I hear people exclaim what we need is a popular front against Trump and Trumpism. What I find striking here is that it suggests that such a front doesn’t yet exist. But it does, unless you have a bookish understanding of the term. And it is broad in character and scope. So the challenge isn’t to “build a popular front,” but to deepen and extend it further for the purpose of defending, first of all, the results of the election, but also addressing other sides of an unfolding crisis. But again, the immediate task on which everything else turns, is to assure that the election results are secured and that the Inauguration of a new president and vice president takes place on Jan 20.
Watched some of Trump’s rant in Georgia last night and I could only think that the explanation I hear from some on our side of the divide that white workers who still support him aren’t necessarily buying into his raw racist invective. I find this delusional. Racism is at the core of Trump’s message. It’s what he peddles, and practically nothing else. Moreover, in this election, Biden and the Democrats did offer an alternative working class agenda, including robust support for the labor movement. White privilege — and it comes in many forms — is a stubborn thing. And class politics that ignores it really isn’t class politics.
I was rereading (after a loooong vacation) C. Wright Mills discussion of what he called the “labor metaphysic.” And it got me to thinking about the actual role of labor (the working class) – not its role in the realm of theory – over the past half century and how it jived with my worldview. I haven’t come to any conclusions, but I will say some of my thinking was metaphysical and thus requires at least qualifications and modifications.
In claiming to be the victim of a rigged and corrupted election and making baseless accusations of fraud last night, Trump is attempting to set one half of the country against the other, provoke violence, and delegitimize the election. His campaign to “blow up” what millions of voters decided in the sanctity of a polling booth earlier this week should be strongly repudiated by people of all political persuasions. The fire of hatred, disruption, and division should be summarily resisted and extinguished.
Trump’s refusal to accept the results of the election is distracting the full attention of the federal government and civil society from throwing their full weight against a deadly and destructive pandemic. At a moment when we need social solidarity at every level of society and sustained and coordinated government action, he is organizing division, distrust, and denialism. Trump is the Jefferson Davis of our time. And neither we nor history should forget that. What he is doing is criminal.