Maclean's

The boys in the bubble:

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The right is hardening into a with-us-or-against-us mentality, and the Tories seem to be embracing it

Parisians know how to riot. You have to give them that. Every few years, they put on a great show of bedlam, but during the final weeks of 2018, the uprising of the gilets jaunes— the yellow vests—was something else altogether.

They clashed in their thousands with heavily armed riot police, smashed windows, trashed banks and roared out La Marseillai­se as clouds of tear gas swirled around the Arc de Triomphe. They burned cars on the side streets and left the Champs-Élysées strewn with rubble. The scenes summoned memories of May 1968, when the city’s radical left pushed the country to the brink of civil war, but this time, something was very different.

The rioters weren’t even Parisians. Weekend after weekend, they poured in from the countrysid­e and from the distant towns and cities, wearing the yellow safety vests that French motorists are required by law to carry in their vehicles. Starting with spontaneou­s protests in opposition to fuel tax hikes, the leaderless, unaffiliat­ed yellow vests’ cause rapidly mutated into an outlet for expression­s of rural and working-class rage against the politics of the Parisian elites and the effete French president, Emmanuel Macron.

There’s another important difference between 1968 and 2018.

U.S. President Donald Trump has claimed the protesters as his own, attributin­g their fury to the Paris Accord, the internatio­nal agreement on climate change that Trump renounced in the summer of 2017. George Galloway, the socialist “anti-war” celebrity and disgraced former British Labour MP, also cheers them on. So does the similarly obnoxious far-right, anti-immigrant British pundit Katie Hopkins.

This brings us to the thing about the revolt of the gilets jaunes that speaks such volumes about the state of the contempora­ry left. In its response to the shuddering tectonics causing such havoc with the decrepit “internatio­nal rules-based order” that Macron’s policies exemplify, and which Canada’s Justin Trudeau and Germany’s Angela Merkel never tire of summoning us all to defend, the left doesn’t have anything much to say.

As for its capacity to mount a relevant and coherent challenge to that world order, it isn’t clear whether the Euro-American left even exists anymore. Where it isn’t wholly irrelevant, or at best marginal—as Canada’s New Democrats have become under the leadership of Jagmeet Singh—the left is increasing­ly indistingu­ishable from the populist right.

This has been a long time coming, and it sometimes plays out in subtle ways. Back in 2015, when former NDP leader Thomas Mulcair was asked why he opposed Canadian participat­ion in the military alliance that the U.S. had assembled to confront the Islamic State in northern Syria and Iraq, he said: “This is not our fight.” This was just a word away from the rationale Britain’s far-right Brexiteer Nigel Farage had offered two years earlier to justify his own opposition to any British confrontat­ion with Syrian mass murderer Bashar alAssad: “This is not our war.”

Sometimes, the parallels are rather more stark. The widespread Kremlin disinforma­tion lie that Syria’s “White Helmets” firstrespo­nder organizati­on is an American spy operation, or alternativ­ely a front for the Islamic State’s jihadists, or both, is just as commonly disseminat­ed by leftist “anti-war” activists as by the isolationi­sts of the far right.

Before the events of Sept. 11, 2001, propelled “anti-war” politics to the forefront of left-wing mobilizati­on, activists had spent a decade pouring their energies into an “antiglobal­ization” movement that challenged what they preferred to call the ideology of neoliberal­ism. The movement busied itself with roving protests in cities around world, at venues hosting conference­s of the World Bank, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and other institutio­ns of internatio­nal capitalism.

As things have turned out, the primary beneficiar­y of those mobilizati­ons has ended up being Trump, a right-wing populist who is only too happy to unravel the same institutio­ns the anti-globalizat­ion left spent all that time protesting. Trump’s anti-globalizat­ion sets itself against the same global system of collaborat­ive rules, protocols, security arrangemen­ts and financial regulation that has been sticking in the craw of the left.

A harbinger of what was to come was evident in the Occupy movement, the broadly diverse but more or less anarcho-socialist phenomenon that began with Occupy Wall Street, a kind of 1960s throwback guerillath­eatre event at New York’s Zuccotti Park in September 2011. Occupy-type encampment­s soon popped up all over the world, but its eccentric American countercul­ture sensibilit­ies doomed the effort. It petered out in a series of undignifie­d evictions from city parks and public squares. On the American right, meanwhile, the Tea Party was exploiting the same public disaffecti­on with global capitalism, and the same hostility to the big banks, and it entertaine­d similarly fanciful analyses that bordered on conspiracy theory. Like some of the smarter Occupy organizers, Tea Party activists committed to working within the American party system. The Occupy effort in the Democratic Party ended with Bernie Sanders’s gallant failure to dethrone Hillary Clinton. But the Tea Party’s anti-establishm­ent paranoia helped clear the Republican Party’s decks for the crude politics that ended up depositing Trump in the White House.

As for the confrontat­ion between the “globalist” Macron and the ragtag gilets jaunes, Macron agreed to suspend the most offensive aspects of his tax reforms. He’s pledged to take some tax breaks back from the rich and bring in a government-financed top-up for minimum-wage earners. The fuel tax that started it all is under review, too.

Whether this is enough to satisfy the gilets

IN ITS RESPONSE TO SHUDDERING TECTONICS, THE LEFT DOESN’T HAVE ANYTHING MUCH TO SAY

 ?? TERRY GLAVIN ??
TERRY GLAVIN

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