The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on an America First Caucus: a warning democracy is under siege

- Editorial

In 1944, George Orwell felt that the word fascism had “lost the last vestige of meaning” so liberally had it been used. But fascism remains very much alive. Decades after Orwell’s message, one of the challenges today is to identify and name it. Whether the label could be applied to Donald Trump had divided expert opinion, until the 6 January assault on Capitol Hill by a mob whose passions had been inflamed by his speech earlier that day. This melted the resistance historians of fascism like Columbia University’s Robert Paxton felt to using the f-word. The use of violence against democratic institutio­ns, he wrote, “crosses a red line”.

If anyone wondered what American fascism might look like then they could start with the proposed congressio­nal “America First Caucus”, which emerged this weekend from the office of extremist Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene. Carrying the torch for Trumpism, this fringe agenda conceals its racial argument behind muscular populist ones. The caucus plans were welcomed by legislator­s who had fanned the flames of the Capitol riot. Before being elected to Congress, Ms Greene peddled conspiracy theories, made racist statements and indicated support for the execution of Democratic leaders and FBI agents. She renounced those beliefs on the eve of being kicked off congressio­nal committees but made no apology for having held them.

The proposed caucus platform contained not so much dog whistles as foghorns for white supremacy. America, the document claims, is based on “respect for uniquely Anglo-Saxon political traditions” and decries “post-1965 immigrants” for depressing workers’ wages, highlighti­ng the year when the US ended its policy of giving preferenti­al treatment to western European migrants. It calls for rebuilding the US with an “aesthetic value that befits the progeny of European architectu­re”. Thankfully the plan exploded on the launch pad. Republican leaders calculated it would hurt their electoral chances in moderate swing seats. Ms Greene disowned the caucus proposals.

Fascism not only pursues rightwing policies, it seeks to build up massmobili­sing movements and paramilita­ry organisati­ons with the aim of establishi­ng a single-party dictatorsh­ip. Mr Trump saw armed citizens as a political asset. His heirs see despotism as a viable alternativ­e to the current political structure. In Congress 147 Republican lawmakers promoted Mr Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was stolen. Republican­s in 47 states have 361 proposed laws to restrict voting access on grounds of baseless claims of electoral fraud.

Around the world electorate­s will have to become reacquaint­ed with fascism. Voters must attune themselves to what it looks and sounds like. In the UK, Labour’s Sir Keir Starmer was caught out earlier this year on a national radio phone-in when he failed to recognise a conspiracy theory popular with fascists, and Fox News star Tucker Carlson, known as the “great replacemen­t”. It falsely claims that dwindling white birthrates have been orchestrat­ed by multicultu­ral global elites in an attempt to make whites a minority. There’s no suggestion that Sir Keir agreed with the racist caller but there was criticism in the way he handled the call. There is an urgent and pressing need to recognise both the real threat of fascism as well as the rhetorical and emotional motifs it employs.

 ??  ?? ‘Before being elected to Congress, Ms Greene peddled conspiracy theories, made racist statements and indicated support for the execution of Democratic leaders and FBI agents.’ Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP
‘Before being elected to Congress, Ms Greene peddled conspiracy theories, made racist statements and indicated support for the execution of Democratic leaders and FBI agents.’ Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP

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