pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The , a coalition between Big Business farmers and turkeys who'll vote for Christmas (Red Scare cowards, apocalyptic white nationalists, religious fanatics, etc) has fallen to its bizarre, violent radical wing, who obsessed pver policies that are irrelevant to the majority of Americans.

If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/06/16/that-boy-aint-right/#dinos-rinos-and-dunnos

1/

mrcompletely,
@mrcompletely@heads.social avatar

@pluralistic I recently reread a bunch of Hofstadter - his work often shows the strain of having been written before the development of intersectional approaches to history but it's still important foundational stuff

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

As writes, the views of the radical right - which are also the policies of the GOP - are wildly out of step with the US political view:

https://www.oliverexplains.com/p/conservatives-arent-like-normal-americans

2/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The press likes to frame American politics as "narrowly divided," but the reality is that Republicans' electoral victories are due to voter suppression and antimajoritarian institutions (the Senate and #ElectoralCollege, etc), not popularity. Democrats consistently outperform the GOP in national races. Dems won majorities in 1992/6, and beat the GOP in 2000, 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2020.

3/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The only presidential race the GOP won on popular votes since 1988 was 2004, when GW Bush eked out a plurality (not a majority).

But, as Willis says, Dems "act like it is 1984 and that they are outliers in a nation of Reagan voters," echoing a stilted media narrative. The GOP's platform just isn't popular. Take the #Groomer panic: 71% of Americans approve of same-sex marriage. The people losing their shit about queer people are a strange, tiny minority.

4/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Every one of the GOP's tentpole issues is wildly unpopular: expanding access to assault rifles, banning immigration, lowering taxes on the rich, cutting social programs, forcing pregnant people to bear unwanted children, etc. This is true all the way up to the GOP's support for Trump as the 2024 candidate. Trump lost every popular vote he's ever stood for, and owes his presidential term to the antimajoritarian Electoral College, gerrymandering, and massive voter suppression.

5/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Willis correctly points out that Dem leaders are basically "normal" center-right politicians, not radicals. And, unlike their GOP counterparts, politicians like Clinton, Obama and Biden don't hide their disdain for the radical wing of their party. Even never-Trumper Republicans are afraid of their base. Romney declared himself "severely conservative" and McCain "put scare quotes around 'health of the mother' provisions for abortion rights."

6/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The GOP fringe imposes incredible discipline on their leaders. Take all the nonsense about "woke capitalism": on the one hand, it's absurd to call union-busting, tax-dodging, worker-screwing companies "woke" (even if they sell Pride flags a couple of weeks a year).

But on the other hand? The GOP leadership have actually declared war on the biggest corporations in America, to the point that the #WSJ says that "Republicans and Big Business broke up":

https://www.wsj.com/articles/republicans-corporations-donations-pacs-9b5b202b

7/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

But America is a two-party system and there are plenty of people who'll pull the lever for any Republican. This means that when the GOP comes under the control of its swivel-eyed loon wing, the swivel-eyed loons wield power far beyond the number of people who agree with them.

There's an important lesson there for Dems, whose establishment is volubly proud of its independence from its voters.

8/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The Biden administration is a weirdly perfect illustration of this "independence." The Biden admin is a kind of referee, doling out policies and appointemnts to its competing wings, without any coherence or consistency.

That's how you get incredible appointments like #LinaKhan at the #FTC and #JonathanKanter at #DoJ #AntitrustDivision and #RohitChopra at the #CFPB.

9/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The progressive wing of the party bargained for these key appointments and then played their cards very well, getting incredible, hard-charging, hyper-competent fighters in those roles.

Likewise, #JaredBernstein, finally confirmed as #CouncilOfEconomicAdvisors chair after an interminable wrangle:

https://prospect.org/blogs-and-newsletters/tap/2023-06-16-team-biden/

10/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

And #JulieSu, acting labor secretary, who just delivered a six-year contract to west coast dockworkers with 8-10% raises in the first year, paid retroactively for the year they worked without a contract:

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/06/14/statement-from-president-biden-on-labor-agreement-at-west-coast-ports/

11/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

But the Biden admin's unwillingness to side with one wing of the party also produces catastrophic failures, like the martyrdom of #GigiSohn, who was subjected to years of vicious personal attacks while awaiting confirmation to the #FCC, undefended by the Biden admin, left to twist in the wind until she gave it up as a bad job:

https://doctorow.medium.com/culture-war-bullshit-stole-your-broadband-4ce1ffb16dc5

12/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

It's how we get key roles filled by do-nothing seatwarmers like #PeteButtigieg, who has the same sweeping powers that Lina Khan is wielding so deftly at the FTC, but who lacks either the will or the skill to wield those same powers at the Department of Transport:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/11/dinah-wont-you-blow/#ecp

By refusing to stand for anything except a fair division of powers among different Democratic Party blocs, the Biden admin ends up undercutting itself.

13/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Take , a centerpiece of the administration's agenda, subject of a historic and FTC regulation:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/18/administrative-competence/#i-know-stuff

Right to Repair fights have been carried out at the state level for years, with the biggest victory coming in , where an automotive ballot initiative won overwhelming support in 2020:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/13/said-no-one-ever/#r2r

14/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

But despite the massive support for automotive right to repair in the Bay State, Big Car has managed to delay the implementation of the new law for years, tying up the state in expensive, time-consuming litigation:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/26/nixing-the-fix/#r2r

15/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

But eventually, even the most expensive delaying tactic fails. Car manufacturers were set to come under the state right to repair rule this month, but they got a last minute reprieve, from Biden's own #NHTSA, who sent urgent letters to every major car manufacturer, telling them to ignore the Massachusetts repair law:

https://www.vice.com/en/article/m7bbkv/biden-administration-tells-car-companies-to-ignore-right-to-repair-law-people-overwhelmingly-voted-for

16/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The NHTSA repeats the car lobby's own scare stories about "cybersecurity" that they blitzed to Massachusetts voters in the runup to the ballot initiative:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/09/03/rip-david-graeber/#rolling-surveillance-platforms

The idea that cybersecurity is best maintained by letting powerful corporations gouge you on service and parts is belied by independent experts, like #SecuRepairs, who do important work countering the FUD thrown off by the industry (and parroted by Biden's NHTSA):

https://securepairs.org/

17/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Independent security experts are clear that letting owners of high-tech devices decide who fixes them, what software they run, etc, makes us safer:

https://www.schneier.com/essays/archives/2022/01/letter-to-the-us-senate-judiciary-committee-on-app-stores.html

But here we are: the Biden admin is sabotaging the Biden admin, because the Biden admin isn't an administration, it's a system for ensuring proportional representation of different parts of the Democratic Party coalition.

18/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

This isn't just bad for policy, it's bad politics, too. It presumes that if some Democratic voters want pizza, and others want hamburgers, that you can please everyone by serving up #pizzaburgers. No one wants a pizzaburger:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/23/narrative-warfare/#giridharadas

The failure to deliver a coherent, muscular vision for a climate-ready, anti-Gilded Age America has left the Democrats vulnerable.

19/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Because while the radical proposals of the GOP fringe may not enjoy much support, there are large majorities of Americans who have lost faith in the status quo and are totally uninterested in the Pizzaburger Party.

Nowhere is this better explained than in #NaomiKlein's superb long-form article on #RFKJr's presidential bid in The Guardian:

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/jun/14/ignoring-robert-f-kennedy-jr-not-an-option

20/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Don't get me wrong, RFK Jr is a Very Bad Politician, for all the reasons that Klein lays out. He's an anti-vaxxer, a conspiracist, and his support for ending American military aggression, defending human rights, and addressing the climate emergency is laughably thin.

But as Klein points out, RFK Jr is not peddling pizzaburgers. He is tapping into a legitimate rage:

21/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

> a great many voters are hurting and rightfully angry: about powerful corporations controlling their democracy and profiting off disease and poverty. About endless wars draining national coffers and maiming their kids. About stagnating wages and soaring costs. This is the world – inflamed on every level – that the two-party duopoly has knowingly created.

22/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

RFK Jr is campaigning against "the corrupt merger between state and corporate power," against drug monopolies setting our national health agenda, and polluters capturing environmental regulators.

As Klein says, despite RFK Jr's willing to say the unsayable, and tap into the yearning among the majority of American voters for something different, he's not running a campaign rooted in finally telling the American public “the truth.”

23/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Rather, "public discourse filled with unsayable and unspeakable subjects is fertile territory for all manner of hucksters positioning themselves as uniquely courageous truth tellers."

We've been here before. Remember Trump campaigning against a "rigged system" and promising to "make America great again?" Remember Clinton's rejoinder that "America was already great?"

24/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

It's hard to imagine a worse response to legitimate outrage - over corporate capture, declining wages and living conditions; and spiraling health, education and shelter costs.

Sure, it was obvious that Trump was a beneficiary of the rigged system, and that he would rig it further, but at least he admitted it was rigged, not "already great."

25/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The Democratic Party is not in thrall to labor unions, or racial equality activists, or people who care about gender justice or the climate emergency. Unlike the GOP, the Dem establishment has figured out how to keep a grip on power within their own party - at the expense of exercising power in America, even when they hold office.

26/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

But unlike culture war nonsense, shared prosperity, fairness, care, and sound environmental policies are very popular in America. Some people have been poisoned against politics altogether and sunk into nihilism, while others have been duped into thinking that America can't afford to look after its people.

In this regard, winning the American electorate is a macrocosm for the way labor activists win union majorities in the workplaces they organize.

27/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

In her memoir A Collective Bargain, #JaneMcAlevey describes how union organizers contend with everything that progressive politicians must overcome. A union drive takes place in the teeth of unfair laws, on a tilted playing field that allows bosses to gerrymander some workers' votes and suppress others' altogether.

28/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

These bosses have far more resources than the workers, and they spend millions on disinformation campaigns, forcing workers to attend long propaganda sessions on pain of dismissal.

https://doctorow.medium.com/a-collective-bargain-a48925f944fe

But despite all this, labor organizers win union elections and strike votes, and they do so with stupendous majorities - 95% or higher.

29/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

This is how the most important labor victories of our day were won: the 2019 LA teachers' strike won everything. Not just higher wages, but consellors in schools, mandatory greenspace for every school in LA, an end to ICE shakedowns of immigrant parents at the school-gate, and immigration law help for students and their families.

30/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

What's more, the teachers used their unity, their connection to the community, and their numbers to get out the vote in the next election, winning the marginal seats that delivered 2020's Democratic Congressional majority.

As I wrote in my review of MacAlevey's book:

> For McAlevey, saving America is just a scaled up version of the union organizer’s day-job. First, we fix the corrupt union, firing its sellout leaders and replacing them with fighters.

31/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

> Then, we organize supermajorities, person-to-person, in a methodical, organized fashion. Then we win votes, using those supermajorities to overpower the dirty tricks that rig the elections against us. Then we stay activated, because winning the vote is just the start of the fight.

> It’s a far cry from the Democratic Party consultant’s “data-driven” microtargeting strategy based on eking out tiny, fragile majorities with Facebook ads.

32/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

> That’s a strategy that fails in the face of even a small and disorganized voter-suppression campaign — it it’s doomed in today’s all-out assault on fair elections.

> What’s more, the consultants’ microtargeting strategy treats people as if the only thing they have to contribute is casting a ballot every couple years. A sleeping electorate will never win the fights that matter — the fight to save our planet, and to abolish billionaires.

33/

pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

If only the Democratic Party was as scared of its base as the Republicans are of their own.

eof/

RedFaster,

@pluralistic oh shit I've been saying for years the choice between a more Italian or a more German version of fascism isn't much of a choice, #Pizzaburger says it all

anand,

@pluralistic I once heard a (current) Dem congressperson proudly describe themselves a centrist between the Boeberts on the right and AOC etc on the left. 🤦🏽‍♂️

vivtek,

@pluralistic Bonus points for citing Odub!

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