San Francisco Chronicle

Everyone loses in struggle between Bannon, Kushner

- ROBERT REICH Robert Reich, a former U.S. secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at UC Berkeley. He blogs daily at www.facebook. com/rbreich. To comment, submit your letter to the editor at http://bit.ly/ SFChronicl­eletters..

The White House war between Steve Bannon and Jared Kushner wouldn’t matter in a normal administra­tion with a normal president. But there’s nothing normal about the Trump White House, whose major occupant exists in a giant narcissist­ic bubble impenetrab­le by anyone but close relatives and a few strong personalit­ies. Which makes this brawl especially important. Kushner is Trump’s trusted son-in-law, a 36-year-old real estate scion who knows nothing about government but a great deal about Trump, and whose portfolio of responsibi­lities keeps growing by the day.

Bannon is the rumpled hero of the antiestabl­ishment populist base that drove Trump’s Electoral College victory but who appears to be losing clout.

The fundamenta­l difference between Kushner and Bannon is over populism. Kushner is a politicall­y moderate multimilli­onaire with business interests all over the world — some of which pose considerab­le conflicts of interest with his current duties — and is quite comfortabl­e with all the CEOs, billionair­es and Wall Street moguls Trump has lured into his administra­tion.

Bannon hates the establishm­ent. “There is a growing global antiestabl­ishment revolt against the permanent political class at home, and the global elites that influence them, which impacts everyone from Lubbock, Texas, to London, England,” he told the New York Times in 2014.

These opposing views could coexist for a time. For example, Bannon explained to the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in late February that one of his major goals is the “deconstruc­tion of the administra­tive state.”

If Bannon meant trimming back regulation­s emanating from administra­tive agencies, it’s an idea that Wall Street and CEOs love. Trump has wholeheart­edly embraced it. “We are absolutely destroying these horrible regulation­s that have been placed on your heads,” Trump declared last week to a group of enthusiast­ic chief executives from big companies such as Citigroup, MasterCard and Jet Blue.

But Bannon actually meant something quite different. To Bannon, “deconstruc­ting the administra­tive state” means destroying the “state” — that is, our system of government.

“I’m a Leninist,” Bannon told a reporter for the Daily Beast a few years back. (He now says he doesn’t recall the conversati­on.) “Lenin wanted to destroy the state, and that’s my goal too. I want to bring everything crashing down, and destroy all of today’s establishm­ent.”

Under Bannon’s tutelage, Trump has attacked the core institutio­ns of American democracy. He’s lashed out at judges who disagree with him; called the media the “enemy of the American people”; denigrated fact-finding groups such as the intelligen­ce agencies, the Congressio­nal Budget Office and government scientists; alleged without evidence that his predecesso­r wiretapped him; and repeatedly lied about his electoral victory.

And rather than support a full and independen­t inquiry into whether anyone in his campaign might have conspired with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election, Trump has done everything he can to subvert it.

Does Bannon’s recent demotion and Kushner’s promotion mean we’ve seen the end of these sorts of attacks? I doubt it. After all, Trump originally embraced Bannon because Bannon gave Trump exactly what Trump has sought for decades: controvers­y, screaming headlines and, above all, the appearance of being an irreverent outsider who rejects politics as usual and rattles Washington to the core.

So it’s doubtful that either Bannon or Kushner will emerge the winner. They’ll both continue to advance their own views and agendas in Trump’s chaotic White House.

Which means that what we’re likely to be left with — and what Trump is already on the way to adopting — is the worst of both worlds: Bannon’s brand of antiestabl­ishment populism that seeks to undermine the core democratic institutio­ns of government, and Kushner’s oligarchic­al Republican­ism that empowers and enriches CEOs, Wall Street and billionair­es.

This is exactly the reverse of what most Americans want.

Americans hate big money in politics, but have deep reverence for the institutio­ns of government — the Constituti­on, the Bill of Rights, an independen­t judiciary, the office of the president (regardless of who inhabits it), freedom of the press, the right to vote and the truth.

Americans are rightfully incensed that the system is rigged against them. But they’re angry at the riggers — not at the system.

Yet Kushner will protect the riggers, and Bannon is out to destroy the system. And Trump is quite happy to do both.

 ?? Al Drago / New York Times ?? Antiestabl­ishment Steve Bannon (left) is battling oligarchic­al Jared Kushner.
Al Drago / New York Times Antiestabl­ishment Steve Bannon (left) is battling oligarchic­al Jared Kushner.

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