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OCTOBER 19, 2022
Kuttner on TAP
How the Center Enables Fascism
It’s not enough to be ‘pro-democracy.’ It’s necessary to be pro-worker.
If we lose our democracy to fascism, one key reason will be that corporate Republicans and Democrats, who profess to care about saving democracy, have relentlessly opposed the populist economic policies that might give working-class people some reason to believe in democracy.

The other day, the usually perceptive Anand Giridharadas had an extended op-ed in the Times, adapted from his new book. He was eloquent on the fascist threat, but he got one big thing wrong.

Giridharadas had three basic points to make. First, we are at dire risk of becoming a fascist country, and we surely are. Second, the far right is simply better tactically at using what my generation called guerrilla theater to get people’s attention and rally support for the right’s issue-framing. (“The right presently runs laps around the left in its ability to manage and use attention. It understands the power of provocation to make people have the conversation that most benefits its side … Democrats and their allies lag on this score, bringing four-point plans to gunfights.”

He’s right about that, too. But his most important argument, which sounds accurate, is wide of the mark.

In urging Democrats to have the courage of their convictions and to lead more boldly, Giridharadas conflates the left with the pro-democracy center. He writes, “The left has a bold agenda: strengthen voting rights, save the planet, upgrade the safety net. But policies do not speak for themselves, and the cause remains starved for a larger, goosebumps-giving, heroes-and-villains, endlessly quotable story … that helps people make sense of the time and place they’re in.”

Progressives do not lack boldness or compelling narratives. What they lack is votes. And progressives are not the same as “Democrats.” The corporate wing of the Democratic Party has relentlessly resisted structural policies that would transform the life chances and political views of working people.

Universal and public health insurance; a much higher minimum wage; massive investment in caregiving; a strengthened right to organize unions—despite bare majorities in both houses, we have not been able to get these through Congress, because of the opposition of some Democrats as well as Republicans. All this goes well beyond the “upgraded safety net” that Giridharadas attributes as the left economic program.

In that respect—let’s not mince words—centrists have been enablers of fascists, because long-festering pocketbook grievances have won converts to Trumpism. More clever tactics will not alter that reality.

Giridharadas is right that it will take extensive organizing, but let’s not mistake the pro-democracy movement for a transformative economic movement. Republicans who loathe Trump—Liz Cheney, Rob Portman, Ben Sasse, and the House Republicans who voted to duly certify the 2020 election results—all these worthies voted for the pro-corporate and anti-worker policies that made Trump.

Pro-democracy has to mean pro-economic democracy. Giridharadas is on point when he salutes the efforts of on-the-ground organizers. But they need to be organizing for economic justice, not just for procedural rights, and often in opposition to other Democrats.
~ ROBERT KUTTNER
Democrats Could Be Missing Out on a Crucial Midterm Pickup
Cheri Beasley has been neck and neck with her Republican opponent for Senate in North Carolina all year. But national Democrats have only recently delivered funding support. BY RAMENDA CYRUS
Prescription Drug Middleman Potentially Profiting off Veterans
Express Scripts has forced 400,000 beneficiaries to find a new prescription filler. Critics say the company is steering them toward its own mail-order pharmacy. BY DAVID DAYEN
Time for the EPA to Use Its Most Powerful Weapon
National Ambient Air Quality Standards under the Clean Air Act could be employed to reach President Biden’s climate goals. BY STEVE NOVICK
The British Marxist Historians
Harvey Kaye speaks about a new edition of his classic book. BY PROSPECT STAFF
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