Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP AND BANNON ARE THE ‘CORPORATIS­TS’

- E.J Dionne Washington Post Writers Group

WASHINGTON — Just when you despair that only chaos animates the Trump administra­tion, along comes Steve Bannon, the White House ideologue, to offer the Rosetta Stone illuminati­ng what this circus is all about.

And when you realize what Trump & Co. might really be up to, your despair turns to alarm.

After Bannon had offered his Deep Thoughts on Trumpism at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference last Thursday, there was Donald Trump on Friday morning back to his usual grubby business of using Twitter to denounce his enemies. His target in this case was the FBI. He accused the agency of being “totally unable to stop the national security ‘leakers’” and being guilty of leaks of its own.

Trump’s anxiety was likely heightened by word that Reince Priebus, his chief of staff, asked the FBI to deny reports that several members of Trump’s team had contacts with Russian agents during E.J. the 2016 campaign. Dionne Priebus’ interventi­on raises serious questions about whether the White House is trying to shut down or influence inquiries that are plainly in the national interest.

Bannon, appearing with Priebus, may have had this in mind when he told the assembled conservati­ves that “every day, it is going to be a fight” and pushed Team Trump’s attacks on the media to a new level. Trump picked up on the theme in his own CPAC remarks on Friday, echoing countless authoritar­ians in repeating his condemnati­on of “fake news” outlets as “the enemy of the people.” Trump’s survival may depend on his supporters ignoring a lot of bad news and inconvenie­nt facts.

But it is Trump’s opponents and the not-yet-committed who need to pay close attention when Bannon, the president’s visionary chief strategist, promises an ominous-sounding “new political order.” Philip Stephens, a columnist for the Financial Times, had a nice descriptio­n of Bannon’s job, describing him as “the ideologue who informs Mr. Trump’s impulses.” And Bannon actually made sense of Trump’s seemingly bizarre habit of naming people to head up agencies whose missions they openly oppose.

When Bannon listed the administra­tion’s central purposes, the first two were unsurprisi­ng: “national security and sovereignt­y” and “economic nationalis­m.” But then came the third: the “deconstruc­tion of the administra­tive state.” Bannon explained that officials who seem to hate what their agencies do — one thinks especially of Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency who has sued it repeatedly to the benefit of oil and gas companies — were “selected for a reason, and that is deconstruc­tion.”

This is a huge deal. It reflects a long-standing critique on the right not just of the Obama and Clinton years but of the entire thrust of American government since the Progressiv­e Era and the New Deal.

This is a war on a century’s worth of work to keep our air and water clean; our food, drugs and workplaces safe; the rights of employees protected; and the marketplac­e fair and unrigged. It’s one thing to make regulation­s more efficient and no more intrusive than necessary. It’s another to say that all the structures of democratic government designed to protect our citizens from the abuses of concentrat­ed private power should be swept away.

It’s a very strange moment. Trump and Bannon are happy to expand the reach of the state when it comes to policing, immigratio­n enforcemen­t, executive branch meddling in the work of investigat­ive agencies, and the browbeatin­g of individual companies that offend the president in one way or another. The parts of government they want to dismantle are those that stand on the side of citizens against powerful interests.

In his CPAC presentati­on, Bannon accused Trump’s foes of being “corporatis­t.” But, in the truest sense of the word, the real corporatis­ts are in the White House.

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