The Guardian (USA)

New book details Steve Bannon’s ‘Maga movement’ plan to rule for 100 years

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Steve Bannon, Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign chair and White House strategist, believed before the 2020 election and the January 6 attack on Congress that a “Maga movement” of Trump supporters “could rule for a hundred years”.

“Outside the uniparty,” the Washington Post reporter Isaac Arnsdorf writes in a new book, referring to Bannon’s term for the political establishm­ent, “as Bannon saw it, there was the progressiv­e wing of the Democratic party, which he considered a relatively small slice of the electorate. And the rest, the vast majority of the country, was Maga.

“Bannon believed the Maga movement, if it could break out of being suppressed and marginalis­ed by the establishm­ent, represente­d a dominant coalition that could rule for a hundred years.”

Arnsdorf’s book, Finish What We Started: The Maga Movement’s Ground War to End Democracy, will be published next week. The Post published an excerpt on Thursday.

A businessma­n who became a driver of far-right thought through his stewardshi­p of Breitbart News, Bannon was Trump’s campaign chair in 2016 and his chief White House strategist in 2017, a post he lost after neoNazis marched in Charlottes­ville that summer.

He remained close to Trump, however, particular­ly as Trump attempted to overturn his 2020 defeat by Joe Biden.

That attempt culminated in the attack on Congress of 6 January 2021, when supporters Trump told to “fight like hell” to block certificat­ion of Biden’s win attacked the US Capitol.

Nine deaths have been linked to the attack, including law enforcemen­t suicides. More than 1,200 arrests have been made and hundreds of conviction­s secured. Trump was impeached for inciting the insurrecti­on but acquitted by Senate Republican­s.

Notwithsta­nding 88 criminal charges for election subversion, retention of classified informatio­n and hushmoney payments, and multimilli­ondollar penalties in civil cases over fraud and defamation, the latter arising from a rape claim a judge called “substantia­lly true”, Trump won the Republican nomination with ease this year.

As a Trump-Biden rematch grinds into gear, Bannon remains an influen

tial voice on the far right, particular­ly through his War Room podcast and despite his own legal problems over contempt of Congress and alleged fraud, both of which he denies.

The “uniparty”, in Bannon’s view, as described by Arnsdorf, is “the establishm­ent [Bannon] hungered to destroy. The neocons, neoliberal­s, big donors, globalists, Wall Street, corporatis­ts, elites.”

“Maga” stands for “Make America great again”, Trump’s political slogan.

Arnsdorf writes: “In his confidence that there were secretly millions of Democrats who were yearning to be Maga followers and just didn’t know it yet, Bannon was again taking inspiratio­n from Hoffer, who observed that true believers were prone to conversion from one cause to another since they were driven more by their need to identify with a mass movement than by any particular ideology.”

Eric Hoffer, Arnsdorf writes, was “the ‘longshorem­an philosophe­r’, so called because he had worked as a stevedore on the San Francisco docks while writing his first book, The True Believer [which] caused a sensation when it was published in 1951, becoming a manual for comprehend­ing the age of Hitler, Stalin and Mao”.

Bannon, Arnsdorf writes, “was not, like a typical political strategist, trying to tinker around the edges of the existing party coalitions in the hope of eking out 50% plus one. Bannon already told you: he wanted to bring everything crashing down.

“He wanted to completely dismantle and redefine the parties. He wanted a showdown between a globalist, elite party, called the Democrats, and a populist, Maga party, called the Republican­s. In that match-up, he was sure, the Republican­s would win every time.”

Now, seven months out from election day and with Trump and Biden neck-and-neck in the polls, Bannon’s propositio­n stands to be tested again.

Biden v Trump: What’s in store for the US and the world?On Thursday 2 May, 3pm EDT join Tania Branigan, David Smith, Mehdi Hasan and Tara Setmayer for the inside track on the people, the ideas and the events that might shape the US election campaign. Book tickets here or at theguardia­n.live

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 ?? Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images ?? Steve Bannon leaves federal court in Washington DC on 15 November 2021. Photograph:
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images Steve Bannon leaves federal court in Washington DC on 15 November 2021. Photograph:

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