Baltimore Sun

Trump is deflecting America’s attention

- By Robert B. Reich Robert B. Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of “The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It.”

Less than two months before one of the most consequent­ial elections in American history, it’s useful to consider the economic reality that fueled President Donald Trump’s victory four years ago.

No other developed nation has nearly the inequaliti­es of income and wealth found in the U.S., even though all have been exposed to the same forces of globalizat­ion and technologi­cal change. The three richest families in America have as much wealth as the bottom half of all Americans combined. Some 30 million Americans recently reported that their households didn’t have enough food.

American capitalism is off the rails.

The main reason is that large corporatio­ns, Wall Street banks and a relative handful of exceedingl­y rich individual­s have gained enough political power to game the system.

Chief executives have done everything possible to prevent the wages of most workers from rising in tandem with productivi­ty gains, so most gains instead go into the pockets of top executives and major investors.

They’ve outsourced abroad, installed labor-replacing technologi­es and switched to part-time and contract work. They’ve busted unions, whose membership shrank from 35% of the private-sector workforce 40 years ago to 6.4% today. They’ve defanged antitrust enforcemen­t, allowing their monopolies free rein.

The so-called free market has been taken over by crony capitalism, corporate bailouts and corporate welfare.

This massive power shift laid the groundwork for Mr. Trump. In1964, almost two thirds of Americans believed government was run for the benefit of all the people. By 2013 almost 80% believed government was run by a few big interests.

Much of the political establishm­ent wants to attribute Mr. Trump’s rise solely to racism. Racism did play a part, to be sure, but racism’s sordid history in American politics long predates Mr. Trump.

What has given Mr. Trump’s racism — as well as his hateful xenophobia, misogyny and jingoism — particular virulence has been his capacity to channel the intensifyi­ng anger of the white working class. It is hardly the first time a demagogue has used scapegoats to deflect public attention from the real causes of its distress.

Mr. Trump speaks the language of authoritar­ian populism but acts in the interests of America’s emerging oligarchy. His deal with the moneyed interests is simple: He’ll stoke divisivene­ss so Americans won’t see how the oligarchy has taken over the reins, twisted government to its benefit and siphoned off the economic rewards.

He’ll make Americans so angry at each other that they won’t pay attention to CEOs getting exorbitant pay while slicing the pay of average workers, won’t notice the giant tax cut that went to big corporatio­ns and the wealthy, and won’t be outraged by a boardroom culture that tolerates financial conflicts of interest, insider trading and the outright bribery of public officials through unlimited campaign donations.

This way, the moneyed interests can rig the system while Mr. Trump complains that the system is rigged by a “deep state.”

Notwithsta­nding all this, Mr. Trump’s inexcusabl­e failure to contain the coronaviru­s is having a larger impact on swing voters than the divisivene­ss he foments. Death has a way of concentrat­ing the mind.

But if Joe Biden is elected, he would be well advised to remember the forces Mr. Trump exploited to gain power, and begin the task of remedying them. The solution is not found in mere redistribu­tion of income. It is found in redistribu­ting power.

If wealth continues to concentrat­e at the top, no one will be able to contain the corrupting influence of big money on the American system and the anger it unleashes. As Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis once said, “We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrat­ed in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.”

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