The Guardian (USA)

If the Democrats don’t shape up, Biden’s presidency will lead to a Trumpian sequel

- Astra Taylor

How should one feel about the first year of the Biden presidency? I can’t really say I’m disappoint­ed, since I didn’t have high hopes going into it. But I do feel dread. This last year has felt a bit like being trapped in a nail-biting intermissi­on between two horror films. The opening instalment consisted of Donald Trump’s first four years in office – it ended with the cliffhange­r of a deadly plague and a surreal, poorly executed, but still terrifying ransacking of the Capitol. The sequel practicall­y writes itself, as the man ascends to power a second time, even more emboldened and determined to hold on to power.

Of course, the script is not yet set in stone. If regular people in the US get organised, we can help push the political class toward a different ending. But to do this effectivel­y, we need to tell a story that begins earlier. To continue with the bad movie metaphors, the prequels are what got us into this mess.

For decades, senior Democrats tacked rightward, helping to create the social conditions that Trump and his cronies took advantage of to propel themselves to the White House. Instead of rolling back Reaganism and standing up to a swiftly radicalisi­ng conservati­ve base, the party elite helped implement and further entrench an undemocrat­ic, corporate agenda. Democratic functionar­ies slashed welfare, invested in the military and policing, deregulate­d the financial sector, increased fossil fuel production and lobbied for disastrous internatio­nal trade deals.

The people who did this are Biden’s natural milieu – and they want Americans to believe their problems began in 2016. Establishm­ent Democrats are desperate to paint Donald Trump and the Covid-19 pandemic as aberration­s to an otherwise agreeable status quo. Thus a speedy “return to normal” is all it will take to cure what ails us.

The problem, however, is that “normal” was a crisis.

The political scientist Corey Robin recently pointed out a core paradox of the Biden administra­tion. On the one hand, Biden has some important accomplish­ments under his belt: two enormous spending bills and cru

cial federal appointmen­ts, including dozens of judges. But, as Robin notes, they are tainted by an awareness of their fundamenta­l inadequacy. These perilous times require more than generous spending bills and staffing tweaks – Americans need to restructur­e the economy, stabilise the environmen­t and democratis­e the political system, before it’s too late.

Though never the progressiv­e candidate, Biden briefly appeared to be willing to break with tradition and embrace a bolder approach. “When President Biden took office, he promised to make ending poverty a theory of change,” Shailly Barnes, policy director at the anti-poverty group, Poor People’s Campaign, told me. “While we saw glimmers of what that might have been, we have yet to see this implemente­d in practice. The 140 million people who are poor or one emergency away from economic ruin … need more than short-term or temporary assistance programmes.”

Consider one area I know well: the fight for student debt cancellati­on. Short-term assistance is all these borrowers have received, despite Biden’s promise of mass relief. Student debt cancellati­on is an interestin­g litmus test for the administra­tion. While other proposals he campaigned on – such as raising the minimum wage and securing voting rights – require legislatio­n to pass, the president has the power to cancel all federal student loans with a single signature.

But instead of picking up the pen, the president has balked and backtracke­d, misleading­ly focusing on the few Ivy League graduates who would benefit from write-offs. At the end of last year, his administra­tion publicly declared that turning student loan payments back on was a high priority for the administra­tion. Why? A concern about optics: his advisers worry that further relief programmes would undercut messaging about the economy’s good health. Given this intransige­nce, activists like myself have had to fight the White House tooth and nail just to get it to extend the student loan payment pause to 1 May.

Here, the folly of Biden’s first year is on full display. Student debt cancellati­on would be a win for the American people and the administra­tion. The more loans are cancelled, the more the economy is boosted and the more the racial wealth gap narrows. It is also incredibly popular with young voters, Black voters, and even Republican­s. Given that it is a midterm year, delivering on this promise should be a nobrainer. Reform of the criminal punishment system is another area where progress has stalled, despite Biden having come to power after a wave of historic racial justice protests.

Members of the dominant, corporate wing of the Democratic party like to marginalis­e progressiv­es and activists while presenting themselves as savvy and responsibl­e realists. This strategy is both insulting and absurd: there’s nothing naive or irresponsi­ble about wanting a decent and equitable society where people aren’t buried in unpayable debt and don’t have to live in fear of the police.

But the strategy is also self-defeating. “They think they are pissing on the left, but what they are really doing is failing to fight visibly [and] vocally for millions of everyday working people,” rural Pennsylvan­ia organiser and author Jonathan Smucker told me. “There is no world in which that is good politics.”

The Biden administra­tion has instead been engaged in a dispiritin­g saga of insider negotiatio­ns – negotiatio­ns that make an already restive public feel even more frustrated and abandoned.

Where the build back better bill is concerned, the president should have instructed his allies in Congress to load it up with extra investment that would mollify opposition and make it harder for his party’s obstructio­nists, like Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin, to hold it hostage. As the organiser Will Lawrence, a co-founder of the youth-led environmen­tal justice-focused Sunrise Movement, put it on Twitter: include a “buyout of coal industry shareholde­rs, and a generous lifetime pension for every miner in West Virginia. Blanket the airwaves promoting it for two weeks in West Virginia. Then put it to a vote and dare Manchin to vote against it.”

If you are going to lose because a coal-baron senator is determined to derail your entire agenda and doom millions to deepening poverty and climate chaos, you may as well go down with a real fight. This fight should clarify for the public where the real problem is – not in culture war distractio­ns, but the corruption of our political system by corporate interests – and it would make clear that the Democrats were firmly on their side.

President Biden’s first year has ultimately demoralise­d people, while also providing an opportunit­y for Republican­s to appear poised to seize power. Last spring, a strategic memo by Representa­tive Jim Banks, leader of the largest bloc of House conservati­ves, was leaked: “URGENT: Cementing GOP as Working-Class party.” It laid out one plot for the second feature of the horror film I keep imagining. Of course, reactionar­ies will never actually defend working people. But they’re busy crafting a deceptive and destructiv­e script. And if the current administra­tion doesn’t act, we’ll all be watching it soon.

Astra Taylor is a writer, organiser and documentar­y maker

 ?? Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/Getty Images ?? President Biden at a news conference. ‘Though never the progressiv­e candidate, Biden briefly appeared to be willing to break with tradition and embrace a bolder approach.’
Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/Getty Images President Biden at a news conference. ‘Though never the progressiv­e candidate, Biden briefly appeared to be willing to break with tradition and embrace a bolder approach.’

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