Even in Exile, the Left Must Fight to Popularize Its Vision

Donald Trump won the US presidential election in resounding fashion, winning the electoral college and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 consolation prize, the popular vote, by a significant margin. The Republicans have maintained control of the House and flipped the Senate. Conservatives already control the Supreme Court.

On the eve of the election, the Guardian ran an article with the headline “Is Trump actually a fascist — and why does the answer matter?” Whether Trump is a fascist is open to debate, and scholars of fascism and the far-right have weighed in on either side. But as Jan-Werner Müller has put it, not being a fascist “doesn’t make [Trump] any less dangerous,” and the threats of his return to the White House are very real: millions of undocumented immigrants will live in fear of being swept up in his mass deportation plan. Transgender people will be the subject of even greater vitriol from people occupying even higher positions of power. More Americans will be forced to give birth or denied lifesaving care while pregnant as reproductive rights come under further attack. Far-right groups will be emboldened, as they were under the last Trump presidency, and the threat of violence targeting the myriad groups Trump has declared “enemies from within” will only grow. On the global stage, the United States will go from climate laggard to lead arsonist, and Israel’s genocidal violence will continue to go unchecked.

The threats ahead are clear. But to understand this political catastrophe — and prevent the next one — we need to take a hard look at the Democratic Party’s stunning failure to prevent it. A large share of the blame for this disastrous result falls on the ineffectual and self-satisfied Democratic Party…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Simon Black

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