The Sunday Guardian

WALL STREET ROOTS FOR HILLARY, TRASHES TRUMP

- CONTINUED FROM P1

in the 1930s. Although financial sleight of hand ensures that the figures for total US output remain high, in reality the country is visibly declining in core areas such as infrastruc­ture. The “Profit Now and Anyhow” culture of Wall Street has replaced the earlier mindset of steady and stable growth of manufactur­ing and other services. The consequenc­e is that US manufactur­es have been losing ground to countries such as China. In the airline industry, for example, cost cutting has lowered the quality of US carriers to what may be described as the Soviet Aeroflot standard. During a flight by a US airline from New Delhi to Newark on 20 August, even amenity kits were absent in the Spartan business class, as it appeared that it was company policy not to spend money on them in certain sectors. The Newark to Seattle flight of the same airline, even in the first class cabin, had seats with minimal reclining capability, while the food was inedible. Across the US, standards of service are going down even as charges to the consumer are rising and the profits made by big operators in Wall Street are shooting up. However, the 2008 financial crash resulted in a sudden loss of faith by the public in the financial services industry, although President Barack Obama followed the Clinton playbook of paying out vast sums of taxpayer cash to rescue Wall Street from its own excesses.

So irresistib­le has the Wall Street- fuelled march towards the Democratic Party nomination of Hillary Clinton been that her socialist opponent, Bernie Sanders, was forced to cringe at the Democratic Party convention and endorse her despite having pointed out on multiple occasions earlier that she was the candidate of Wall Street. The Obama administra­tion continued the Clinton-Bush tradition of giving top posts in the economic policy silos to those who had been vetted and ap- proved by Wall Street, such as Timothy Geithner and Lawrence Summers. Despite her harsh rhetoric against Wall Street, a President Hillary Clinton will continue the practice of placing the interests of the financial services industry at the top of her list of priorities, perhaps unlike Donald Trump, whose relations with the financial services industry are chilly and whose activities relate to the building and manufactur­ing economy rather than to the finance sector. Small wonder that even the (Bush era) Treasury Secretary responsibl­e for the 2008 crash, Hank Paulson, has endorsed Clinton, as have an army of others in the financial services industry, while they have been openly abusive of Donald Trump. The support given by Wall Street and its numerous offshoots to Hillary Clinton has resulted in a flood of donations to her campaign, and to almost the entire US media entering on a near-hysterical campaign designed to convince voters that Donald Trump is a bigot and worse.

Not even a pretence of objectivit­y is being made by media channels such as the Washington Post and CNN, who are daily finding out new reasons to attack the Republican nominee in a manner unparallel­ed in recent US history. While (to protect Hillary Clinton) Bernie Sanders was made to stand down from his pledge to take his campaign up to the convention floor and beyond, an “independen­t” Presidenti­al candidate has been found by financial interests who is expected to siphon off a substantia­l number of Republican votes from Donald Trump.

Wall Street is betting on Hillary Clinton re-entering the White House in the 2016 election, a desire shared by those members of the Republican Party who are themselves close to the financial services industry, such as former President George W. Bush and former Republican Presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney and John McCain, who are openly canvassing against their own party’s nominee. Main Street is far weaker in the influence game, and it shows in the fact that the wind seems to be filling the Hillary sails. Smart money is betting that Wall Street will prevail over Main Street, and that the financial services industry will as usual get the better of the manufactur­ing and building sector, by their candidate decisively defeating another who does not (in practice rather than speech) share the same loyalty to Wall Street.

However, the race is far from over, as the anger against Wall Street (or what is called “the system”) is palpable across the US, and may result in a large number of votes going to Donald Trump or the Green candidate as a protest against the post-1990s establishm­ent and its candidate, Hillary Clinton. Millions of voters have watched their standard of living plummet. In particular, hundreds of thousands have lost their homes to bank foreclosur­es, even while these same institutio­ns were given massive handouts by the Obama administra­tion throughout 2009-12. Apart from the fact that the manufactur­ing industry is smarting from the neglect it is suffering in contrast to the largesse showered on the financial services industry by successive administra­tions, other factors are operating in favour of Trump as well that may be resulting in an “iceberg formation”. So far as his support is concerned, the bulk of it may be hidden “under the water”, the way most of an iceberg is.

The three other factors that have come to the surface in this extraordin­ary election are (a) a growing uneasiness about China and its rising power and a worry that this will soon become irreversib­le; (b) fear of the reach and potency of Wahhabism and its terror machine; and (c) a perception that relations between the black and white races have become worse rather than better after the country’s first African-American President took office in 2009. Hillary Clinton has had extensive contacts with the Chinese leadership, in contrast to Donald Trump, who has almost none of such linkages, while on Wahhabism, his rhetoric has been fiery rather than accommodat­ive in the manner of his opponent, who has close links to Qatar, Saudi Arabia and other GCC states. The perception that Trump would be far more hawkish on China and on Wahhabism than Hillary Clinton is an important factor explaining the fact that the Republican candidate is still within striking distance of victory on 8 November. However, where Hillary Clinton scores decisively over Trump is in the nonwhite vote, which has been put off by the Republican candidate’s rhetoric, some of which could be interprete­d as majoritari­anism. Whether such a gap can be bridged by bridge building to the powerful and vibrant African-American and Latino communitie­s, and by the majority (white) com- munity US citizens coming out to vote for Trump in large numbers (in contrast to low turnouts within this group in the past), remains to be seen.

Having built up a formidable war chest, Hillary Clinton has the cash needed to power a blitz of advertisin­g during the coming weeks in addition to the food of supportive coverage she has been getting in the US media. Trump’s early mistakes, especially some of his remarks against Hispanics and African-Americans, may yet result in a defeat for the constructi­on magnate. Whoever wins, this will be the most consequent­ial US election since that which saw Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the White House in 1933. As of now, it is clear that Wall Street has the edge.

However, much could change during the coming two months. The US voter is seething and is worried, a mood that may result in a surprise for the establishm­ent, the media and the pundits on 8 November.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India