HEATHER DIGBY PARTON
Supposed genius Steve Bannon
thinks he can lure progressives into the nationalist right. Sanders says no
thanks
I wrote earlier in the week about Steve Bannon's ties to
far-right politicians in Europe. In fact, Bannon is in Italy right now
schmoozing with his newest political ally, Matteo Salvini, who's the interior
minister and leads the country's nationalist, anti-immigrant party. The New
York Times describes Salvini as "the most powerful figure in
Italy’s new populist government." He's an emerging far-right superstar
known for his puckish habit of owning the libs by quoting Benito Mussolini.
According to the Times,
Salvini has signed on to Bannon's new so-called organization, "The
Movement" in order to "help bring about a continent-wide populist
takeover during European Parliamentary elections next spring." Bannon will
offer a meeting space and supposed expertise in various aspects of campaigning
for far-right populist leaders. (Apparently, his three months of experience
working for Donald Trump in the flukiest presidential election in U.S. history
qualifies him as a political guru.)
Salvini has other things in
common with Trump and the Republicans besides Steve Bannon. He and his party
are being investigated by government prosecutors for allegedly stealing tens of
millions of euros. (Funny how all these "populists" are always
stealing money with both hands.) Just to make things even more interesting,
Buzzfeed report that Salvini's close aide,
Gianluca Savoini, "has links to mercenaries fighting alongside
pro-Russian and neo-Nazi militias in Ukraine." Savoini himself is the
leader of a pro-Russia "cultural organization" which Buzzfeed's
research showed has disseminated pro-Kremlin propaganda. He has been pushing
hard to remove Italian sanctions against Russia. What a small world.
Evidently, Salvini has
recently met with Hungary's nationalist anti-immigrant prime minister Viktor
Orbán, who is also interested in joining up with Bannon's new movement. Banding
together to defeat liberals across the continent is a curious form of
nationalism but that seems to be the plan.
Zack Beauchamp of Vox got a first-hand look at this
new movement when he went to Hungary to check out the Orbán government. His
report is chilling. He describes an authoritarian state with border fences,
byzantine bureaucracy designed to thwart democratic governance, a
stifled press overwhelmed with government propaganda and a kleptocratic
economy. He dubs it "soft fascism," which sounds better than it
actually is:
[A] political system that aims
to stamp out dissent and seize control of every major aspect of a country’s
political and social life, without needing to resort to “hard” measures like
banning elections and building up a police state.
He observes how this provides
a model for the U.S., not by dramatically imposing dictatorial rule but rather
through "a series of changes to electoral rules and laws imposed over time
that might individually be defensible but in combination with corruption and
demagogic populism creates a new system — one that appears democratic but
functionally is not."
Bannon has said that
Orbán, who has been in office since 2010, was “Trump before Trump.”
Bannon thinks
he's smarter than everybody else and often tries to co-opt the
populist left into his warped vision. He told CNN's Fareed Zakaria last June that he
believes he can peel off at least 25 percent of Bernie Sanders' followers to
form a nationalist governing majority. Just last week, he warned progressives that the establishment would
obstruct their agenda if a Democrat won the White House, just as he believes it
is staging a "coup" against Donald Trump.
I suspect many members of the
American left have been looking for their leaders to speak out on this.
On Thursday, Sen. Bernie Sanders came through with a searing op-ed in the Guardian condemning this
far-right movement and calling it out for the serious threat it is. He calls it
"a global struggle taking place of enormous consequence. Nothing less than
the future of the planet – economically, socially and environmentally – is at
stake ... we are seeing the rise of a new authoritarian axis."
Sanders didn't use the term
"axis" by accident. He writes:
While these regimes may differ
in some respects, they share key attributes: hostility toward democratic norms,
antagonism toward a free press, intolerance toward ethnic and religious
minorities, and a belief that government should benefit their own selfish
financial interests. ... This trend certainly did not begin with Trump, but
there’s no question that authoritarian leaders around the world have drawn
inspiration from the fact that the leader of the world’s oldest and most powerful
democracy seems to delight in shattering democratic norms.
It is extremely important that
one of the most important leaders of the American left puts this is such stark
and evocative terms. He calls out the corrupt, authoritarian leadership
of Russia, Saudi Arabia, Hungary, China and more and makes the connections
among them clear, calling them part of a "common front" sharing
tactics and even some of the same mega-rich funders.
Sanders doesn't offer specific
policies to combat this threat, beyond his social-democratic economic agenda
and standard non-interventionist philosophy but that's not the important part.
He is issuing a wake-up call to the American left:
In order to effectively combat
the rise of the international authoritarian axis, we need an international
progressive movement that mobilizes behind a vision of shared prosperity,
security and dignity for all people, and that addresses the massive global
inequality that exists, not only in wealth but in political power.
Such a movement must be
willing to think creatively and boldly about the world that we would like to
see. While the authoritarian axis is committed to tearing down a post-second
world war global order that they see as limiting their access to power and
wealth, it is not enough for us to simply defend that order as it exists now.
We must look honestly at how
that order has failed to deliver on many of its promises, and how
authoritarians have adeptly exploited those failures in order to build support
for their agenda. We must take the opportunity to reconceptualize a genuinely
progressive global order based on human solidarity, an order that recognizes
that every person on this planet shares a common humanity, that we all want our
children to grow up healthy, to have a good education, have decent jobs, drink
clean water, breathe clean air and live in peace.
Neither the American left nor
the international left is buying into Bannon and company's cramped, ugly,
Hobbesian worldview and it never will. The right-wing racists and nationalists
are on their own.
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