In a slender volume edited by
Heinrich Geisenberger “The Great Regression”, fifteen, among the most important left-wing social thinkers
of today, ask the following question: what
is the future of social-democracy now when global neoliberalism is crumbling
and the forces of nationalism and xenophobia are on the rise? I would not be
letting you in on a big secret, nor do I think I would undermine the book’s appeal,
if I say that they do not have an answer; neither individually, not collectively.
The reason is simple: the answer, as of now, is elusive, and it might even seem
that it does not exist.
The contributors to this very good
volume which, as I said, gives an excellent insight into the intellectual
thinking of the left are (in alphabetic order): Arjun Appadurai, Zygmunt Bauman, Donatella della
Porta, Nancy Fraser, Eva Illouz, Ivan
Krastev, Bruno Latour, Paul Mason, Pankaj Mishra, Robert Misik, Oliver
Nachtwey, César Rendueles, Wolfgang Streeck, David Van Reybrouck and
Slavoj Žižek.
Not all contributions are, in my opinion, equally interesting, I find
Zygmunt Bauman’s writing, as always, very convoluted and difficult to read. Ivan
Krastev seems like an odd man out among this group of writers: he disagrees
with Trump and Brexit but from what seem fully certifiable neoliberal positions.
It would not surprise the reader that
the names that are often mentioned in the volume are Polanyi and Gramsci, with Erich
Fromm with his “Escape from Freedom” coming back from a long oblivion. Be ready
to see Fromm quoted more and more.
I would like to highlight three contributions
that seem most interesting to me. Nancy Fraser has written an excellent and bold
essay on the ideological background to Trump’s victory. She sees the main competitors
to be “progressive neoliberals” and “reactionary populists”. Progressive
neoliberals are the creation of Clinton’s “New Democrats” and his innumerable
triangulations that eventually brought together “progressives” who cared about identity,
gender and racial equality, and sexual
rights together with the most hard-nosed Wall Street types. This was, at the
origin, an unlikely coalition: LBGTQ activists together with Goldman Sachs. But
it worked. The “progressives” enjoyed their
newly-found influence. They got Goldman to pay lip service to equal rights,
promote a few persons of “color” to top positions, and even realize the advantage,
for its bottom-line, of being more open to diverse talent.* Goldman Sachs made the
money. This is what in the 1990s and early 2000s went under the slogan of
“socially liberal and fiscally conservative”.
Who played the serpent to this “progressive neoliberal” paradise? Those
left out of economic success, that is, losers of globalization, and those
unable or unwilling to accept the new screeds of “progressivism”. The alliance
of progressives and financial-sector neoliberals created, almost by
definitions, its counterpart among those who were maladjusted: either economically
or socially, So long as “the maladjusted” accounted for 20% or so of the
electorate and made lots of noise with little
political success (“The Tea Party”), they could be ignored by the winning
coalition. It is one of the ironies of life that “the maladjusted” found in
Donald Trump somebody who was able to express, and use that resentment.
But, as Nancy Fraser shows, this alignment
of forces totally ignored the left. The left was co-opted by the Clintonite and
Obama’s grand coalition of sexual liberators and money bagmen, and whenever it threatened
to get out of that coalition it was faced with the specter of terrible things
to come. It became a hostage of progressive neoliberals. This completely neutered
the left. It could not get out of Clintonite coalition without bringing racists
and xenophobes to power, and it could not nudge the Clinton-Obama coalition
left.
In this excellent analysis Fraser
openly puts the responsibility for Trump’s rise on the ”unholy alliance of ‘emancipation’
with ‘financialization’”. What to do next?: “To reach out to the mass of Trump
voters who are neither racists nor committed ‘right-wingers’ but the casualties
of a ‘rigged system’” (p.48).
Wolfgang Streeck analysis for Europe
is very similar to Fraser’s for the United States. The costs of “la pensée
unique” adopted by social-democrats across the continent are being paid now through
the absence of a credible social-democratic alternative that could attract the
votes of “malcontents” and consequently check the rise of the right. In the opinion of “the progressive
neoliberal” alliance, Streeck writes, “the fact that the Great Unwashed, who for
so long had helped promote the progress of capitalism passing their time with
the Facebook pages of Kim Kardashian…had now returned to the voting booth,
appears to be a sign of an ominous regression” (p. 161).
Streeck is very critical of the use
of the term of “populist”. He sees it,
rightly in my opinion, as a useful shorthand to reject “en bloc” everybody who
is against TINA (“There Is No Alternative”).
The term of “populist” is useful to the “progressive-neoliberal alliance”
because it makes no distinction between the left and the right, and because both Trump and Sanders can be dismissed as populists
who are providing “simple answers to a complex reality”. Everything but TINA is simple and wrong because
that immeasurably complex reality is understood only by neoliberals. “’Populism’ is diagnosed in normal internationalist
usage as a cognitive problem” (p. 163). In other words, questioning TINA is
seen by the elites as a symptom of some deep cognitive issue. Not surprisingly
, there are calls to ditch the universal franchise and replace it by
“gnosocracy”: vote given only to those who can show to be sufficiently smart.
(Streeck quotes such instances).
Solution: None at the moment. We are
in the Gramscian interregnum when "familiar
chains of cause and effect are no longer in force and unexpected, dangerous and
grotesquely abnormal events may occur at any moment” (p. 166).
Paul Mason (whose excellent
“Postcapitalism” I have reviewed here) has
penned a beautiful essay that draws on his, and his father’s, personal
experiences. It is a story of the English working class, bound together in its contempt
for the rich, swindlers and government, open to foreigners like themselves, and
with strong social ties. All of that was, according to Mason, destroyed by Thatcherism.
Companies went bust, coal mines were closed, work for which these people were prepared
became hard to find, jobs got off-shored, social solidarity frayed, and atomization
set in. Some left these now desolate places looking for better alternatives in
the cities, others espoused the new dogma of financialization and easy money. Local
rugby clubs folded. Instead of a rich social fabric, there was now a desert.
The description is strong and
poignant. Mason wants things to go back to the way they were in the 1960s and
1970s. He is frank in stating that the left must undo globalization, bring back
the jobs, forget about developing countries, and get rid of East European immigrants. The latter come for
a special critique, unlike the earlier African and Sub-Continental immigrants because, through no fault of theirs,
they came to the UK when the country was transiting from manufacturing to service
economy: they thus could not be included into an essentially working-class ethos
described by Mason because that world had by then ceased to exist. But Mason does
not like them because he sees them also as being too pliant to the demands of globalized capitalism
and too acceptant of neoliberal dogmas. Forget about the blond Polish baristas,
give us back a strong, beer-swelling Kenyan worker!
But what kind of leftism, one could
ask, is that, so indistinguishable from Marine Le Pen’s Front National?
The question left to the reader at
the end of the book is, should the social-democratic left maintain its internationalism,
in which case it would have to go back to Wall Street elites and ditch national
policies of redistribution, or should it focus on domestic malcontents in which
case it would move towards policies of national socialism? Or will be able to
find a narrow path, between the two, that would combine internationalism with domestic
redistribution?
* Fraser (p. 41) speak contemptuously of “corporate feminism
focused on ‘leaning in’ and ‘cracking the glass ceiling’”.
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