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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/wp_mjgj8c/racefiles.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114There\u2019s been a lot of speculation about what will happen if Trump is elected. Less discussed, but no less consequential is what will happen if Clinton is elected. This past summer, a group of progressive activists were gathered from across the country at White Salmon, Washington by ChangeLab, a national racial justice thought laboratory, to discuss the implications of the Trump and Clinton candidacies. This article is based on that discussion and subsequent observation and analysis of the odd, frankly frightening, events that have unfolded in this election season since then:<\/em><\/p>\n One popular thread suggests that if Trump is elected he will either moderate in order to govern, or his will be a Rose Garden presidency during which we will be ruled by committee, with Trump sidelined by the GOP, perhaps by his own volition. The result is that public policy during his administration will not be nearly as extreme as has been assumed.<\/p>\n Digging deeper, this scenario has some serious implications \u2013<\/p>\n Others suggest that if Trump wins, he will deliver what he’s promised, dialing up state repression, using federal law enforcement and the IRS to go after his enemies, including social movements on the Left, forcing extreme austerity measures on the bottom 90%, instituting immigration quotas and bans or simply foreclosing on any possibility of humane reform and expanding the current deportation regime. And, what is more difficult to oppose through popular protest, many predict that he will open the door to extreme crony capitalism.<\/p>\n Some political dynamics that could result include \u2013<\/p>\n And this is just the tip of the iceberg. There are many other possibilities. In either scenario, we need to consider the impact of Trump\u2019s appointments, not just to the Supreme Court, but also to key positions throughout the federal court system, and in key federal agencies and Departments.<\/p>\n If Trump is elected, what will happen to the Environmental Protection Agency? Who will he appoint to head the State Department, Defense, Homeland Security? The Department of the Interior, as one demonstration of potential impact, manages hundreds of thousands of Native American trusts, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the Bureau of Land Management. The issue of federal management of public lands is an organizing lever on the right (think Cliven Bundy<\/a> and the Bundy militia<\/a>), especially West of the Rockies where the Bureau of Land Management is the steward of most of the undeveloped land and natural resources in states where rural communities are facing a seemingly intractable economic crisis.<\/p>\n The right\u2019s agenda in in the rural West includes privatization of public land. Public lands management and natural resource use and extraction issues directly intersect with the interests of tribal communities. If Trump is elected, will he put the potential of privatization on the table to appease those factions on the right for whom this is a bottom line issue?<\/p>\n If Hillary Clinton is elected, many have speculated that she will continue to lead as she has historically. Here are some highlights:<\/p>\n If Clinton wins, there are also larger political dynamics that may be triggered. Here again, some highlights:<\/p>\n And this, again, is just the tip of the iceberg. There is much more to theorize and speculate about.<\/p>\n I believe that progressives, especially anti-racist progressives, should direct some energy at long-term planning, education, and organizing. What this election and these scenarios reveal is that both parties are in disarray. The extreme polarization of the electorate, and a widespread rejection of establishment politics (basically, all sides attacking the middle) are placing extraordinary pressure on both major parties, creating an opening for alternative movements, as cited earlier. Progressives should position our selves to be able to compete for power in this context, an effort that will require broad based coalition building across gender, race, and class. Broad based coalition building will require us to rethink how we frame issues of race, gender, and class, with a focus on thinking about the relations held in place by these power structures, in fact, relationally<\/a><\/em>.<\/p>\n In thinking about how to prepare our selves for this fight, consideration of a bit of history may be helpful.<\/p>\n The Republican Party has obviously made significant investments in mobilizing racial resentment and misogyny, in part through promoting \u201ctraditional values\u201d (read, breeding fear of change which is blamed on feminists, queers, immigrants, and Blacks) as a moral issue in elections. They cast these groups, and especially Blacks and immigrants, as \u201ctakers\u201d in a makers versus takers<\/em> narrative of social decay and economic decline that blames takers<\/em> who are, by turn, described as moochers, welfare queens, \u201cillegals,\u201d super-predators, and entitlement junkies, for the demise the work ethic, mettle, gumption, and pluck (read white American or Western-European cultural values) that made the U.S. the dominant global political and economic power after WWII (and may make it \u201cgreat again\u201d if takers are sufficiently marginalized).<\/p>\n This strategy was deployed over the course of the 70\u2019s, 80\u2019s, 90\u2019s, and early 2000\u2019s as the economy stagnated for most workers in the U.S., worker productivity nonetheless rose, and wealth inequality increased dramatically, all effects of the neoliberal takeover that began with the Reagan revolution. That neoliberal takeover is one orchestrated by the right wing, with rightist leaders clearing the way for this agenda by exploiting cultural movements like the evangelical movement, and taking moral issues of those movements and politicizing them. By doing so, they split the Democratic coalition over issues like LGBTQ rights and abortion, first peeling off Catholics and other social conservatives and dividing labor and the traditional Left. This in turn created a permanent donor base for right wing think tanks and political organizations among donors who are extremely reliable because they are religiously motivated.<\/p>\n Additionally, by popularizing the makers versus takers narrative, the right was able to broaden their base further. The right simultaneously credited the post-WWII political and economic bubble to American ingenuity and work ethic, and deflected blame for the natural decline that followed in subsequent decades onto Blacks, immigrants, feminists, queers, economic competition from Asia, etc. By riding this wave, the GOP was able to rebrand itself as the party of real (read white male) Americans and shuck its former image as the party of Northern elites. Through playing this blame game, the right gave specific political meaning to an array of ordinary bigotries \u2013 they politicized homophobia, conjured up thought police enforcing \u201cpolitical correctness,\u201d and equated abortion with murder and civil rights with \u201cspecial rights\u201d causing extreme political polarization.<\/p>\n These moves helped the GOP move the center of gravity in our political culture to the right. But this also created a practical problem resulting from the significant presence at every level of leadership within the party and in government of uncompromising, ideologically right wing, anti-government activists. One result is that today a significant percentage of GOP voters believe that Hillary Clinton is a \u201cdemon.\u201d This kind of sentiment is dividing the party, contributing to political gridlock, and making the problem of government lack of responsiveness at the local level (resulting in no small part from a lack of adequate tax revenue resulting from the neoliberal anti-government agenda of the right) into what appears to many to be a purely partisan national drama playing out daily on cable news.<\/p>\n\n
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