The Guardian (USA)

Trump’s War on Capitalism review: a Reaganite and RFK Jr walk into a bar…

- Lloyd Green

With a foreword from Robert F Kennedy Jr, David Stockman, once Ronald Reagan’s budget director, delivers an unsparing attack on Donald Trump. The former president’s stances on trade, social security, spending and Covid all receive a beatdown. Stockman was somewhat sympatheti­c to Trump when he rose to power eight years ago but has since grown hostile, posing as a keeper of the flame of Reaganism, defender of free markets and opponent of statist encroachme­nt.

Stockman’s plug from RFK Jr, a former candidate for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination now running as an independen­t, is noteworthy. After reminding the reader of past antipathy toward Stockman over cuts to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency budget four decades ago, Kennedy lauds him for criticizin­g Trump on Covid.

“He’s truth-teller,” Kennedy declares. “He tells the truth in these pages – by the numbers.”

In 2007, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil fraud charges against Stockman, together with officers and employees of Collins & Aikman, an auto-parts supplier that went bankrupt in 2005.

“Between 2001 and 2005, C&A and several of its former officers and employees, including its chief executive officer, Stockman, engaged in pervasive accounting fraud,” the commission alleged. The case was settled in 2010, after Stockman agreed to pay $7.2m, without admission of wrongdoing.

As for Kennedy, he has problems of his own.

“Covid-19. There is an argument that it is ethnically targeted,” he said in Manhattan last year. “Covid-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and Black people. The people who are most immune are Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese.”

For the record, Borough Park and Midwood in New York, home to large Jewish population­s, had among the highest Covid death rates in the city. Both neighborho­ods also had markedly low vaccinatio­n rates.

Despite his protestati­ons to the contrary, Kennedy sure looks like an antivaxxer. In states and cities, the red v blue, Republican v Democrat Covid death rate disparity is real. Ditto the gap in vaccine hesitancy.

More comically, Kennedy’s campaign recently announced that he would not attend a birthday party fundraiser after several celebritie­s supposedly due to be there said they had nothing to do with the bash.

“I don’t know anything about this event,” the singer Dionne Warwick said. “I did not agree to it, and I certainly won’t be there.” The actor Martin Sheen announced: “I wholeheart­edly support President Joe Biden and the Democratic ticket in 2024.”

Back to Stockman. Since 2017, in his eyes, Trump has repeatedly failed. In 2019, Stockman wrote Peak Trump: the Undrainabl­e Swamp and the Fantasy of Maga, in which he called Trump “a political flyweight, megalomani­acal incompeten­t and bile-ridden bully who stumbled into the Oval Office”.

On the eve of the 2020 election, Stockman exhorted conservati­ves to abandon Trump. “[His] embrace of what amounts to crackpot economics has not only left the nation spiraling toward the mother of all financial disasters,” Stockman wrote. “He has also finally euthanized what remained of GOP fiscal rectitude.”

Really? With Reagan as president and Stockman at the Office of Management and Budget, the federal deficit ballooned to nearly 5.9% of GDP, a post-second world war record. “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter,” Dick Cheney gushed in 2003, as vice-president, staring at tax cuts passed under his boss, George W Bush.

On Trump’s watch, the deficit-GDP ratio came within a whisker of 14.9%. Even before Covid, Trump was visibly unconcerne­d with federal spending – unless it was part of the legacy of Barack Obama.

“It’s a great talking point when you have an administra­tion that’s Democrat-led,” said Mark Walker, a former North Carolina Republican congressma­n and minister, in 2017. “It’s a little different now that Republican­s have both houses and the administra­tion.”

Under Biden, the deficit stands at around 5.5% – evoking Republican howls. Then again, Reagan and the Federal Reserve did manage to tame inflation. By contrast, Biden underestim­ated the inflationa­ry impact of his spending and interest rates remain stuck. Said differentl­y, a trip to the supermarke­t is a constant and nagging problem – a reality-based Trump ad.

Stockman also criticizes Trump for his aversion to cutting benefits for seniors – which puts the likely Republican nominee in sync with the American public.

“With the Donald’s loud insistence, the contempora­ry GOP has even taken a powder completely on Medicare, social security and the lesser entitlemen­ts,” Stockman writes. His solution: “Import millions of new workers.” Will the Republican party of Trump ever choose to take such medicine? Not likely.

In a sense, Stockman is simply being Stockman, an ideologica­l vagabond searching for a cause. In high school, he entered an American Friends Service Committee essay contest and won with “an ode to Martin Luther King Jr and Mahatma Gandhi”, Peter Steinfels, a noted Catholic liberal and journalist, recalled.

But Stockman also helped Barry Goldwater’s ultra-conservati­ve campaign for president in 1964. Later, in college, he struck a pose as a Students for a Democratic Society, anti-Vietnam war activist. He moved on to become a Reagan-era supply-sider, then a fiscal conservati­ve. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, as a congressma­n, Stockman was the sole member of the Michigan delegation to oppose a government bailout of Chrysler.

Taken together, all this makes Kennedy’s praise for Stockman politicall­y self-destructiv­e. The idea of a Democrat-turned-independen­t presidenti­al candidate pumping a book that calls for cuts to social security and increased immigratio­n is down-right wacky. Talk about anti-populism. Seniors vote. Other than publicity, there is little to be visibly gained.

And yet, our political system ails. Five in eight Americans say they back a third party, including three-quarters of independen­ts and 58% of Republican­s. Trump and Biden are viewed unfavourab­ly, the president in a doubledigi­t pit. Kennedy’s numbers remain above water, which may be an accomplish­ment in itself. He may be more of a threat to Trump than to Biden. In the end, Stockman will be rooting for him.

Trump’s War on Capitalism ispublishe­d in the US by Skyhorse

 ?? Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA ?? Robert F Kennedy Jr speaks in Atlanta.
Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA Robert F Kennedy Jr speaks in Atlanta.
 ?? Composite: Getty Images ?? David Stockman in 2015, left, and as Ronald Reagan's budget director, in 1984.
Composite: Getty Images David Stockman in 2015, left, and as Ronald Reagan's budget director, in 1984.

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