Thursday, July 25, 2024

The Constitution and the American Left

A culture of reverence for the U.S. Constitution shields the founding document from criticism, despite its many shortcomings. We need an alternative vision that provides meaningful freedom at home and embraces self-determination abroad.
July 22, 2024
Source: Dissent Magazine





The U.S. Constitution is profoundly undemocratic, as generations of abolitionists, socialists, labor activists, and Black radicals have loudly proclaimed. Just as it did a hundred years ago, the document creates an infrastructure for minority rule—a specific and very American brand of white authoritarianism. This is because the Constitution organizes representation around states rather than the principle of one person, one vote. And it fragments and undermines popular authority through endless veto points. The consequences today are numerous: presidents elected who lose the popular vote; a Senate that gives vastly more power to voters in Wyoming than in California; an impassible route for constitutional amendments; a tiny, lifetime-appointed Supreme Court that repudiates popular policies, including the right to abortion, and elevates the president above the law—abetting a culture of impunity.

Despite these problems, in some corners the document inspires an almost religious devotion. Politicians of both major parties routinely praise its genius. This eighteenth-century text, so the argument goes, highlights how the United States has been engaged in what Barack Obama called “an improbable experiment in democracy” from its founding, grounded in principles of equality, self-government, and personal liberty. It is the key to what makes America exceptional and the reason the country offers a universal model of what Abraham Lincoln called “government of the people, by the people, for the people.”

How did Americans get to a place where their national story is so fundamentally wrapped up with a constitution that fails them? And given this culture of reverence, how should the American left orient itself toward the document? Especially at a moment when the disconnect between nationalist narrative and institutional reality seems unbridgeable, it is essential for left voices to disavow constitutional veneration. But such a position will require more than rejectionism. It will mean articulating an alternative vision for constitutional politics. Just as critical, this vision will have to extend beyond matters of procedural design to tell a genuinely democratic and anti-imperial story of American possibility.



When scholars talk about reverence for the Constitution, they often say that things have always been this way. And it’s true that Constitution worship goes back nearly to the country’s founding. In 1838, a young Lincoln famously called on every American to “pledge [their] life” to the Constitution, with the hope that it would “become the political religion of the nation.”

But even if bathed in quasi-religious language, Americans’ relationship to the text was very different in the nineteenth century. The Constitution now is inexorably joined to what Swedish sociologist Gunnar Myrdal famously labeled in 1944 the “American creed”—the idea that the United States stands for the promise of equal liberty for all. Black and anti-slavery radicals voiced this narrative during and after the Civil War, but it faced systematic pushback and real marginalization by white opponents of racial equality.

As recently as 1900, the more entrenched national story, promoted by President Theodore Roosevelt and famed historian Frederick Jackson Turner, revolved around Euro-American continental conquest and settlement. As Roosevelt titled his 1889 work, the mission was “the winning of the West.”

For nineteenth-century politicians, the Constitution enabled this ongoing conquest, partly through its compromise on slavery. Northern elites like Massachusetts Senator Daniel Webster, who opposed slavery, nonetheless accepted that while the Constitution allowed the government to prevent the extension of slavery into new territories, slavery “as far as it existed” at the founding, was not, in Webster’s words, “to be disturbed or interfered with by the new general government.” Such compromise was permissible because it ensured the nation’s existence, promoting shared goals of prosperity, independence, and territorial growth—goals vital in any region.

These understandings are antithetical to the current American story. A national narrative built around accommodating slavery to facilitate the expropriation of Native lands would be seen as deeply immoral today. But in the mid-nineteenth century, Webster’s constitution of compromise circulated far more broadly within elite Northern political culture than anything resembling Obama’s reading.

By 1900, discussions of the Constitution focused on many of the same anti-democratic ills that are currently part of political debate. The Civil War had underscored the explicit failures of the founding compromise. The effects of industrialization and resulting class conflict also raised fundamental issues about the legitimacy of the prevailing order. The system’s endless veto points made it nearly impossible for the poor to use elections to better their lot, while business elites wielded outsized power at virtually every level of government.

Even Euro-Americans who accepted as given their society’s racial hierarchy increasingly questioned the Constitution. These years saw the growth of a substantial cottage industry of constitutionally skeptical scholarly and journalistic writing contending that the document was nothing less than “a class instrument directed against the democracy,” as the Progressive era historian Vernon Parrington wrote. In the early twentieth century, it would have been easier to imagine the old text being rewritten than to conceive of a twenty-first-century America that deifies the Constitution as embodying commitments to “colorblind” equal liberty.



What changed? Such questions are rarely asked, and when they are the answers almost never look to the outside world. Since the United States is so distinctive, its development, some assume, cannot be a product of international processes and comparative practices. In truth, however, alongside domestic developments, the modern veneration of the Constitution is directly related to the rise of the United States from regional power to the world’s dominant global force, over the course of two world wars, international decolonization, and the Cold War.

The first half of the twentieth century witnessed the collapse of the old European imperial powers as well as the rise of national resistance movements across the Global South. In this brave new world, both formerly colonized peoples and Western governments needed to reconstruct their national stories and positions. Emerging states sought to foster identities and institutions that were politically coherent and legible at the international level. Similarly, in an effort to gain influence and moral authority, the United States and the European imperial powers had to recast their country’s narratives in ways that resonated around the world.

In this context, constitution-writing became central to America’s global identity. To an important degree, constitution-writing—conceived of as a foundational activity in the construction of a self-controlling and self-representing polity—had already attained a symbolic status in American life. When the United States adopted its federal Constitution in the late eighteenth century, constitution-writing projects were historical anomalies. The document marked the United States as an experiment distinct from most European polities.

Constitution-writing proliferated globally through the slow disintegration of the imperial model and the emergence of newly independent nation-states. In a world in which the challenges and needs of new polities moved to the forefront of global discussions, American foreign policymakers came to understand and to position the United States as the original constitutional, anti-imperial paradigm—the first among equals, both temporally and substantively. In joining creedal ideals with veneration specifically for the 1787 Constitution, governing elites developed a uniquely American account of liberal nationalism, attuned to the ideological needs of global primacy in an age of decolonization and rising non-white political power.

Politicians and commentators began to distinguish U.S. global dominance from the old imperial orders. Officials explained their presence on the world stage not as the basis for extraction and conquest, but as a projection of the basic values and ideals of constitutionalism itself. American international police power was justified because of the country’s organizing principles, centered on constitutional democracy and independence, which it aimed to spread around the world.

Whenever the country intervened militarily abroad or asserted its economic and political might, it did so in the service of noble ends. Constitutionalism provided both an ideological basis for international arrangements under American supervision as well as the model for how foreign states should themselves be domestically structured. For this reason, it was inappropriate to compare the United States to other empires; its interests matched the world’s interests.



Of course, many countries have narratives of exceptionalism. European powers justified their nations’ global authority with claims of special historic destiny and the gifts that they alone could offer the world.

But the unique American fusion of this narrative with creed and Constitution resonated globally. At the same time, the narrative was flexible enough to accommodate domestic social struggles, especially over race. Cold War–era Supreme Court decisions like Brown v. Board of Education, which declared “separate but equal” schooling inherently unequal, reinforced domestic associations of the Constitution—and the federal judiciary—with key civil liberties and civil rights victories.

Equally significant, the historical contingencies of the mid-twentieth century—for instance, the strength of the labor movement—created supermajorities behind the New Deal and the postwar political settlement, which defused class conflict and entrenched a limited welfare state. Such developments, however exceptional within the context of American history, calmed worries that the constitutional order was an immovable roadblock to even minor social improvements.

Over time, these international and domestic factors fostered a romance around the Constitution, a heartfelt and genuine belief among politicians and many citizens—on both center-left and center-right—in the genius of the American system. Critically, these voices, from John McCain to Obama, did not proceed cynically, reaching for venerative arguments simply as a veil to justify assertions of power. They worked and sacrificed for this vision, and it gave their lives a larger meaning.

There were other ideological pillars of this constitutional creed: an anti-totalitarian account of individual liberty and market capitalism; an embrace of American checks and balances, with the Supreme Court at the forefront; and a commitment to U.S. global leadership and primacy. On the face of it, all of these were disparate ends, which need not go together and might well be in profound tension. But the narrative that developed around the Constitution cohered these ends into a single, pervasive American story.

This story explained why the Constitution promoted a just political, economic, and social order, and why its principles should be replicated everywhere. The Constitution became the normative core of what magazine magnate Henry Luce famously dubbed the American Century. When Obama stood in Philadelphia before a picture of James Madison accompanied by the words “Writing the Constitution” during his 2020 Democratic National Convention speech, it was this interrelated set of commitments that he invoked as the bulwark against Trumpism.



Today there is a striking gulf between how most societies approach their constitutions and how Americans treat their text. In the last two centuries, some 220 countries have appeared on the world stage, and they have produced a remarkable 900 written constitutions. The sheer numbers are telling: for the most part, constitutions are treated instrumentally, in service of a polity’s needs. When legal-political orders break down or social upheaval brings new alliances to power, old documents are jettisoned, and new ones written.

By contrast, it can be hard for twenty-first-century Americans to conceive of their national project without the original text. And this can place left activists in an uncomfortable position. Maintaining contact with society seems to require participating, however ambivalently, in the dominant devotional culture. Indeed, one saw this dynamic at play even in Occupy Wall Street, which launched on September 17, or Constitution Day, commemorating the day in 1787 that the drafters signed their document.

This participation must be resisted at all costs. Most obviously, it ignores how today’s institutional problems are not simply unintended and contingent but are at least in part a product of the framers’ hostility toward real democracy. Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and others infused the constitutional order with veto points precisely to contain the central political tool that poorer citizens had to pursue their needs: the power of the vote. These features also fit hand in glove with the long history of racial subordination: white elites have benefited greatly from both state-based representation and the various checks embedded throughout the constitutional system, which create partisan incentives at the national level to avoid meaningful reform. The framers placed this constitutional system largely beyond popular revision through an incredibly elaborate amendment process. The result is a system that disadvantages those with the fewest resources, while allowing those with power to use a fragmented political system to quietly preserve their interests.

Any call to remain true to the Constitution amounts to an invitation to hold firm to the very arrangements that have facilitated, both today and in the past, the conditions that the left seeks to transform. Even if the goal is making Trump and Trumpism no longer politically viable, the Constitution is not our friend. It is the mechanism that put Trump into office in 2016 after losing the popular vote, and it repeatedly elevates the worst tendencies in political life.



The flaws of constitutional culture extend well beyond technical debates. For starters, they feed a climate of deep disillusionment, in which the public holds out the hope that the political class can resolve key concerns, only to be disappointed time and again. One can see this dynamic in the general paralysis that marks every new act of military-style gun violence, whether that violence targets school children or the political class itself, including Trump. Institutional blockages spread a destabilizing sense of collective helplessness, reinforcing the experience of American violence as ubiquitous and untamable.

And when the governing system isn’t reduced to paralysis, constitutional meaning is overwhelmingly shaped by the interests and whims of federal judges. Even when critical of the right-wing Supreme Court, debates about interpretation tend to take their lead from the issues these same judges choose to address and what they write and care about. This approach misses the fundamental issue: all of the judges, whether liberal or conservative, are members of a governing elite that by training and professional acculturation has become deeply invested in the existing constitutional state. There are profound differences in how liberal and conservative judges venerate the Constitution, with major consequences for contemporary politics—especially in the age of Trump. Yet for all the meaningful conflicts within the judicial elite, deeper structural flaws are excised from public debate.

Whether living constitutionalist or originalist, all the judges are institutional players who have drunk deeply from the well of U.S. exceptionalism. This is a longstanding problem. But given today’s real institutional crises, it is especially troubling to have a political culture that hands the reins of constitutional authorship, memory, and knowledge to such officials—and to a small class of lawyers who revere them—to the exclusion of nearly everyone else.

This state of affairs not only circumscribes domestic reform conversations. It also reinforces the global terms of American international police power. That shared constitutional story takes for granted an inherent American anti-imperialism. Despite this prevailing narrative, the twentieth-century ties between market capitalism, global primacy, and constitutionalism were cemented in ways that repeatedly entailed real repression both at home and overseas.

When U.S. security interests—read as the world’s interests—were at stake, legal constraints were often set aside in the name of preserving constitutional democracy. In this way, U.S. primacy was ideologically grounded in what amounted to a form of imperial constitutionalism. Constitutional veneration created the terms for inclusion and rights protection, and it could in key moments push back against specific abuses. Indeed, the centrality of constitutionalism to national self-understanding is part of why the United States played such a key role in the establishment of everything from the UN Declaration of Human Rights to the Geneva Conventions. But that same constitutional culture also, perhaps counterintuitively, buttressed an overarching account of American power and purpose that legitimated an ever-expanding security state along with continuous interventionism. Since only the United States could safeguard the world, American-backed violence was routinely repackaged as essential for the enjoyment of constitutional principles at home and abroad.

The result has been a vision of constitutionalism that has gone hand in hand with unchecked and coercive power. Indeed, from the Philippines after 1898 to Vietnam and Latin America during the Cold War to Israel/Palestine today, U.S. officials have time and again proclaimed intense violence against civilians as in line with its vision of constitutionalism. As the historian Geoffrey Robinson writes, even in the extreme case of 1960s Indonesia, the U.S. government defended Suharto’s brutal takeover “as ‘constitutional’ and ‘bloodless,’ as though it were quite unrelated to the violence that preceded it and was still going on in some parts of the country.”

When this narrative has proved implausible, officials typically treat constitutional violations as unfortunate necessities or mere aberrations. One can see this now in the context of Gaza. Officials have repeatedly responded to the presentation of evidence that the United States is facilitating mass violations of international law with displays of outrage at their critics. The very idea that American behavior could itself be a basic threat to the rule of law is treated as insulting. For those like Joe Biden, just as with George W. Bush during the “war on terror,” military action and support preserve an overarching “rules-based order,” grounded in American-style constitutionalism. This is the case even though the practical effect of U.S. behavior is a systematic tearing down of those rules.



If it’s clear that the left must break from the culture of constitutional veneration, what is the alternative? Simply ignoring or rejecting the constitutional domain won’t work. There is an understandable sense that constitutional matters feel abstract and technical, far removed from the material and moral concerns—over race, the economy, and war—that reverberate in American life. Talking about them can appear to be a proceduralist distraction. But the current rules of the constitutional game place a massive thumb on the scale when it comes to what issues are debated and what policy outcomes result. The material and moral changes Americans want cannot be separated from the underlying structure of legal-political institutions. They depend on alterations to the democratic infrastructure of the country.

All of this suggests that it is vital for movements and activists to see the material and moral and the constitutional as two sides of the same coin—and to have a clear constitutional politics. At some point in the future, this constitutional politics may even concern things as seemingly remote from the present day as holding a new convention and rewriting the document. Even in our moment, it is vital to determine how to engage with these flawed institutions. For instance, although one may be rightly opposed to the power the judges currently wield, activists still must determine when and how to use the courts, if only to hold those in power to their own rules. Movements also need to consider which reforms to the current constitutional landscape—and which legal-political pathways (legislation, amendment, and so on)—can help to cultivate a new social order. In other words, movements must reclaim ownership over the Constitution.

During the twentieth century, left constitutional alternatives—especially those tied to socialist democracy and anti-colonial politics—were written out of the national narrative. In the official story, constitutionalism meant embracing the 1787 Constitution and a Madisonian inheritance. Perhaps for that very reason, these forgotten left traditions offer a striking guide to both the limitations of that inheritance and the potential pathways to a different system.

Take the Socialist Party of America (SPA), which in the early twentieth century placed extensive emphasis on constitutional change. Their end goal was nothing less than overcoming capitalism itself. Party activists and allied reformers, including Eugene Debs, Crystal Eastman, and even W.E.B. Du Bois, sought a society in which mass publics could intervene continuously to ensure that both the economy and state met popular needs. Socialists had no desire to fetishize some new fundamental law, but they understood that without clear constitutional politics their broader agenda would be nearly impossible to implement.

With respect to the institutions of representative government, socialist constitutional ideas are an archive of possibility. SPA reforms included eliminating the Senate and the Electoral College; breaking up the system of state-based representation; extending voting rights; implementing proportional representation across government (today, for instance, this could entail having multimember House districts); constraining presidential power; reforming the bench; and simplifying the amendment process so that constitutional questions need not be funneled into the courts.

The aim of these reforms was to create a legal-political system that empowered the many rather than the few, and that based constitutionalism in legislative and popular majorities. These majorities would be entrenched through strong intermediate institutions, like unions, that protected constituents and amplified their needs. For this reason, socialists viewed measures that safeguarded striking and voicing political dissent, and that ensured socioeconomic rights, as democracy-enhancing reforms—of a piece with alterations to the electoral system.

Black and Indigenous activists—including Du Bois, radical labor figure James Boggs, the Black Panther Party’s Afeni Shakur, and Hank Adams and others involved in the Trail of Broken Treaties—contended that real changes to the state and the economy would not endure unless Americans also revised the society’s colonial infrastructure. In 1970 the Panthers engaged in a constitution-writing exercise, the People’s Revolutionary Constitution Convention, in which they sought to incorporate a set of explicitly decolonial and anti-imperial commitments into a new document worthy of a multiracial democracy.

Such demands at the time involved ending the colonial status of existing territories; sharing real sovereignty with Native nations; paying reparations, at home and abroad; expanding socioeconomic rights and wealth transfers, including through public and universal provision of food, housing, child care, medical care, reproductive rights, non-exploitative work, and a guaranteed income; demobilizing and reimagining the military and policing; decriminalizing the border; and providing legal and political avenues for the remedy of both historic colonial crimes and ongoing state violence.

One of the great struggles of earlier left constitutional politics concerned the difficulty of linking these two projects—democracy and decolonization. In the years leading up to the New Deal, the former project vied for political preeminence. But the latter has never received anything close to majority support. For many Americans, the idea of a colonial accounting is seen as a zero-sum threat to status, wealth, and even physical safety.

These fears ignore the actual content of what Black and Indigenous activists sought—an inclusive society for all in which everyone could achieve meaningful freedom and protection from violence. As Boggs declared of the United States, white and non-white communities were permanently and mutually entangled. Decolonization could not proceed through removal or separation; it entailed “tackling” together “all the problems of this society, because at the root of all the problems of black people is the same structure and the same system which is at the root of all the problems of all people.”

Figures like Du Bois and Boggs aimed to build a broad and coalitional majority on behalf of both decolonization and democracy. Such a project is no doubt deeply challenging, even more so when thinking globally about obligations to those subject to U.S. power. But despite these difficulties, a number of figures have risked safety and status to further these efforts during all the great U.S. transformations, including Thaddeus Stevens during Reconstruction, Eugene Debs in the Gilded Age, and New York City politician Vito Marcantonio in his fight for Puerto Rican independence and against Cold War orthodoxy. They believed that the only path forward entailed the establishment of equal and effective freedom for everyone.



The central constitutional need today is perhaps not even directly about legal or political process. Even minor constitutional improvements—like making Washington, D.C., a state—are rendered impossible by the institutional veto-power of a right-wing minority. The only way out of this bind is a dramatic extension of the mass base and organizational authority of the left. This means that along with clarity about legal-political reform ideas and strategies, current efforts must prioritize strengthening the power of left constituencies, especially cross-racial and working-class groups.

Take expanded voting rights and initiatives like the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, which deepen the capacity of workers to join unions and to strike. Both heighten the bargaining power and social position of working people and broaden the sites where they can exercise self-governance. These levers are best understood as pragmatic reforms with revolutionary implications—small-scale shifts that can alter how contests with employers proceed, what types of legislation are possible to enact, and, critically, who exercises real decision-making. The question of which specific lever to pursue—whether directly or indirectly focused on constitutional design—in any given moment will inevitably be a matter of political judgment tied to time and place. The answer depends on a combination of factors, including organizational strength, the viability of reform success, and, most important, the capacity of that lever to open up even greater transformative space.

Such strategic assessment requires appreciating that the greater the capacity mobilized coalitions develop in one setting—whether at the ballot or in the workplace—the more likely it is that those coalitions will have the ability to protect essential rights from attack or to pursue their interests in other domains. These efforts aim to create a “government behind the government,” a large-scale institutional infrastructure that projects political power and promotes a left cultural world. In this context, left ideas—including those around constitutional transformation—spread as an organic part of the everyday experiences of working people. Indeed, it is not a surprise that the precondition in recent decades for many of the large-scale projects of constitution-writing around the world was precisely such parallel left power—vibrant union, church, and party institutions. These institutions linked people’s concrete material demands and organic sense of the world around them, to a vision of a transformed governing order.

It is only through building this sort of power that the left can challenge the presumptive nationalism of conventional constitutional reform discussion, where the focus is on technical matters around a single country’s internal processes, independent of what officials may or may not do on the global stage. That nationalist horizon is especially troubling given that the existing culture of U.S. constitutional veneration is profoundly imperial, promoting an intuitive linkage between defenses of democracy and of American discretionary power. A competing internationalist vision of constitutional transformation would promote issues like immigrant freedom—such as basing the vote on residency not citizenship—and security state reform as basic constitutional principles. Defending these policies are not legal-political sideshows. They are essential to creating a constitutional culture distinct from the dominant one of the American Century, and to promoting an organic left world in which awareness of the ties binding foreign and domestic are simply part of the political drinking water.



Ultimately, in the United States only mass movement and left power building can overcome the obstacles thrown up by a sclerotic legal-political system. Virtually any desired change to the constitutional order—reforms to House districting, Senate structure, Supreme Court composition—is stymied by the existing rules. This means that real legal-political shifts will almost inevitably proceed by breaking from at least some of those rules. An easy case would be abandoning the Senate filibuster. But there are a number of harder cases. For example, although a simplified amendment process is essential to reducing the Supreme Court’s dominance over constitutional politics, such a change may only be possible by deviating from the explicit terms set out in Article V of the Constitution (which governs how to amend the document).

Indeed, democratization and constitutional rupture have tended to go hand in hand in the United States because significant moments of democratic struggle—whether during Reconstruction, the New Deal, or the civil rights movement—faced violent resistance from the right, buttressed by the existing rules. This is the unavoidable truth of the American constitutional experience, largely occluded by the twentieth-century culture of veneration. Each of those periods were times of intense political conflict.

Today, activists need to think deeply about the type of majority coalition that can authorize such change. Trump could be defeated at the polls in November or even face real criminal consequences, but both outcomes are on shaky ground partly due to the legal-political structures. They have allowed right-wing judges to encase Trump in a cocoon of impunity. At the same time, the interplay of constitutional and sub-constitutional election rules has left the Democratic Party beholden to the psychology of an isolated sitting president, bereft of the flexibility other systems provide for building unified fronts against the far right.

Still, if and when Trump exits the political stage, that will not be the end of Trumpism. The prevailing state of American conservatism means that real change will likely require both taking apart the right in its current form and repudiating the institutional mechanisms it employs to project unrepresentative power. Such circumstances beg the question of when and how to diverge from existing rules. Ultimately, any such break can only be justified if it is in service of deeper democratic norms and commitments. This underscores the critical need for building a transformative left majority. Since decisions about rupture are matters of political ethics and judgment, their legitimacy rests on whether reform movements enjoy real popular authority for their actions.

There remains a pervasive, and no doubt understandable, wish—especially in liberal circles—that change in the United States could proceed without the hard forms of organizing and political struggle required to generate such legitimacy. But the country faces a stark choice: to persist on its present course or to collectively press ahead for genuine reform, with all the real risks that may entail. We should be clear-eyed in assessing these risks, and only pursue rupture when mass politics can validate and deepen specific efforts.

As a note of caution, for instance, a constitutional convention right now does not seem wise due to a combination of factors, beginning with the emboldened nature of the far right. In addition, Article V, which governs conventions, places great emphasis on the states for ratification, and it is hard to imagine a transformative left agenda succeeding within those procedural terms. But that does not mean that such possibilities should be permanently banished or that activists should not think about how they would stage a truly democratic convention and ratification.

In fact, thinking about how such a project should proceed is essential if for no other reason than that the right—through initiatives like the Convention of States—has a massive head start. The Convention of States has succeeded in getting nineteen of the thirty-four states required under Article V to agree to convening a constitutional convention and has clear ideas of how to arrange that convention to lock in right-wing ends. Those regressive goals include changes allowing a “simple majority of the states” to nullify federal decisions. This would empower state-level Republican officials to reject policies they oppose—a further anti-democratic backstop for when their views become so unpopular that even the current constitutional order cannot overcome popular sentiment.



A common liberal rejoinder to left critiques of the Constitution is the idea that constitutional fidelity has generated ameliorative change in the past. To abandon it now, so the argument goes, is to court irrelevancy or, worse, right-wing extremism. But it is also vital to appreciate that past reforms were deeply connected to contingent historical conditions—from the New Deal and its working-class supermajorities to the Cold War and global decolonization. These contingent conditions pushed the center-right toward accommodations on issues of race and the economy in ways that diverge dramatically from the long history before and after. Simply put, the unusual circumstances that generated the mid-twentieth century settlement are gone. And today it is precisely the existing arrangements that empower forces of extremism.

If anything, American politics now is littered with the costs of that earlier compact—from the failure to address deep-rooted legal-political flaws to the entrenchment of a discretionary and interventionist security apparatus. Our times require facing squarely the institutions and the broader constitutional culture forged during the American Century. Trumpism makes this evident at home, just as U.S. support for extreme violence makes it evident abroad. Since both projects—constitutionalism and global primacy—were fused together, it is not surprising that they are also breaking down together.

The political lessons liberals and centrists learned about pragmatism may no longer speak to the present, when the United States lacks the political resources and institutions to address our prevailing crises. Simply reaffirming the old-time religion amounts to an exercise in nostalgia. We need an expansive constitutional vision for the country, one capable of reconstructing the domestic and global face of American statecraft and power. The aim is a society that extends meaningful freedom to all at home and embraces actual self-determination for all abroad. Thinking about how to generate large-scale systematic change and working to bring it about might sound utopian, but it is in reality the most pragmatic agenda—even if the end goal remains distant from our present moment.

The obvious weaknesses of the current Constitution create more space for articulating a left constitutional alternative than perhaps at any time since the 1930s and 1940s. There is an opening to break from constitutional devotion and to think in the most fundamental terms about the society Americans want. If the country is now adrift, this is partly due to a narrowing of horizons. For that reason, a truly emancipatory and anti-imperial constitutionalism may be what our moment demands.


This essay is drawn from the newly published book, The Constitutional Bind: How Americans Came to Idolize a Document That Fails Them. Reprinted with permission from the University of Chicago Press.

Aziz Rana teaches law at Boston College. He is the author of The Constitutional Bind: How Americans Came to Idolize a Document That Fails Them and The Two Faces of American Freedom.




ANARCHIST ANTHROPOLOGY
Beyond Kingdoms and Empires

A revolution in archaeology is transforming our picture of past populations and the scope of human freedoms
July 22, 2024
Source: Aeon

Tikal is one of the largest archeological sites and urban centers of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. Petén, Guatemala | Photo: Alexandria Shaner



Contemporary historians tell us that, by the start of the Common Era, approximately three-quarters of the world’s population were living in just four empires (we’ve all heard of the Romans and the Han; fewer of us, perhaps, of the Parthians and Kushans). Just think about this for a minute. If true, then it means that the great majority of people who ever existed were born, lived and died under imperial rule. Such claims are hardly original, but for those who share Arnold Toynbee’s conviction that history should amount to more than ‘just one damned thing after another’, they have taken on a new importance.

For some scholars today, the claims prove that empires are obvious and natural structures for human beings to inhabit, or even attractive political projects that, once discovered, we have reproduced again and again over the longue durée of history. The suggestion is that if the subjects of empire in times past could have escaped, they’d have been unwise to do so, and anyway the majority would have preferred life in imperial cages to whatever lay beyond, in the forest or marshes, in the mountains and foothills, or out on the open steppe. Such ideas have deep roots, which may be one reason why they often go unchallenged
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The temple complex at Tikal National Park, Guatemala. Photo by Ryanacandee/Flickr

In the late 18th century, Edward Gibbon – taking inspiration from ancient writers such as Tacitus – described the Roman Empire (before its ‘decline and fall’) as covering ‘the fairest part of the earth, and the most civilised portion of mankind,’ surrounded by barbarians whose freedom was little more than a side-effect of their primitive ways of life. Gibbon’s barbarian is an inveterate idler: free, yes, but only to live in scattered homesteads, wearing skins for clothes, or following his ‘monstrous herds of cattle’. ‘Their poverty,’ wrote Gibbon of the ancient Germans, ‘secured their freedom.’

It is from such sources that we get, not just our notion of empire as handmaiden to civilisation, but also our contemporary image of life before and beyond empire as being small-scale, chaotic and largely unproductive. In short, everything that is still implied by the word ‘tribal’. Tribes are to empires (and their scholarly champions) much as children were to adults of Gibbon’s generation – occasionally charming or amusing creatures, but mostly a disruptive force, whose destiny is to be disciplined, put to useful work, and governed, at least until they are ready to govern themselves in a similar fashion. Either that, or to be confined, punished and, if necessary, eliminated from the pages of history.

Ideas of this sort are, in fact, as old as empire itself. In their diplomatic correspondence, which can be followed back to a time more than 3,000 years ago, the rulers of Egypt and Syria grumble incessantly about the subversive activities of groups calledÊ¿Apiru. Scholars of the ancient Near East once tookÊ¿Apiru to be an early reference to the Hebrews, but it’s now thought to be an umbrella term, used almost indiscriminately for any group of political defectors, dissenters, insurgents or refugees who threatened the interests of Egypt’s vassals in neighbouring Canaan (much as some modern politicians have been known to use the word ‘terrorist’ for rhetorical effect today).

In Babylonia, such groups – when not given tribal or ethnic labels – might be variously described as ‘scattered people’, ‘head-bangers’ or simply ‘enemies’. In the early centuries BCE, emissaries of the Han Empire wrote in similar ways about the rebellious marsh-dwellers of the tropical coastlands to their south. Historians now see these ancient inhabitants of Guangdong and Fujian through Han eyes, as the ‘Bai-yue’ (‘Hundred Yue’), who were said to shave their heads, cover their bodies in tattoos, and sacrifice live humans to their savage gods. After centuries of resistance and guerrilla warfare, we learn, the Yue capitulated. On the order of Emperor Wu, most were deported and put to hard labour, their lands given over to colonial settlers from the north, including many retired soldiers.

Empires have always created vivid and disturbingly violent images of tribal life on their frontiers, placing in a different, paternalistic light the violence at the heart of their own political projects. In such ways, we convince ourselves that these things are somehow deeply related, that violence and domination are the necessary substratum of ‘civilisation’, or that Europe after the fall of Rome achieved something unique – unnatural even, on a global scale – by breaking decisively from ancient cycles of empire and forging a singular path to liberty and prosperity. Once entrenched in our imaginations, such ways of thinking are fiendishly difficult to reverse. Even experienced scholars of empirically grounded disciplines may find themselves advancing such arguments based on the flimsiest of sources.

According to Walter Scheidel, a professor of classics and history at Stanford University in California, the population figures cited at the start of this essay ‘convey a sense of the competitive advantage of a particular type of state: far-flung imperial structures held together by powerful extractive elites.’ In ‘quantitative terms,’ he tells us in The Great Leveller (2017), this ‘proved extremely successful.’ Looking deeper back in time, to the very ‘origin of the state’, Scheidel further conjectures that ‘3,500 years ago, when state-level polities covered perhaps not more than 1 per cent of the earth’s terrestrial surface (excluding Antarctica), they already laid claim to up to half of our species.’

Venture down into the footnotes, and you discover that everyone is citing the same source

Now, it is surely true that in any period of human history, there will always be those who feel most comfortable in ranks and orders. As Étienne de La Boétie had already pointed out in the 16th century, the source of ‘voluntary servitude’ is arguably the most important political question of them all. But where do the statistics come from, to support such grand claims? Are they reliable? Venture down into the footnotes, and you discover that everyone is citing the same source: an Atlas of World Population History, published in 1978; in fairness, Scheidel does provide one additional citation, to Joel Cohen’s How Many People Can the Earth Support? (1995), but this turns out to comprise a chart showing estimates of past human population sizes in which all figures for the premodern era derive from, again, the Atlas of World Population History or from subsequent publications based on it.

In light of all this, anyone today who consults the Atlas of World Population History for the first time is in for a surprise. It is an unassuming tome, and a very old one at that. It comprises simple-to-read population graphs for different world regions, accompanied by pithy essays, which sometimes verge on the laconic. There is also an Appendix on ‘Reliability’ that begins: ‘The hypotheses of the historical demographer are not, in the current state of the art, testable and consequently the idea of their being reliable in the statistician’s sense is out of the question.’

I’ll come back to this important point in a moment.

First, it is worth reflecting on what it means to talk of the ‘competitive advantage’ of states governed by extractive elites. At the least, this introduces questions about the long-term strength and viability of certain types of society, and the endemic weaknesses of others. Only the ‘winners’, one assumes, get to forge viable paths to the future. These, however, are matters of opinion, not statistics. They brush over irritating questions like ‘How many benefited from living in imperial structures?’ or ‘What is a viable path into the future?’ What ‘advantages’, we might ask, accrued to a girl captured by Cilician pirates, and sold in the slave markets of Roman-era Delos, over one living freely in the Nuba Hills of southern Kordofan? Slaves were said to change hands at a rate of 10,000 per day in Delos, and the total number of slaves in the early Roman Empire could have been between 6 and 10 million. In what sense can their numbers be added to the side of the ‘winners’?

Thinking ‘in quantitative terms’ doesn’t really allow us to bypass these issues, or at least it shouldn’t. Questions remain. What, exactly, were ancient empires ‘successful’ at, if extraordinary levels of violence, destruction and displacement were required to keep them afloat? Today it seems very possible that another 2,000 years of world governance by ‘powerful extractive elites’ could lead to the destruction of most life on Earth. Many experts think it could happen far sooner if we simply continue with the status quo. Looking back from such a vantage point, if anyone will even be able to do that, who then will seem to be the ‘winners’ of history? Will history have made losers of us all? Would the ‘fittest’ have found an exit route, some way to terraform other parts of the solar system, founding colonies on Mars or Venus that resemble Palo Alto, or even Massachusetts? If there are schools (or at least, TED talks), then perhaps future generations will look back and ask if we might have learned something from the faded traditions of those who lived otherwise. What if there is no Planet B? Or maybe, by then, none of it will really matter very much, because the past will itself have been automated. Instead of historians, we’ll have ‘history machines’ based on algorithms and databanks: more facts on file, designed by survivors of the final bureaucratic assault on what was once fondly called ‘the humanities’.

Let’s come back to the figures in the Atlas of World Population History. It estimates 46 million Roman subjects and 50 million Han subjects. Let’s assume, for a moment, this is OK. Supposedly – if we combine it with statistics for other empires of the same era – this amounts to ‘between two-thirds and three-quarters of all people alive at the time’ (to quote Scheidel). But what does the Atlas tell us about all those other parts of the ancient world that lay beyond the grasp of powerful, extractive elites? Were they really so empty?

New techniques are revealing entire traditions of urban life, spanning centuries or even millennia

One way to control the quality of historical conjecture is by using rigorous sources that are up to date. In the social sciences, basing important claims on a source from 1978 is going back a while (I was six years old when the Atlas in question was published). Surely such significant matters have been the subject of continuing research? Over the past 45 years, scholars’ understanding of imperial Roman and Chinese demography may not have changed that much. It has, after all, been a matter of serious research for decades. But we can hardly claim that there’s been no relevant, even vital progress in our knowledge of other parts of the world. This is especially true in my own field of archaeology.

Over the past few decades, geographical spaces once written off as blanks on the map, or dismissed as ‘an unchanging palaeolithic backwater’ (as our 1978 Atlas puts it, for Aboriginal Australia), have been flooded with new data. Archaeology, specifically rapid advances in settlement archaeology and methods of survey, has been one major contributor. Among other things, these new techniques are revealing entire traditions of urban life, spanning centuries or even millennia, where none were previously suspected. All of them lie within the scope of the past 5,000 years, but surprisingly few can be convincingly identified with the rise of bureaucratically ordered kingdoms or empires.

In the years following the publication of the Atlas, archaeologists working in the inland delta of the Middle Niger revealed evidence for a prosperous urban civilisation with no discernible signs of rulership or central authority, focused on the site of Jenne-jeno, and preceding the empires of Ghana, Mali and Songhai by some centuries. China, too, has gained a long history of cities before empire, from the lower reaches of the Yellow River to the Fen Valley of Shanxi province, and the ‘Liangzhu culture’ of Jiangsu and Zhejiang. The same is true for the coastlands of Peru, where archaeologists have uncovered huge settlements with sunken plazas and grand platforms, four millennia older than the Inca Empire. In Ukraine, before the Russian invasion, archaeological work on the grasslands north of the Black Sea – which ancient Greek authors portrayed as ‘barbarian steppe’, a land of fierce nomads – was generating detailed evidence of a lost urban tradition, 3,000 years before Herodotus; at sites such as Nebelivka, for example.

As David Graeber and I observed in The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity (2021), our knowledge of such regions and their deep histories has increased exponentially in recent decades. Why, then, beat such a hasty retreat to the state of knowledge as it existed in 1978, and miss out on all this new information? In a moment, we’ll get a clearer sense of what it means to do this, and just how shaky things can get. First, though, there’s more to say on the question of reliability. Colin McEvedy and Richard Jones – who authored the Atlas of World Population History – were, in fact, disarmingly frank about the quality of their data: ‘we wouldn’t attempt to disguise the hypothetical nature of our treatment of the earlier periods … we haven’t just pulled the figures out of the sky. Well, not often.’ Their own acknowledgement of the provisional, hypothetical nature of some of these figures is interesting, since Scheidel is hardly alone in basing some extremely broad assertions on this single, dated source.

Last year, Timothy Guinnane, professor emeritus of economics at Yale University in Connecticut, decided to blow the whistle on the Atlas.

Writing in The Journal of Economic History, Guinnane assessed the scholarly merits of the Atlas. He deemed it ‘unreliable’ – little more than an encyclopaedia of zombie statistics. Guinnane finds the Atlas guilty of sometimes reporting population estimates with no apparent supporting evidence, or no indication of how a particular source was converted into usable statistics. Historians, he suggests, should stop using it, because claims about global history based on the Atlas can only ever resemble the proverbial piece of old Swiss cheese: mostly missing, and what’s there is off. Its authors, he notes, were often more candid about the gaps in their work, and the speculative nature of their population graphs, than the researchers who continue to use their data.

How did such a dismal source as the Atlas become the sole basis for a demographics of doom?

In a recent interview with the Long Now Foundation, Guinnane explains how he was inspired to write his article after seeing one scholar after another make ‘references to data of this type’. Confronted, time and again, with statistics that have a major bearing on our understanding of world history, including the long-term history of human land use and environmental change, he quite reasonably wanted to know where the population figures come from; much as we might ask how anyone can surmise that, at the start of the Common Era, most people on Earth were living under imperial rule. Why do we think that? In Guinnane’s own words, the results of his enquiries left him ‘baffled’, since his experience indicates that ‘no such data exist’. Hence the title of his journal paper: ‘We Do Not Know the Population of Every Country in the World for the Past Two Thousand Years’ (let alone the past 5,000).

In the near future, intellectual historians may puzzle over how, a half-century after its publication, such a dismal source as the Atlas became the sole basis for a demographics of doom. How, on such feeble foundations, did we pump into our heads the notion that there is something natural about living in societies where rulers exercise arbitrary authority over subjects? Or where dissent is likely to be met with brutality, imprisonment, exile or even death; and where the only alternative is something like the ‘liberty’ of Gibbon’s ancient Germans: a life of freedom, but also of poverty, ignorance and general immiseration.

Guinnane names prominent economic historians who continue to use the Atlas in various ways. As he rightly emphasises, the blame shouldn’t really lie with individual scholars. He is also, surely, correct to say that, so long as reputable publishers of academic books and journals continue to accept work based on such sources, we’re unlikely to see much progress: ‘estimates will not improve unless we care enough about good data to stop naively using the old.’ Archaeology, I suggest, has a vital role to play here.

Let’s take the example of the Amazon rainforest, an area of well over 2 million square miles, with no history of empire until the European conquest, and which the Atlas characterises as yet another demographic backwater, thinly scattered with nomadic foragers, whose mode of livelihood (its authors assumed) could never support dense populations. How does this hold up today?

Lidar map of the city of Kunguints in the Ecuadorian Amazon showing ancient streets lined with houses. Courtesy Antoine Dorison and Stéphen Rostain/Wikipedia

It doesn’t. Over the past decade, archaeologists have been busily turning the whole picture on its head, using airborne lasers to peer through the forest canopy. Tropical landscapes that resisted terrestrial survey are giving up their secrets. In place of blanks on the map, we’re now able to see highly cultivated landscapes with massive infrastructure stretching back to the early centuries BCE. Road networks, terraces, ceremonial earthworks, planned residential neighbourhoods, and regional settlement systems ordered into patterns of geometrical precision can be traced across Amazonia, from Brazil to Bolivia, as far as the eastern foothills of the Andes. In certain parts of Amazonia, the forest itself turns out to be a product of past human interaction with the soil. Over time, this generated the rich ‘anthropogenic’ earths called terra preta de índio (‘black earth of the Indians’), with levels of fertility far in excess of ordinary tropical soils. Scientists now believe that between 10,000 and 20,000 large-scale sites remain to be discovered across Amazonia. Similarly startling finds are emerging from Southeast Asia, and we might reasonably expect them from the forested parts of the African continent too.

Of course, the same procedures are changing our picture of tropical landscapes that did witness the rise and fall of great kingdoms, and even empires. Archaeologists now believe that in the year 500 CE, between 10 and 15 million people lived in the Maya lowlands of Yucatán and northern Guatemala. For comparison, the Atlas offers a figure of just 2 million for all of Mexico in the same era, including the Indigenous cities of the Altiplano (at least some of which, we now know, were organised not as empires or even kingdoms, but fiercely autonomous republics, long before the Spanish conquest).

Until surprisingly recent times, spaces of human freedom existed across large parts of our planet

It is easy, encouraged by works such as the Atlas, to imagine ancient history as a chequerboard of kingdoms and empires. But it is also very misleading. Ancient polities in the Maya lowlands and Southeast Asia had porous boundaries, constantly shifting, and open to contestation. Authority waned with distance from the centre. Warfare and tribute were largely seasonal affairs, after which coercive power shrank back behind the walls of the capital. As the archaeologist Monica Smith points out, only the most naive historian would assume that the claims inscribed on imperial monuments are a simple reflection of political reality on the ground. Of course ancient rulers loved to present themselves as ‘sovereigns of the four quarters’, ‘masters of the known world’, and so on. Yet no ancient world emperor could even have imagined powers of surveillance, such as those now enjoyed by any minor dictator or oligarch.

On a global scale, we are witnessing a revolution in our understanding of ancient demography. To ignore it, these days, is to indulge in a cruel sort of intellectual prank, by which the genocide of Indigenous populations – a direct consequence of the planetary revolt against freedom, in the past 500 years – is naturalised as a perennial absence of people. Nor can we just assume that if we want to understand the prospects for our modern world, the only ‘big’ stories worth telling are those of empire.

The world we live in today is not just the one created by the likes of Tiberius of Rome, or even Emperor Wu of Han. Until surprisingly recent times, spaces of human freedom existed across large parts of our planet. Millions lived in them. We don’t know their names, as they didn’t carve them in stone, but we know that many lived lives in which one could hope to do more than just scratch out an existence, or rehearse someone else’s script of ‘the origin of the state’ – in which one could move away, disobey, experiment with other notions of how to live, even create new forms of social reality.

Sometimes, the unfree did this too, against much harder odds. How many, back then, preferred imperial control to non-imperial freedoms? How many were given a choice? How much choice do we have now? It seems nobody really knows the answers to these questions, at least not yet. In future, it will take more than zombie statistics to stop us from asking them. There are forgotten histories buried in the ground, of human politics and values. The soil mantle of Earth, including the very soil itself, turns out to be not just our species’ life support system, but also a forensic archive, containing precious evidence to challenge timeworn narratives about the origins of inequality, private property, patriarchy, warfare, urban life and the state – narratives born directly from the experience of empire, written by the ‘winners’ of a future that may yet make losers of us all.

Investigating the human past in this way is not a matter of searching for utopia, but of freeing us to think about the true possibilities of human existence. Unhampered by outdated theoretical assumptions and dogmatic interpretations of obsolete data, could we look with fresh eyes at the very meaning of terms like ‘civilisation’? Our species has existed for something like 300,000 years. Today, we stand on a precipice, confronting a future defined by environmental collapse, the erosion of democracy, and wars of unprecedented destructiveness: a new age of empire, perhaps the last in a cycle of such ages that, for all we really know, may represent only a modest fraction of the human experience.

For those who seek to change course, such uncertainty about the scope of human freedoms may itself be a source of liberation, opening pathways to other futures.


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David Wengrow  is professor of comparative archaeology at University College London. His books include The Origins of Monsters (2013), What Makes Civilization? (2nd ed, 2018) and, co-authored with David Graeber, The Dawn of Everything (2021).
Kamala Harris has already opened substantial lead over Trump with young voters: new poll

Adam Nichols
July 25, 2024 

U.S. Vice President and Democratic presumptive presidential nominee Kamala Harris (AFP)

A recentAxios/Generation Lab poll reveals that Vice President Kamala Harris enjoys substantially higher popularity among America's youngest voters compared to President Joe Biden.

The survey, conducted entirely after Biden's withdrawal announcement on Sunday, gauged respondents' preferences in hypothetical Biden-Trump and Harris-Trump matchups.

In a Biden versus Trump scenario, 18- to 34-year-olds favored Biden by 53% to Trump's 47%, a 6-point advantage for Biden, the poll found.

However, in a Harris versus Trump contest, the same age group preferred Harris by 60% to Trump's 40%, giving Harris a substantial 20-point lead.Gen Z and millennial voters played a crucial role in Biden's 2020 victory, with unprecedented turnout and a 20-point preference for Biden, according to a Pew Research Center analysis
Bernie Sanders Should Be Kamala Harris’s Vice President

If Kamala Harris really wants to show she is ready to turn a new page in the campaign against Donald Trump, it’s obvious who her choice as running mate should be: Bernie Sanders.


Bernie Sanders and Kamala Harris at the fifth Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidential campaign season in Atlanta, Georgia, on November 20, 2019.
(Saul Loeb / AFP via Getty Images)


07.24.2024
JACOBIN


Vice President Kamala Harris has reminded us all of a key insight into social and political analysis. In what has become a signature catchphrase, none of us just “fell out of a coconut tree.” We “exist in the context of everything that has come before us.” Karl Marx himself couldn’t have said it better.

In Harris’s case, that context includes serving as number two to President Joe Biden and thus being tarnished by his disastrous foreign policy. Biden has given a blank check of support to Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, offering massive material assistance and diplomatic cover to Netanyahu’s government as it has engaged in genocidal crimes. Millions of Gazans have been displaced. The Israel Defense Forces has indiscriminately bombed schools, hospitals, churches, mosques, schools, universities, and apartment blocks full of children. There are credible reports of mass executions of unarmed Palestinian civilians during house-to-house raids. According to a “conservative estimate” published in the Lancet, 186,000 people have died as a direct or indirect result of the carnage.

The policy of assistance for these crimes has disgusted much of the Biden-Harris base. In one poll, only 20 percent of the voters who elected Biden in 2020 were confident that what was happening in Gaza wasn’t a genocide. Crucial swing states like Michigan may have been lost to Biden because of the fury over Gaza felt by crucial elements of his base.

Key to Harris beating Donald Trump is winning these voters back by decisively breaking with Biden’s policy and promising, as Sen. Bernie Sanders told the New Yorker’s Isaac Chotiner last week, “not one more nickel” of aid for Netanyahu’s war if she becomes president this January.

On the domestic front, the best way to counter the pseudo-populist siren song of Trump and his running mate J. D. Vance would be with a full-throated embrace of actually populist economic policies.

She could pivot back to her previous support for Medicare for All, for example. Once upon a time, Harris was a Senate cosponsor of Medicare for All. Then she ran for president in 2020 and triangulated herself into absurdity on the issue. But millions of Americans are still suffering from crushing medical costs, forgoing care to avoid those costs, and seeing their health deteriorate as a result. Harris likes to emphasize that we can dream of “what can be, unburdened by what has been.” It’s not too late for Harris to unburden herself from what her position on Medicare for All has been.

She could also take a page from Bernie’s 2020 platform and start to think about a bundle of policies like a national rent-control standard that could get us closer to achieving “Housing for All.” At the very least, Harris could emphasize a national policy of capping rents, which Biden got on board with in the twilight of his reelection campaign in response to reported demands from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

Harris could revive the PRO Act, which would make it much easier to organize and strengthen unions. The Biden-Harris administration theoretically supports the act, but it’s long been consigned to the back burner; now is the time to make it a centerpiece of her campaign. Every speech could include talk of the vital importance of rebuilding the labor movement for the future of American workers — not to mention that promoting the PRO Act would be an excellent opportunity to slam Vance for his transparently fake pro-worker stance by highlighting the incoherent excuses he’s given for refusing to support the PRO Act in the Senate.

In one interview, pressed about why he wouldn’t support it despite his alleged economic populism, Vance argued that “as it is, the existing, mainstream labor movement is irreconcilably hostile to Republicans and that more trust-building is needed before a comprehensive rapprochement can take place.” Translation: we won’t support workers’ rights because labor doesn’t like the GOP. (Perhaps because of the GOP’s steadfast facilitation of billionaire rapaciousness and attacks on workers?)

But as I noted earlier this week, this populist message might not land if people don’t find the messenger credible. Lip service to good policies might not sound very convincing coming from as establishment-coded a figure as Harris, whose record on progressive policymaking is decidedly checkered, as my colleague Branko Marcetic has laid out.

Again though, Harris still has room to pivot — including in who she chooses to be her running mate.

She should choose Senator Bernie Sanders as her vice president.
Bernie Sanders would bring to the Harris candidacy exactly the kind of antiwar and economic-populist energy it needs to counter the cheap counterfeit of those stances offered by Donald Trump’s running mate, J. D. Vance. (Phil Roeder / Flickr)

Perhaps you’re rolling your eyes here, but hear me out. No politician in the United States has been more steadfast an advocate for the working class than Sanders, who speaks about the challenges facing the American working class — and the desperate need for the Democratic Party to fight for that class if it wants to win — constantly.

Bernie is more thoroughly associated with Medicare for All than any major politician has been with a single policy proposal in my lifetime. He has a long history of siding with working-class tenants and homeowners and speaking to the realities of enormous housing costs that are crushing to so many millions of Americans.

Sanders is the strongest advocate for the labor movement in Congress. He never stops talking about workers’ declining wages while the rich get richer, and he constantly advocates for rebuilding unions as an essential solution to workers’ woes. Just this month, in an interview with Jacobin founder Bhaskar Sunkara in the Nation, Sanders said his advice to young people was, “If your first impulse is to run for office, rethink it. . . . Sometimes you can have more of an impact organizing your brothers and sisters on the job in a union than you can have for running for office.”

Sanders has not been perfect on Palestine over the years. It took him far too long, for example, to call for a cease-fire in Gaza. But he has also been the Senate’s strongest voice in defense of Palestinians over the years and against the most recent atrocities in Gaza. He has called over and over again to end US military aid for Netanyahu’s genocidal war.

Sanders would bring to the Harris candidacy exactly the kind of antiwar and economic-populist energy it needs to counter the cheap counterfeit of those stances offered by Trump’s running mate.

Perhaps you think Bernie is too old — just like Joe Biden was. And if his policies are popular, why did he lose two elections?

The reality is that he came remarkably close in 2016, winning almost as many states as Hillary Clinton, and in some ways he came even closer during the opening phase of the 2020 primaries before the establishment candidates consolidated in an unprecedented way to stop him. And we have years of polling to show that Bernie is actually more popular with the public at large than he is with the slice of it that identifies with the Democratic Party’s “brand.” Numerous polls over the years have found him one of the most popular senators in America, or even the most popular.

Most head-to-head matchup polls over the years had him slaughtering Trump. Not for nothing did people like me spend years reminding anyone who’d listen that “Bernie would have won.”

And hey, when it comes to the age issue, think of it like this: What better way to prove to elderly voters that Biden was pressured to drop out not because of his age but because of his incapacity than to nominate a vice-presidential candidate who’s a full year older than the president, but whose brain is universally acknowledged to still be in working order?

Will Harris pick her 2016 Democratic presidential primary opponent for veep? I doubt it. But it actually would be a good idea. Just imagine watching him obliterating a man less than half his age, J. D. Vance, on the debate stage this fall without breaking a sweat.

CONTRIBUTOR
Ben Burgis is a Jacobin columnist, an adjunct philosophy professor at Rutgers University, and the host of the YouTube show and podcast Give Them An Argument. He’s the author of several books, most recently Christopher Hitchens: What He Got Right, How He Went Wrong, and Why He Still Matters.

Kamala Harris, Trump’s Voters, and Shawn Fain

July 22, 2024
Source: Originally published by Z. Feel free to share widely.




Biden bids adieu. Anoints Vice President Harris. What next? In particular, who runs to become the next Vice President? How can anyone who has endured the last few weeks (months, years, decades?) even guess at that, much less offer a serious plausible proposal for that? Well, I think I can.

What was the final cause of Biden’s decision? We can only guess but I would bet the big donors and a few Party power brokers—read Pelosi and Obama—finally said enough is enough. But regardless, who now rums?

Barring some kind of perversity or miracle, I think it will be Kamala Harris. She has Biden’s support. She can be an overwhelming or even unanimous choice to avoid a contentious convention. She can fight and debate. A prosecutor for a felon. And for kickers Harris can access funds that were raised for Biden and that others can’t access. But there arises another question. Who runs along with Harris? Who does Harris and the convention settle on to become Vice President?

For that calculation, the key point is to beat Trump and Vance. So I hope they settle on someone who can inject some real excitement, some real hope. Someone who is not a political insider but is also not a ridiculous transplant from an entirely unrelated domain. So not a politician. Not an actor. Not a singer. Not an athlete. Not even a TV talk show star. Okay, maybe Jon Stewart, I guess. But who would I actually want?

My favorite is Shawn Fain, President of the UAW. To me, if the aim is to beat Trump, this pick is obvious. Peel off much of Trump’s working class support. Election over. Arouse an incredible army of volunteers. Double over. Show Vance who the real deal working class hero is. Triply over. Midwest strength and how about if as a bonus, at the optimistic edge, Fain brings along with himself million worker Harris/Fain marches in New York, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago, Las Vegas, San Francisco, phoenix, Houston, Birmingham, Augusta, and Miami. Take that Trump. Time for you to weep. And Trump voters. Here is a reason for you to change teams. More on Fain at the end, below.

But why is beating Trump paramount? Well, if anyone reading this doesn’t already know, we could consider the Republican National Convention. Hulk Hogan? Hannibal Lector? Donald Trump? That isn’t parody. It is actuality. It is real farce. But for me the RNC farce raised still another question. How could anyone watch Trump’s convention, that flaunt farce him in our faces, center stage, no masquerade, star bright, and still decide support Donald Trump?

Does it give you a headache to consider my question about Trump’s voters? Do you suffer sleeplessness if you mull “why” so many of your fellow Americans support Trump? It breaks my brain too. Crushes my heart too. So why ask why? Indeed why worry about why? Why not just ignore why Trump’s supporters support Trump? Why not just look away? Netflix calls. Olympics are imminent. Escape beckons. What, me worry? Not me. Less painful to look away.

But I do worry. Why do roughly half of U.S. voters still support Trump. I understand and I too feel the inclination to look away. Nonetheless, I worry about how so many voters can visibly see what’s repeatedly flaunted before them, not to mention peruse Project 2025, and still support Trump.

I worry about that not solely because to Stop Trump it will help to know why so many voters support Trump. I also worry about it because beyond the election, to arrive at a fundamentally transformed society we cannot have half the voting population remain Trumpist. But to avoid having that, we have to successfully communicate with Trump’s voters. And successful communication will not happen while we have no notion why Trump’s voters feel as they do. Much less can we successfully communicate with Trump’s voters while we aggressively avoid Trump’s voters.

Sanders says that even just accounting for only one issue, global warming, no one in the U.S. should cast a vote for Trump. Drill baby drill is, even taken alone, disqualifying. “You are going to boil and drown me. I’d rather you lose.” But even beyond that, no one should believe Trump cares even a whit for other than the rich, and actually, plausibly, for other than himself. Okay, Sanders is absolutely right about all that. So we of course need to convincingly demonstrate Sanders’ two claims, and other similar ones, as well.

But at the same time, if we are going to be heard by Trump supporters, don’t we need to recognize that to offer such observations alone has been and will remain essentially irrelevant. Trump supporters will mostly not believe, mostly not register, mostly not even hear such communications. Or they will hear them only as lies to reject. They will discount or never register evidence regarding the dangers of Trump’s agenda if we who offer such evidence—whether we do it on late night TV to millions or at a bus stop or bar to one—don’t acknowledge why Trump’s supporters support Trump and don’t sincerely and respectfully address their warranted concerns.

So why do people support Trump? Don’t we who despise not just Trump but also what Trump is preparing to do as President via his Project 2025 need to know why Trump’s supporters support him despite the dangers to others and even to themselves if we are to effectively convey to them valid facts, figures, and implications? Well, wait a minute. Why? For what reason do we need to know their reasons?

The reason we need to know Trump’s voters reasons is that in a vacuum, which is to say absent shared compelling explanations of their reasons, anti-Trump voters will fill the explanation vacuum on the fly. And we know that the answer many will grab on the fly is that it’s because everyone who supports Trump is crazy. Or is out of this world racist, sexist, and authoritarian. Or is mind bogglingly greedy. Or whatever other vile characterization one finds comfortable as a summary—like, oh, perhaps everyone who supports Trump is deplorable.

We know it is undeniably easy for anti-Trump voters to think such thoughts. After all, if no one should rationally support Trump, doesn’t it follow that anyone who does support Trump has some perverse and irrational attribute causing their aberrant choice? And if irrational perversity is at work, then isn’t it reasonable for us to conclude that there is no point even trying to impact that?

No. My point is that our spontaneous answers tend to preclude effective communication with Trump’s supporters. Our spontaneous answers tend to lump all who support Trump into a single mass with common immutable motivations. We then see only an abyss. And we look away. But what if, albeit with some exceptions, our spontaneous answers are not dead end wrong?

“Some exceptions”? Who are the “some exceptions”? Who are the Trump supporters whose reasons for supporting him will remain until November and perhaps for a long time thereafter immutably, untouchable vile?

First, the seriously rich do indeed support Trump for clear and what are for them rationally warranted albeit horribly vile reasons. For example, Trump will lower their taxes. Trump will aid their efforts to obstruct unionization and to crush labor resistance. Trump will remove restrictions on their profit-seeking pursuits. No more pollution controls, no more workplace or product safety requirements, no more minimum wage, no more climate policy, and so on. Trump promises to fulfill every rich person’s wish list. Trump says drill baby drill. So the rich say, “go Donald.” Trump in absolute control? The rich say, “great. Donald is my guy” and pay his bills. Okay, we can’t budge their greedy minds. But on election day, in the tally, they are still at best a few percent of the population.

Second, truly grossly misogynist and/or racist voters support Trump also for clear and I guess in their clouded eyes rationally warranted reasons. Trump will not coddle women, Latins, immigrants, and Blacks. Trump will instead degrade, denigrate, deny, and deport or at least diminish all those and in that way he will elevate his supporters. Get control Donald, and then get them. You must be for me if you are against them. So “go Donald. You are my guy.” But how many voters are like this? I don’t know and neither do you, but I think it is not all that many.

Structural sexism and racism are still incredibly serious cancers of our society. But are they widely this personally strong, this personally overt, this personally aggressive, so that they individual people’s all other concerns? Even fear of fascism once one stares that in the eyes? Again I would estimate this just adds a few more percent to Trumps rock solid Election Day tally and then Trumpism’s on-going flock.

So, who else is in the unreachable base? Religious fundamentalists who seek a Christian nation and think Trump is saved so Trump can do or is doing God’s work so that for them Trump’s personal history is literally beside the point. He is God’s chosen one. “Go Donald. You are God’s guy so you are my guy too.” Are those reasons valid and immovably entrenched in the heads of religious fundamentalists? Even if they are, how many more voters does that add beyond the above two categories? Sum it all up. Is it even thirty percent of his voters? I think not.

The above says to me that it isn’t only undecideds at play in the coming election. I think it is also soft supporters on both sides. And who is soft support for Trump? It is people who have supported Trump because their friends are doing so and they don’t want any friction with their friends. It is people who have supported and even clung to Trump because they hated Biden, or they thought Biden was too weak or too old. Trump is more robust. Trump is tougher. It is people who supported Trump because he is entertaining and they feel that being entertaining is the only positive attribute either Trump or any candidate can have, so they will vote for the candidate with more entertainment sense and that is Trump. It is people who javelin thought Trump understands them. Trump is not an elitist asshole to avoid. Trump is a guy to have fun with. It is people who have thought Trump bullies the bad guys, but not us. Trump lies to the bad guys, but not to us. It is people who have thought Trump will shake up the government and, indeed, will shake up everything, and who have figured that the ensuing Trumpian chaos might lead to some good. After all, everything is certainly broken. Everything does deserve to be shaken up. None of that seems immutably unreachable to me.

And what resides behind all of that soft Trump support including from so many desperate white and now also some Black and Latin workers, and including from lots of lonely scared and impoverished people, and including even from millions of women?

We can see people who have very real grievances from economic hardship to oxycodone addiction and fentanyl death. People who have had their dignity trampled, their voice silenced. Plus a team, MAGA, that beckons them. A team which they receive some sense of efficacy from. A team which they receive a degree of, yes, camaraderie from. Which they receive a degree of, yes, solidarity from. A team whose members that look like them. A team that doesn’t dismiss, deny, and denigrate them, which the only other big team repeatedly does all day long and late night too. They see a MAGA team that they feel emboldened by. A MAGA team that they don’t want to leave. They feel some power in it, some efficacy.

Do we want to talk and act in ways that can weaken Trump’s support rather than to look away and ignore looming defeat until it snuffs out more lives and smothers more hope? If so, don’t we have to hear Trump’s supporters’ reasons. And don’t we have to listen to and really hear their either partially or probably more often than not entirely valid grievances? And don’t we have to acknowledge their feelings and then and only then ask, okay, but how does what Trump will deliver improve anything for you? There will be mostly and perhaps even entirely silence. If there are answers, you are communicating. Great. Converse more. Ask them how does each specific agenda item of Trump’s Project 2025 help you? Ask them specifically why various agenda items don’t hurt you. Demonstrate the truth. Conversation then progressing, ask why they think the Democrats’ plans to do so and so and to do such and such, accurately described, wouldn’t be helpful. And finally, when it won’t feel like slapping them upside their head, ask which is better, authoritarian fascism that squeezes and constricts populations unto death, or admittedly oppressive business as usual that we can, however, push to be better, even much better, to then seek still more gains?

You may need to counter all kinds of prejudices, biases, confusions, and sometimes even perverse values. It won’t be fun. To worry about this stuff may engender in you headaches and sleeplessness. But isn’t it necessary to do just that if we are to Stop Trump now and beyond November stop Trumpism and move toward a fundamentally better world?

Are the above observations and the derivative prescription seriously wrong? If so, please write to tell me why, so I don’t keep pounding out misguided words. Or is the above mostly right? If so, please don’t give up. Organize.

I said above that I would provide a bit more about Shawn Fain, my VP pick, to close this article. In Trump’s acceptance speech at the RNC he said the UAW should immediately fire Shawn Fain. The reason he offered was some blather about Chinese auto plants. Fain replied and I think his reply tells us a lot.

“Last night, Donald Trump once again attacked our union on a national stage. That should tell you everything you need to know about the man and the candidate. As we’ve said for many months, he stands for everything we stand against. Trump claims to be attacking us in the name of protecting American auto workers.

“So tell us why, when Lordstown closed in 2019, when Trump was President, and our members were on strike for 40 days, he said nothing and did nothing. Tell us why Trump pushed to move auto jobs out of Michigan to drive down wages.

“Tell us why Trump ‘renegotiated NAFTA’ for the disastrous USMCA, under which manufacturing jobs continue to leave the country and the trade deficit with Mexico has gone up, not down. Tell us why Trump blamed the 2008 auto crisis on the autoworkers. We’ll tell you why. Because Donald Trump always has and always will side with the billionaire class against the working class.

“Trump doesn’t want to protect American auto workers. He wants to pad the pockets of the ludicrously wealthy auto executives. He wants to cut the corporate tax rates of his golfing buddies and keep the stock buybacks and Wall Street manipulation going. He wants autoworkers to shut up and take scraps, not stand up and fight for more.

“Trump talks about the electric vehicle transition as the reason our industry is under threat. Our members don’t go to work every day because they’re passionate about combustion engines. It’s about our families and our communities getting our fair share of the record auto profits, electric or not. The threat we face is corporate greed run wild, and that’s what Donald Trump enables and celebrates.

“America’s autoworkers aren’t the problem. Our union isn’t the problem. The working class isn’t the problem. Corporate greed and the billionaires’ hero, mascot, and lapdog, Donald Trump, are the problem. Don’t get played by this scab billionaire. Stand up and fight for more.”

My reaction: Fain for Vice President and Harris-Fain will resoundingly defeat Trump-Vance.


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Michael Albert

Michael Albert`s radicalization occurred during the 1960s. His political involvements, starting then and continuing to the present, have ranged from local, regional, and national organizing projects and campaigns to co-founding South End Press, Z Magazine, the Z Media Institute, and ZNet, and to working on all these projects, writing for various publications and publishers, giving public talks, etc. His personal interests, outside the political realm, focus on general science reading (with an emphasis on physics, math, and matters of evolution and cognitive science), computers, mystery and thriller/adventure novels, sea kayaking, and the more sedentary but no less challenging game of GO. Albert is the author of 21 books which include: No Bosses: A New Economy for a Better World; Fanfare for the Future; Remembering Tomorrow; Realizing Hope; and Parecon: Life After Capitalism. Michael is currently host of the podcast Revolution Z and is a Friend of ZNetwork.

Republicans Claim Harris Can’t Beat Trump — Don’t Believe Them

July 23, 2024
Source: Truthout


Image by Lawrence Jackson, Public domain

Hours after President Joe Biden announced that he would not seek reelection, Donald Trump declared that he believed Vice President Kamala Harris, the most likely Democratic nominee, would be easier to beat in November than Biden. The Republican Party immediately kicked into gear, denouncing Harris as “enabler-in-chief” to a floundering Biden and decrying her role in what the party continues to label an immigration “crisis.”

Don’t believe Trump’s bluster for a minute. Harris has the potential to be a far more formidable opponent than Biden.

First off, Trump’s supposed strength is more a product of Biden’s weakness than of a sudden lovefest a majority of Americans are having with the impeached, found-liable-for-sexual-assault MAGA leader. Put simply, there is no lovefest. This became even more evident after he was shot by a sniper in Pennsylvania — a situation which has, historically, seen the surviving political figure benefit from a surge of popular good will. Reagan’s approval ratings, after he was shot, climbed to nearly 70 percent. Meanwhile, polls after Trump’s shooting showed that he still only had a 40 percent approval rating, with a majority of Americans continuing to disapprove.

And those numbers are after a month in which Trump has had an extraordinary run of luck: from a would-be-assassin’s bullet whizzing past his ear, missing his head and recasting him as a victim rather than a promoter of political violence; to the malevolent Supreme Court ruling granting presidents immunity for anything deemed to be done in an official capacity; to a Florida judge throwing out the charges against him for illegally hoarding classified documents; back to Joe Biden’s beyond-decrepit debate performance on June 27.

Trump went through the entire GOP convention with the media spotlight firmly focused on the death-watch around Biden’s campaign. And yet throughout, his favorability rating has remained underwater, and in most polls his electoral support came in at less than 50 percent. Given the many leg-ups Trump has had since late June from the judicial system, from his opponent, and from the fates themselves, it’s remarkable that the Republican nominee remains as unpopular as he is — and it suggests that he has reached an apex of popularity beyond which he cannot rise.

In fact, I would argue, Trump’s run of luck ended on Sunday morning when Biden released a letter to the American people announcing that he would not seek reelection. And it further corroded when, a few minutes later, the president endorsed Kamala Harris to succeed him. As potential challengers to Harris, such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, instead began rallying around her candidacy it became clear that the Democrats were going to avoid a food fight for the nomination.

By day’s end, instead of forming a circular firing squad, Democrats had reaped more than $50 million in online donations — between five and 10 times the daily haul the party has seen since the June 27 debate. Given the sentiment of anyone-but-Biden among a wide swath of Democratic activists in recent weeks, and the relief at having a plausible candidate to support, this surge of incoming dollars could continue over the coming days and weeks, providing a huge war chest to take into the final post-convention sprint to the election.

Some pundits were quick to point out that there really wasn’t much of a difference in the polling between how Biden matched up against Trump and how Harris matches up against Trump — and to a degree that’s true. In an average of recent polls, Biden trailed Trump by about 2 percent, and Harris by about 1.5 percent.

These polls, however, obscure more than they illuminate. After the debate debacle, it was clear that Biden’s campaign was in a death spiral, one that he should have recognized weeks ago. Instead, he plowed ahead, taking a wrecking ball to his own prospects as he went. While the president touted supposed internal polls suggesting a rosier picture, in fact Biden’s numbers, especially in the swing states, were plummeting. States such as Michigan suddenly seemed entirely out of reach for the president, and a number of states that until recently were thought to be securely blue, such as New Hampshire and Minnesota, looked like potential Trump targets of opportunity.

By mid-July, it looked like the longer Biden remained the candidate, the more Democrats themselves would see it as a foregone conclusion that he would lose. As a result, donors began withholding funds and pollsters found that two-thirds of Democratic voters wanted a new horse to back in November’s election.

With a large share of Democrats sitting on their hands and refusing to actively campaign for Biden, and with the possibility that many more potential Democratic voters would simply not go to the polls come November, it seemed entirely possible the president’s campaign could be heading into wipe-out territory.

To reiterate, however, this was due to Biden’s weakness rather than to Trump’s innate strength.

Harris, by contrast, will enter the race with her campaign on an upward trajectory. If Biden trailing Trump by 2 percent seemed a pinnacle for the current president, from which he would only continue to tumble, Harris’s 1.5 percent deficit seems a baseline.

From now on, this will be her campaign. If she is strategic — which she is — she will bring the energy of relative youth to contrast with Trump’s 78-year-old persona. After all, Trump is prone to making the same kinds of gaffes that Biden did; instead of being the dynamic presence in the race, he will now become the more blundering candidate — and the public scrutiny that Biden underwent may now shift onto Trump.

Harris will, moreover, be able to step out of Biden’s shadow and craft her own political agenda. She can forcefully contrast the Democratic position on reproductive rights with Republican support for the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade — a position that is deeply unpopular not just with Democrats but with independent voters.

Harris’s baseline poll numbers reflect views on a politician most Americans have seen only in a refracted light. They know her as Biden’s vice president, rather than as a political leader in her own right. Now, over the coming weeks, the country will see her shape her own political priorities, speak on the stump about her own values, debate — if Trump has the guts to share a stage with her — her corrupt opponent, and perhaps most importantly, choose her own vice-presidential nominee. If that nominee is a Rust Belt governor, or, say, Arizona’s astronaut-turned-senator Mark Kelly, the momentum from that choice alone ought to significantly recalibrate the race in several critical swing states.

In other words, take with a pinch of salt those Republicans who claim to be gleeful about the opportunity to take on Harris. The race for the White House is, today, dramatically different from what it was last week. In 2020, Biden was able to deprive Trump of a second term in office. In 2024, in stepping aside (albeit belatedly) and paving the way for a Harris candidacy and for the Democratic Party to rapidly coalesce around that candidacy, he may, once again, have found a way to trip Trump up and to block the MAGA leader’s authoritarian ambitions.