http://themilitant.com/2015/7942/794253.html
The Militant (logo)
Vol. 79/No. 42 November 23, 2015
(commentary)
Do 2015 election results show workers moving to the right?
BY SETH GALINSKY
Are workers who are Caucasian becoming more conservative? Do the
off-year elections show a rightward shift in U.S. politics? Or are
working people beginning to look for alternatives to crisis-ridden
capitalism, including by showing interest in the 2015 Socialist Workers
Party election campaigns?
“From Coast to Coast, Conservatives Score Huge Victories in Off-Year
Elections,” read the headline of a Nov. 4 article in the Washington
Post. This was typical of others in several liberal and conservative
publications that claim this year’s mid-term election marked a big shift.
Those articles point to the defeat of Houston’s Equal Rights Ordinance
and to a few races where Republicans defeated Democratic Party
candidates — mostly ignoring other races where Democrats defeated
Republicans — to make their case. In fact nationwide there was little
change in the number of Democrats or Republicans who won office in this
round.
It’s worth looking at the vote on the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance —
which would have extended nondiscrimination laws to gay and transgender
people — to see how far off this analysis is. The ordinance went down to
a crushing defeat with 61 percent voting no.
But the vote had nothing to do with alleged reactionary views of workers
or a retreat in the overwhelming sentiment against prejudice and unequal
treatment based on an individual’s gender or sexual orientation.
Instead, the liberal and petty-bourgeois radical supporters of
“political correctness” sank the proposed law by including in the
initial version of the bill a clause — later deleted — that said no
business open to the public could deny a transgender person entry to a
restroom consistent with their self-proclaimed gender identity.
Conservative opponents of the law took advantage of this to attack the
bill, including by printing signs proclaiming “No Men in Women’s
Restrooms” that were prominent in working-class and other neighborhoods
around the city.
The defeat of the bill was aided by the Nov. 2 decision of the U.S.
Department of Education that a transgender student in Illinois had the
right to use female restrooms and locker rooms.
“I got three daughters,” Houston city worker Todd Ward told the New York
Times. “There’s not an equal right for me to go into a women’s bathroom.
That’s common sense.”
Several articles in the Wall Street Journal, including one Nov. 6
headlined “Has the World Lost Faith in Capitalism?” get a little closer
to what’s happening in U.S. politics today.
To the consternation of the Journal, a “survey found that 55% of
Americans think the ‘rich get richer’ and the ‘poor get poorer’ under
capitalism. Sixty-five percent agree that most big businesses have
‘dodged taxes, damaged the environment or bought special favors from
politicians.’”
The article reports on a poll in seven countries — the U.S., Thailand,
India, Indonesia, Brazil, the U.K. and Germany — that also shows that
people in the U.S. are “gloomiest about the future. It is new-world
America, where only 14% of those surveyed think that life will be better
for their children, and 52% disagree.”
The liberal capitalist Post comes at the question from a different
angle. A Nov. 4 article by Harold Meyerson cites a recent study by
Princeton economists Angus Deaton and Anne Case that reports the number
of deaths by suicide, alcohol use and drug use “among working-class
whites ages 45 to 54 has risen precipitously since 1999 — so
precipitously that their overall death rate … increased by 22 percent.”
The Post blames the rise on the “disintegration of the working-class
white family.” The paper notes that “the share of blue-collar jobs in
the U.S. economy declined from 28 percent in 1970 to 17 percent in
2010,” while downplaying the depression conditions that millions of
workers in the U.S. are facing.
“This helped fuel a racial and nativist backlash that has driven much of
the white working class (particularly in the South) into Republican
ranks,” the Post asserts. In the eyes of the Post, these so-called
uneducated, alcoholic, drug-saddled workers are the principal reason
behind Donald Trump’s success in the presidential race so far.
Interest in Socialist Workers Party
Socialist Workers Party candidates for mayor and City Council in
Philadelphia and for port commissioner in Seattle have found that
workers who are Caucasian — just like the rest of the working class —
are being battered by the capitalist economic crisis, including high
unemployment and the slashing of wages and benefits over the last
several decades. Workers — whatever their ethnicity — looking for
radical solutions are often attracted to Trump and other candidates who
profess to tell it like it is or who rail against “crony capitalism.”
Backers of the Socialist Workers Party have won a hearing at several
Trump rallies from working people when they explain the problem is not
“crony” capitalism, but capitalism period. Workers at those rallies were
open to considering the working-class alternative to the Democrats and
Republicans, including the SWP’s opposition to Trump’s program of
deporting immigrant workers. Workers need to join together in a common
struggle, no matter where they were born, to fight for raising the
minimum wage and for organizing the unorganized into unions, the SWP
candidates say, on the road to building a revolutionary movement capable
of taking power out of the hands of the capitalist class.
Going door to door in working-class neighborhoods, communist workers
have gotten a good response to their Marxist explanation of the
capitalist crisis; the need for working people to organize independently
of the capitalist parties and to fight for a labor party based on the
unions; and the importance of solidarity with the struggles of working
people and the oppressed around the world.
Related articles:
SWP campaign in Philadelphia: ‘We won because we built the party’
Join defense of SWP exemption from disclosing campaign donors
Front page (for this issue) | Home | Text-version home