff’s departments in the country.
Although she won the popular vote, Hillary Clinton carried just 487
of the country’s 3,181 counties. These rightwing Republicans
are on a tear to remake the country in their own image while they
have the power to do so.
On
our side we can be tremendously proud of the vibrant peoples’
Resistance that has surged to meet the Trumpist challenge. Rising up
angry, women have created #MeToo, #TimesUp and the Women’s
March which confront the patriarchy and sexual abuse that have
permeated human cultures since time immemorial. Students have surged
forward to provide powerful leadership to the fight against gun
violence. Teachers are rallying in their thousands, even in deep red
states such as Oklahoma and West Virginia. Bernie Sanders uncovered
and mobilized a new generation of radicals. Native peoples surged
forward at Standing Rock. Resistance is high among immigrants, Black
people, Muslims, and LGBTs.
In
all of these, young people and women are playing a vital role. Polls
consistently show Trump limping at historically low approval ratings
though also retaining a large, loyal and well-organized base.
Indeed,
the country is probably more politically and culturally polarized
than at any time since the Civil War. The far right is moving further
to the right; the center left is moving further to the left. The
space for public dialogue or compromise between the two is almost
non-existent. The stakes are immense. It’s no exaggeration to
say that we are in a state of peaceful civil war.
As
of this writing, the prospects look positive, though by no means
certain, for the Democrats to take back at least the House of
Representatives in 2018 and to beat Trump in 2020. Such victories are
absolutely crucial to our short and longterm prospects of defeating
the right.
However,
we are far less prepared to actually defeat the far right or undo the
extensive damage it has done at all levels of our country. Without
broad and strong state-based and national united fronts anchored by
powerful and organized social justice forces, it is likely that the
traditional centrist/liberal power players will compromise with the
far right, and revert to some version of corporate neo-liberalism. By
themselves they will be insufficient to defeat the right at the
national let alone state levels and local levels.
The
fight against the far right is likely to last decades with many ups
and downs and a still very uncertain outcome. In fact, the battle
against the right has been raging since at least the election of
Ronald Reagan in 1980.
Reconstruction
was crushed after a decade of post-Civil War progress when the
Republican elite cut a deal with the white supremacist South. The
Civil Rights movement—the Second Reconstruction—has been
sabotaged by decades of backlash by an alliance of the Republican
corporate elite and racist populists, with collaboration by all too
many Democrats. We must not fail at a Third Reconstruction. To
prevail, we must decisively win public opinion and build massive
organized strength, anchored by determined progressives and social
justice forces, that are prepared to persist not just through 2020,
but long past.
RACE
AS THE PIVOT OF POLITICS
Racism
is at the core of rightwing populism in this country. Of course, that
populism has numerous important strands: sexism, gun rights,
Christian fundamentalism, authoritarianism, economic anxiety,
homophobia, climate denial, greed, fascism, transphobia, fiscal
conservatism, libertarianism, etc. But, as study after study
verifies, it is the perceived threat to white group dominance—racism
and its variants such as Islamophobia and xenophobia—that is
the critical political and cultural unifying thread of Trumpism and
the force that sustains them through ups and downs.
The
contemporary far right has its origins in the 1960s white backlash
against the victories of the Civil Rights movement. But its
increasing strength and radicalization centers on dire fear of the
power of the coming people of color majority in the U.S. Despite the
fact that whites will long be the largest group in the U.S., the far
right is launching a preemptive strike—and many whites are
willing to sacrifice the most basic norms of democracy to ensure
their dominance. Racism is driving authoritarianism.
In
my opinion, the “coming people of color majority by 2045”
is often overstated and the idea that demography is destiny is not
useful. Many Latinos are, racially, white, and the racial identity
and politics of the increasing numbers of multiracial people is
uncertain. People of color are extraordinarily diverse by history,
class, politics and ethnicity. Moreover,
there is a significant difference between percentage of the
population and percentage of voters. In California, for example,
whites have dropped to 39% of the population but are still 61% of the
voters due to racial differences in rate of citizenship and voter
participation.
Nonetheless,
race is unmistakably the main pivot of politics. Racism is the glue
of the far right and they cannot win unless they suppress the votes
of people of color. The Democrats, let along the progressives, cannot
win without the moral and political leadership and strength of people
of color.
People
of color, most especially Black people, are the most consistent
progressive forces in the U.S. And, since the 2000 election, Blacks,
Latinos, Asian, Arabs and Muslims have dramatically increased their
opposition to the Republicans both in percentages and numbers.
Without a doubt they are the core of progressive voters and the moral
and political heartbeat of the fight against the right and for social
justice. Yet there is still a marked tendency in the Democratic
mainstream and among some progressives to take people of color for
granted and spend inordinate amounts of time and energy trying to win
over white Trump voters.
Despite
much racial progress, the failure of this country to successfully
settle accounts with its foundational history of racism and settler
colonialism has, once again, come back to haunt us. If we are to
truly defeat the far right, we will need to strike a mortal and
sustained blow to racism.
The
immigrant rights movement and #BlackLivesMatter have contributed
greatly to this process, as has revulsion to the white nationalism
that Trump has stoked. According to a poll done by
fivethirtyeight.com, one of the positive developments of the last few
years is the deepening understanding of and opposition to white
privilege among liberal and moderate white people. The participation
of tens of millions of whites, disproportionately women and LGBT,
young and working class, will long be a strategic condition for
building a powerful progressive movement, let alone to defeating the
far right.
Yet
downplaying the strategic centrality of the struggle against racism
and the leadership role of people of color and other core progressive
constituencies dilutes our ability to confront the racist right and
to build the kind of multiracial, multi-class movement necessary to
win hearts and minds and build power.
FIGHT
FOR THE SOUTH AND SOUTHWEST
The
fight against racism is seriously impaired without undertaking the
struggle for the South and Southwest. The South, in particular, has
more population, more Blacks and Latinos, more congressional
representatives and more Electoral College votes than any other
region. And its power is growing since it has been the fastest
growing region for decades, a trend expected to continue well into
the future. Yet progressives have largely ceded those regions to the
far right.
The
majority of Blacks still live in the South, augmented by three
decades of Black re-migration to the region. Latinos now live
throughout the country but the largest concentration is still in the
Southwest.
Given
the dynamics of racism, it is not surprising that the South and
Southwest are also centers of poverty and the military industrial
complex.
If
we cede the South and Southwest to the right, we undermine the
strength of our most progressive populations and forfeit the moral
high ground in the fight against racism, poverty and militarism.
Both
the South and Southwest are highly diverse and their politics and
sociology are rapidly changing. The big cities are getting more
numerous and larger, and all vote Democratic, as do an increasing
number of suburbs. There are numerous Blacks, Latinos and Native
Americans in the rural areas and far more Black and Latino majority
counties than anywhere else in the country. Given the racial,
economic and political diversity of these states, it is crucial to
create a strategy appropriate to each one.
Moreover,
it is possible to shift the political center of gravity and the
coalition that holds governing power. Already Virginia, Maryland,
Washington D.C., Colorado, California, Nevada and New Mexico tilt
strongly Blue. Florida, North Carolina, Georgia and perhaps Arizona
are purple. Texas has virtually the same racial demographics as
California and before long will be the most populous state in the
country. It can be a national game changer.
THE
WOMEN’S MOVEMENT
The
women’s movement—led by #MeToo, #TimesUp and the Women’s
March—are an incredibly powerful force against Trump and a
movement of truly historic potential that challenges oppressive
gender relations and sexual harassment that are as old as humankind
and almost as determinative as DNA. Not that previous women’s
movements have not done the same. But what makes the current women’s
movement different is that in its brief history it has demonstrated
astonishing power to seize media attention and mobilize supporters,
causing the unceremonious ouster of corporate, cultural and political
big shots almost weekly. Even rabidly rightwing Fox television has
found it in its interest to do so.
Of
course, there is a long, long, long way to go. Patriarchy and sexual
abuse are part of the fabric of most institutions in U.S. (and
global) life, from workplaces to schools to households. But #MeToo
and #Times Up are off to a very impressive start.
The
women’s movement has not only won the moral high ground, it has
also begun to transform politics. An historic number of women have
contended for elected office in these last two years, and an historic
number have won. Women candidates have driven Democratic voter
turnout, greatly enhancing Democratic electoral results.
Sexual
abuse is hardly confined to rightwingers or Republicans. It poisons
the entire political spectrum and it would be both immoral and
politically foolhardy to confine its targets to pro-Trumpers.
Women’s
leadership has become not just a theoretical necessity, but an
increasing practical reality. And the related surge of the LGBT
movement over the last two decades is also truly remarkable. This
movement has made it crystal clear that it is not morally acceptable
nor politically viable to exclude the fight against homophobia and
transphobia from the core of the progressive agenda.
INSIDE/OUTSIDE
STRATEGY
Another
positive development of the last decade or so is the increasing
sophistication among progressives about how to navigate the
complexities of the U.S. electoral system.
Not
long ago many progressives were mired in abstentionism, third
partyism, or being passive, self-denying Democrats. But, in opposite
ways, the victory of Obama and the victory of Trump—as well as
the stunning presidential run of Bernie Sanders—have awakened
the vast majority to the crucial importance of organizing both inside
and outside of elections, and both inside and outside of the
Democratic Party if we are going to build a powerful, independent
social justice movement that might one day achieve governing power.
The
U.S. two party system sets high bars of funding and scale of
operations to seriously contend and is fraught with racial and wealth
inequities. The Electoral College violates even the basic democratic
principle of one person, one vote. We must fight to democratize the
electoral system against the dominating role of big money, to
eliminate the racist and undemocratic Electoral College, denial of
the vote to former felons, pernicious gerrymandering and other forms
of voter suppression.
Many
of these reforms would require us to accumulate enormous power in
Congress and state by state strength to meet the high bar of
constitutional change. This strength can only be forged by struggling
within the current system. Failure to seriously engage in elections
marginalizes us from the fight for political power and public
opinion, blocks us from organizing the hundreds of millions of voters
and constrains our fight for policies and programs that shape the
lives of everyone who lives in this country.
Since
I neglected it in this book of essays, I think it is important to
highlight the importance of state-based strategies and organizations
and not just national ones:
First,
the majority of laws that govern our lives are decided at the state
and local levels, not the federal.
Second,
the presidency is decided not by the national vote, but by the tally
in each state.
Third,
the federal Congress consists of representatives elected in the
states.
Fourth,
state governments generally control redistricting which has an
enormous impact on congressional and legislative electoral outcomes.
Fifth,
the political dynamics and forces vary quite drastically from one
state to the other, requiring unique analyses and strategies tailored
to each state. Indeed, a real national strategy would be extremely
inadequate if it did not include state strategies.
And
last but hardly least, the state level presents a much more favorable
and manageable terrain and scale compared to the nation as a whole at
which to build mass organization and power. Without mass progressive
organization we will significantly remain at the mercy of the powers
that be.
THE
FIGHT FOR PEACE
Trumpism
presents a clear and present danger of expanded and intensified wars,
on many fronts and continents, up to and including the previously
unthinkable possibility of nuclear war. The administration has
already embarked on a massive military build-up and appointed a
Cabinet replete with war criminals. Terrorism, or the
often-exaggerated threat of it, might well be the excuse Trump uses
to embark on new wars, especially with Iran. Yet one of the important
unresolved issues facing progressives is how to reinvigorate the
peace movement and respond to terrorism.
The
U.S. has been at war since Bush launched his attack on Afghanistan
following Sept. 11. These wars in the Middle East have now lasted
five times longer than the U.S. involvement in WWII, wasted hundreds
of billions—maybe trillions of dollars, killed tens of
thousands of people, displaced tens of millions of people from their
homes and homelands, crushed the societal infrastructures
(government, public safety, schools, neighborhoods, health care
systems, etc.) of several countries, and caused a massive increase in
poverty.
Even
when the antiwar in Iraq movement reached massive proportions in the
early 2000s, it was an extremely rare domestic social justice
organization that participated. While social justice individuals
turned out en masse to the demonstrations, almost no organization
adopted an official antiwar position let alone crafted antiwar
programs or appointed staff to help build the antiwar movement or
actions.
Seventeen
years later, somehow most U.S. people have normalized war and even
the antiwar movement has not awakened to the new dangers posed by
Trumpist militarism. We cannot be an effective opposition to the
right, let alone defeat it, if we do not place the struggle against
militarism and for peace at the center of our agenda.
CHALLENGING
CORPORATE POWER AND A THIRD RECONSTRUCTION
Of
course, it is not just the far right that is creating havoc in
peoples’ lives. Contemporary corporate capitalism is producing
gross inequality and misery alongside obscene wealth at an
accelerating rate. For example, California is by far the richest
state in the union and it is politically dominated by Democrats, many
of them self-styled progressives. Yet last year the U.S. census
announced that, when cost of living is considered (especially
housing), California has the highest poverty rate of any state in the
country!
This
puts progressives and social justice forces in a complicated
relationship with corporate, anti-Trump forces. On one hand, we know
there’s a good chance they would make all sorts of negative
compromises with Trump and Trumpism if they are put back in power by
themselves. On the other hand, they hold so much political, economic
and media power compared to the social justice forces that it is
pretty much impossible to conceive how we could defeat Trump and
Trumpism without their participation. Many corporate leaders, media
and pro-corporate politicians are already engaged in the fight
against Trump, and it would not be surprising to see many more join
in if, for any reason, corporate profits or the stock market
significantly wane.
We
are, necessarily, in a complicated unity and struggle relationship
with them, not unlike the relationship the rightwing populists have
navigated with the corporate Republicans for the past forty years.
Realism about power relationships and skill at changing them is a
hallmark of a serious movement.
Yet
the abysmal results of high tech, financialized capitalism—even
at its best as in California—ought to be a signal that social
justice cannot be approached, let alone achieved, without confronting
corporate power and beginning to effect a real social transformation.
Such a transformation is purely hypothetical unless we are able to
massively build our forces within the broad front that can defeat the
right and divide the corporates.
Within
this, the specifically left and social justice forces will need even
more power to be able to advance toward a new era of social progress.
The struggle against the far right and for a Third Reconstruction
cannot be victorious without constructing a sweeping alliance and
progressive program that includes and speaks to the needs and dignity
of all working people for peace, democracy, and social and
environmental justice. These fights will surely involve tremendous
collisions with corporate power and the corporate structures which
are the root cause of much of the inequality, poverty and war in the
world.
STRATEGY
SUMMARY
In
brief,
First,
we need to correctly target the main enemy, which for some time ahead
is the Trump-led racist authoritarian right which has captured the
Republican Party and controls the vast majority of the federal, state
and local governmental elected and non-elected bodies.
Second,
to defeat the far right and simultaneously to lay the basis for
social advance when this is achieved, we need to create broad
national and state united fronts with a unified inside/outside
strategy, organizing inside and
outside elections, the Democratic Party and the halls of power.
Third,
our strategy needs to centrally incorporate racial, economic and
gender justice and be connected to our core progressive social base
of people of color, poor folk, labor, women, youth, LGBTs and
students. People of color and women’s leadership will be
crucial to ignite working class-oriented racial and social justice
movements and to defeat the right.
Fourth,
we must fight for the South and Southwest in order to give substance
to and build the power of people of color, the fight against poverty,
the fight against militarism, the struggle against the far right and
to contend for power in the largest and fastest growing regions of
the country.
Fifth,
despite the blows that the corporate powers have rained down upon
labor, as well as its own internal inconsistencies, the labor
movement is still one of the most powerful parts of the anti-right
and progressive movements and the centerpiece of the crucial fight
for economic justice. Increased political unity between the social
justice and labor movements is key to the future of our movement and
our country.
Sixth,
we must have a governance strategy, not a strategy limited to
“influence” or “impacting public policy and debate”
and certainly not a strategy of self-righteous isolation. The people
and the country need us, but only if we take ourselves seriously
enough to prepare to govern.
Seventh,
we must build independent, progressive power, but also strategic and
ecumenical coalitions in order to build real power inside and outside
of the Democratic Party, but to simultaneously play a major role in
an “anti-right” front against the Republicans and
rightwingers who are our main enemies.
Eighth,
we need to simultaneously work national, state and local strategies,
remembering that states are key building blocks of our electoral and
governmental systems.
Ninth,
we need to grasp the intimate interconnection of the fight for social
justice with the fight against militarism and for peace.
Tenth,
we need to dramatically broaden and deepen our concept and practice
of communications work if we are to reach tens of millions and fight
for public opinion.
Last,
even as we prioritize the urgent task of defeating the right, we need
to prepare the ground for a profound social transformation, a Third
Reconstruction. That would be a period when peace and social justice
forces are powerful enough to set a governing agenda that makes
unprecedented strides toward peace and racial, gender, social,
economic and environmental justice, but which is short of, yet
perhaps might open the way to, a post-capitalist society.
There
are many more elements to an adequate strategy, and countless more
that will emerge as we intensify the struggle. How can we maximize
the diminishing strength of labor? What is the strategic meaning of
the changing nature and divisions within the working class and what
sectors might be able to play a role similar to the industrial
proletariat in the past? And, besides communities of color, what
other social forces among working people can be mobilized to be the
antiracist and class anchors of the multiracial, multi-class social
justice movement? What is the role of the environmental crises and
the environmental movements? And what about the complicated
historical and ongoing problems of Marxism and socialism—of all
varieties—in forging a sustainable, equitable and democratic
future?
Hopefully,
however, I have provided some substantial ideas that will be useful
to consider in the critical process of advancing social justice work,
especially its electoral component, in the coming years.
Much
of my new book, Toward Racial Justice and a Third Reconstruction,
traces my analysis of this central problem and this introduction
focuses on the struggle against Trumpism. The accompanying website, bobwingracialjustice.org contains the contents of the book and most of my other written work.
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