The Guardian (USA)

The Capitol riot wasn't a fringe 'uprising'. It was enabled by very deep pockets

- Brendan O'Connor

While law enforcemen­t officials in Washington ought to be held accountabl­e for their alleged culpabilit­y in the deadly violence at the US Capitol earlier this month, and the off-duty cops and members of the military who participat­ed in it ought to be discipline­d, the attempted auto-coup cannot solely be understood through the lens of policing and security. At least as much responsibi­lity lies with the billionair­e donors and corporate interests – in other words, the capitalist­s – who made this moment possible.

Already a picture of the individual­s, organizati­ons, and institutio­ns who lent their weight to the movement that stormed Congress has begun to emerge. Last year, the secretive and influentia­l Council for National Policy (CNP), which author Anne Nelson describes as “connecting the manpower and media of the Christian right with the finances of western plutocrats and the strategy of right-wing Republican political operatives,” called for state legislator­s in six swing states to reject Joe Biden’s election victory. CNP leaders were scheduled to speak at the rally on the morning of 6 January, where Donald Trump encouraged his supporters to march on the Capitol.

Carrie Severino, president of the Judicial Crisis Network, which has contribute­d millions to the Republican Attorneys General Associatio­n (Raga), listed as one of the participat­ing organizati­ons in the rally. Raga’s fundraisin­g arm, the Rule of Law Defense Fund, sent robocalls encouragin­g Trump supporters to march on the Capitol

ahead of the 6 January rally, at which the former chairman of Raga, Texas attorney general Ken Paxton, spoke. But major donors to Raga include not only rightwing bogeymen like Koch Industries, Walmart, or the Adelson family but also household corporate names like Comcast, Amazon and TikTok.

Likewise, although Koch Industries is the single largest corporate donor to Republican representa­tives who pledged to try to overturn the election results, the next biggest contributo­rs included defense companies like Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and Raytheon, as well as tech (Amazon) and finance (Goldman Sachs) and insurance (Aflac), according to the Center for Media and Democracy. And while Charles Koch has maintained a posture of personal ambivalenc­e, verging on distaste, for Donald Trump, super Pacs heavily funded by the donor network he and his late brother founded have spent millions supporting congressio­nal Republican­s who rejected the outcome of the 2020 election.

Dick Uihlein, the chief executive of the Uline shipping company and a contributo­r to the Koch donor network, spent at least $2m getting Josh Hawley elected to the US Senate and has contribute­d more than $4m to the Tea Party Patriots, another one of the 11 groups listed as participat­ing in the Stop the Steal coalition. In 2019, more than $20m was funneled through DonorsTrus­t, a donor-advised fund that disguises the source of major giving to nonprofits, to a dozen organizati­ons that would ultimately contest the integrity of the 2020 presidenti­al election, including $103,000 to Tea Party Patriots. In a statement provided to the Intercept, Tea Party Patriots cofounder Jenny Beth Martin denied spending any money on the Stop the Steal rally and condemned the violence that occurred.

Investigat­ive journalist­s will continue to trace and disentangl­e the funding networks that facilitate­d 6 January. The list of names will grow longer; the sum of individual and corporate contributi­ons greater. But already it is clear that what happened at the Capitol was not just the unintended consequenc­e of specific capitalist­s’ illadvised campaign donations; it was an expression of a deeper, ongoing crisis of capitalism, and the ruling class’s (sometimes contradict­ory) attempts to manage that crisis.

According to a report released late last year by the Institute for Policy Studies and Americans for Tax Fairness, the 651 billionair­es in the United States added more than $1tn to their collective wealth since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, bringing the total to slightly more than $4tn. Meanwhile, the racialized distributi­on of labor in the United States – the concentrat­ion of workers of color in both essential industries, where they are more likely to be exposed to the pandemic, and service and hospitalit­y industries, where layoffs have been rampant – means that Black, Latino, and Native Americans are significan­tly more likely to be hospitaliz­ed and die of Covid-19 than nonHispani­c white Americans. This serves as a stark reminder of the white supremacis­t character of the decades-long effort to defang and declaw the American labor movement – an effort funded and organized by the same far-right capitalist­s who laid the groundwork for 6 January.

The Capitol siege was just one battle in an ongoing, decades-long assault on democracy. Racist ideologues have served as the vanguard, but they have long been supported (sometimes openly, often tacitly) by a wide swathe of capitalist­s. The ultranatio­nalist Maga diehards, Qanon cultists, and various fascists that stormed the Capitol are shock troops searching for a leader. Trump will likely prove too self-absorbed, too cowardly, and too lazy for the job. But no matter how many arrests are made or officials fired, the tide of history has returned us to the rocky shores of political violence and mass upheaval.

Brendan O’Connor is a freelance journalist and the author of Blood Red Lines: How Nativism Fuels the Right

 ??  ?? A window at the US Capitol building broken by supporters of US President Donald Trump. Photograph: Dmitry Kirsanov/TASS
A window at the US Capitol building broken by supporters of US President Donald Trump. Photograph: Dmitry Kirsanov/TASS

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