Monday, August 24, 2020

It’s Not Just Trump: The Neoliberal Roots of the Postal Service Crisis




We should defend the Post Office, both from Trump and the ideology of austerity that treats the agency “like a business.”


MAX B. SAWICKY
AUGUST 20, 2020




https://inthesetimes.com/article/its-not-just-trump-the-neoliberal-roots-of-the-postal-service-crisis




We’re cur­rent­ly get­ting a vivid, painful reminder of why we need a pub­lic sec­tor. The col­lapse of pub­lic ser­vices, in par­tic­u­lar the pro­vi­sion of pub­lic health, has tor­pe­doed the entire econ­o­my as a dead­ly pan­dem­ic rav­ages the coun­try. The end of the road in our cur­rent devo­lu­tion may be the assault on one of our old­est pub­lic insti­tu­tions — the ven­er­a­ble and very pop­u­lar U.S. Postal Service.

The inter­net has come to take on much of how we com­mu­ni­cate in the 21st Cen­tu­ry, but the fact remains that Amer­i­cans still rely heav­i­ly on the deliv­ery of phys­i­cal cor­re­spon­dence. And it’s not just assis­tance checks and life-sav­ing med­ica­tion, all kinds of com­merce in pri­vate goods is facil­i­tat­ed to a sig­nif­i­cant extent by the Postal Service’s pack­age deliv­ery. Trans­port of peri­od­i­cals, the busi­ness of non-prof­it orga­ni­za­tions, and now the very fea­si­bil­i­ty of our nation­al elec­tions, also all depend on a well-func­tion­ing Postal Service.

There has been a cas­cade of well-found­ed furor over Pres­i­dent Trump’s bla­tant sab­o­tage of the mail in order to ben­e­fit him polit­i­cal­ly. But focus­ing only on Trump’s cur­rent attacks obscures the bipar­ti­san, neolib­er­al roots of the cur­rent crisis.

Fol­low­ing the U.S. postal strike of 1970, Con­gress—includ­ing Repub­li­cans and Democ­rats — passed the Postal Reor­ga­ni­za­tion Act, which sep­a­rat­ed the agency from the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment as an inde­pen­dent, qua­si-pub­lic cor­po­ra­tion. One upside of the change was that postal work­ers won col­lec­tive bar­gain­ing rights, and the ser­vice was large­ly able to func­tion and escape con­tro­ver­sy for decades after­wards. Yet it also ensured that the Postal Ser­vice would be run ​“like a business.”

The 1990s were a peri­od of retrench­ment in the pub­lic sec­tor. Demo­c­ra­t­ic Pres­i­dent Bill Clin­ton declared, ​“The era of Big Gov­ern­ment is over.” Vice Pres­i­dent Al Gore cru­sad­ed to ​“rein­vent gov­ern­ment.” The admin­is­tra­tion boast­ed of its efforts to reduce the num­ber of fed­er­al employ­ees, and pri­va­ti­za­tion and shrink­ing of cer­tain pub­lic ser­vices became the cause-cele­bre. The Demo­c­ra­t­ic Lead­er­ship Coun­cil, also known as ​‘New Democ­rats,’ put much of their faith in mar­kets rather than government.

It could not have been sur­pris­ing that the neolib­er­al gun­sights lat­er became trained on the U.S. Postal Ser­vice. Clin­ton admin­is­tra­tion alum­na Elaine Kamar­ck, a leader in Al Gore’s rein­vent­ing gov­ern­ment project, sub­se­quent­ly called for pri­va­ti­za­tion of the Postal Ser­vice.

In 2012, Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s for­mer head of the Office of Man­age­ment and Bud­get, Peter Orszag, also advo­cat­ed pri­va­ti­za­tion of the Postal Ser­vice. Among the Oba­ma administration’s laps­es was the fail­ure to appoint its own major­i­ty to the Postal Ser­vice Board of Gov­er­nors (BoG). Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Obama’s fail­ure to exer­cise his appoint­ment pow­er was a pat­tern that affect­ed mul­ti­ple gov­ern­ment insti­tu­tions. Postal Ser­vice employ­ment itself was reduced by almost 20 per­cent dur­ing Obama’s time in office.

Oba­ma end­ed up nom­i­nat­ing Bush admin­is­tra­tion holdovers to the BoG that were reject­ed by a coali­tion of pro­gres­sive orga­ni­za­tions, includ­ing La Raza, the Lead­er­ship Con­fer­ence on Civ­il Rights, the NAACP, the Nation­al Urban League, the AFL-CIO, and postal work­ers’ unions.

Recent­ly, the objec­tion at the time of Sen. Bernie Sanders to these Oba­ma nom­i­na­tions, on the grounds that they threat­ened the future of the agency, was said by both MSNBC com­men­ta­tor Jason John­son
and Dai­ly Kos blog­ger Markos Moulit­sas to have helped cause the cur­rent dys­func­tion at the Postal Ser­vice. It should not be sur­pris­ing that, despite such spe­cious rewrit­ing of his­to­ry, Sanders actu­al­ly had the strong sup­port of postal work­ers them­selves.

From its defen­sive crouch, the Postal Ser­vice now attempts to shore up its polit­i­cal sup­port by pledg­ing that it does not require ​“tax dol­lars” to func­tion. Its lead­er­ship is now say­ing that once the cur­rent hit to its finances due to the coro­n­avirus is reme­di­at­ed, the agency will be able oper­ate as a stand-alone enter­prise.

From an eco­nom­ic stand­point, there is no rea­son a postal ser­vice must run a prof­it. As many com­men­ta­tors have point­ed out, this con­straint is applied selec­tive­ly, out of ide­o­log­i­cal prej­u­dices. Nobody requires the Depart­ment of Defense to turn a prof­it. (For this we should prob­a­bly be grateful.)

The tra­di­tion­al ratio­nale for sub­si­diz­ing a postal ser­vice goes by the prin­ci­ple of ​“uni­ver­sal ser­vice.” The bonds of a nation are strength­ened by the abil­i­ty to com­mu­ni­cate on paper, at nom­i­nal cost, with any res­i­den­tial address in the coun­try. In eco­nom­ics, the tech­ni­cal buzz­word for this is ​“net­work exter­nal­i­ties.” All mem­bers of a net­work ben­e­fit from direct links to oth­er mem­bers, even if they are sel­dom or even nev­er tak­en advan­tage of.

The uni­ver­sal ser­vice com­mit­ment makes pos­si­ble the pro­vi­sion of reg­u­lar mail deliv­ery to rel­a­tive­ly iso­lat­ed rur­al loca­tions. If the Postal Ser­vice were an unreg­u­lat­ed, prof­it-mak­ing con­cern, mail deliv­ery would cost a pre­mi­um for cus­tomers in such areas. That is why, when push comes to shove, you can find con­ser­v­a­tive mem­bers of Con­gress from rur­al dis­tricts stick­ing up for their rel­a­tive­ly cost­ly local post offices and mail routes.

The prob­lem with a pledge to reject ​“tax dol­lars” became evi­dent with the Postal Account­abil­i­ty and Enhance­ment Act of 2006, passed in a lame-duck Con­gress by unan­i­mous con­sent, by Repub­li­cans and Democ­rats alike. One of the orig­i­nal spon­sors was Rep. Hen­ry Wax­man (D‑Calif.), a long-time lib­er­al stal­wart in the House of Representatives.

Among oth­er changes, the act required the Postal Ser­vice to put aside mon­ey for the health ben­e­fits of future retirees, lead­ing inex­orably to bud­get pres­sure on cur­rent oper­at­ing expen­di­tures and jus­ti­fi­ca­tions for ser­vice cuts: few­er postal work­ers, less over­time, decom­mis­sion­ing mail-sort­ing machines, and short­er win­dow hours at the nation’s post offices add up to less time­ly and reli­able ser­vice.


Now, in the heat of a nation­al elec­tion with a great­ly expand­ed use of mail-in vot­ing, prob­lems should be expect­ed. The spu­ri­ous notion of a stand-alone agency also means that any infu­sion of funds from gen­er­al tax rev­enue, oth­er­wise jus­ti­fi­able in eco­nom­ic terms, can be stig­ma­tized as a ​“bail-out.”

The point here is that the spu­ri­ous notion that the U.S. Postal Ser­vice should be finan­cial­ly self-suf­fi­cient — which goes back decades — helped give rise to the abil­i­ty of Trump’s crony in charge of the Post Office, the con­flict-of-inter­est-rid­den Louis DeJoy, to cut ser­vices in the name of account­ing sol­ven­cy. For his part, Trump has acknowl­edged open­ly that his refusal to pro­vide nec­es­sary sup­ple­men­tary funds to ensure effec­tive deliv­ery of the mail is found­ed on his deter­mi­na­tion to frus­trate the vote-by-mail system.

In the wake of the uproar over mail sab­o­tage, pub­lic pres­sure has appar­ent­ly forced DeJoy to defer some ser­vice cuts until after the elec­tion. To make sure this pledge is hon­ored, we will have to keep a clear eye on the actu­al progress, on the ground, in prepar­ing for the elec­tion. For­tu­nate­ly, union­ized postal work­ers will be essen­tial allies in mon­i­tor­ing the integri­ty of Postal Ser­vice man­age­ment. Pend­ing the suc­cess­ful removal of the cur­rent admin­is­tra­tion, a forth­right reju­ve­na­tion of the U.S. Postal Ser­vice can com­mence, in which we final­ly cast off the unfound­ed account­ing imper­a­tives that crip­ple its operations.

Ahead of Key House Vote, Polling Shows Bipartisan Majority of Americans Want More Funding for USPS



"We must do everything we can to ensure that the post office is fully funded. It's good policy and strongly supported by the public."


by
Jessica Corbett, staff writer




https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/08/19/ahead-key-house-vote-polling-shows-bipartisan-majority-americans-want-more-funding




A new pair of polls show that a bipartisan majority of Americans are concerned about the U.S. Postal Service and want more money directed to the agency—results released just days before the Democrat-held U.S. House is set to vote on legislation to provide the USPS with $25 billion in emergency funding and restore mail operations disrupted by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy's recent controversial policy changes.

Reuters/Ipsos polling results published Wednesday show that 78% of Americans surveyed, including 92% of Democrats and 67% of Republicans, agree "a well-functioning United States Postal Service is important to having a smooth and successful election during the coronavirus pandemic."

The poll, conducted August 14-18, also found that almost three-quarters of respondents, including 88% of Democrats and 60% of Republicans, agree "funding for the United States Postal Service should be increased to ensure Americans' mail gets delivered in a timely fashion."


The Reuters/Ipsos survey came a day after the release of Data for Progress polling that found "by substantial margins, nearly all segments of voters prefer the USPS be funded as an essential service like the military, rather requiring it to cover its own costs like a business."

Overall, 58% of people polled by Data for Progress, a progressive think tank, expressed support for treating the USPS as an essential service. Majorities of both Democratic voters (75%) and Independent or third-party voters (52%) agreed with this approach, compared with only 43% of Republican voters.

Data for Progress also asked voters whether they have sent mail via the Postal Service in the past two weeks; think mail service has gotten worse in the past month; are concerned about Trump appointing a top donor to run the agency; are worried about reported slow-downs in USPS service; and support $25 billion in emergency funding for the agency to update and digitize its infrastructure as part of a coronavirus relief bill.


A majority of voters across the political spectrum (61%) are somewhat or very concerned about Trump's appointment of DeJoy just months before the November election that will heavily rely on mail-in voting because of the ongoing pandemic. While 86% of Democrats expressed some degree of concern, that sentiment was shared by only 39% of Republicans.




Similarly, 60% of all voters are somewhat or very concerned about reported slow-downs of mail service. There was also a partisan divide with this question, with 78% of Democrats worried about service delays compared with just 46% of Republicans.

In terms of the $25 billion in funding, 63% of all voters said they somewhat or strongly support it, including 79% of Democrats and 52% of Republicans.

"Quick recap: EVERYONE LOVES THE USPS!" the American Postal Workers Union tweeted Tuesday in response to the Data for Progress polling results.


Although public pressure led DeJoy, a GOP donor appointed by President Donald Trump, to announce Tuesday that he would "suspend" changes to Postal Service operations until after the November election, postal workers and union leaders are still warning that the damage inflicted by the removal of mail sorting machines and other policies could be difficult to reverse.

"Earlier today, I spoke with Postmaster General DeJoy regarding his alleged pause in operational changes," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) tweeted Wednesday afternoon. "During our conversation, he admitted he has no intention of replacing the sorting machines, blue mailboxes, and other infrastructure that have been removed."

In the midst of widespread outrage and alarm that DeJoy's changes could disenfranchise voters, and allegations that the postmaster general and the president are attempting to "sabotage" the election, Pelosi announced Sunday that she was calling House members back from recess to Washington, D.C. early to vote this coming Saturday on related legislation.

The Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions (HEROES) Act that House Democrats passed in May would have allocated $25 billion to the USPS, a figure that Pelosi has said is recommended by the service's board of governors. However, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has refused to allow a vote on that legislation.

The bill that the House plans to vote on Saturday was unveiled Wednesday. It is an updated version of Rep. Carolyn Maloney's (D-N.Y.) Delivering for America Act. In addition to the funding and requirements to restore mail service to "pre-DeJoy levels," the measure would also mandate that all ballots and other election-related mail be treated as first class.




'Very Bad News for Trump' as Federal Judge Rejects His Claim That Tax Records Subpoena Amounts to 'Harassment'






"The grand jury is getting its hands on those tax returns."


by
Julia Conley, staff writer

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/08/20/very-bad-news-trump-federal-judge-rejects-his-claim-tax-records-subpoena-amounts




The district attorney of Manhattan can obtain President Donald Trump's tax records, according to a federal judge who ruled Thursday against the president's claims that a subpoena for the documents was issued "in bad faith."

U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero blocked (pdf) Trump's latest attempt to keep his tax records hidden as Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance investigates payments that were made to two women by the president's former lawyer during the 2016 election and whether the payments amount to a campaign finance violation.

"This is very bad news for Trump," tweeted Slate staff writer Mark Joseph Stern.


Trump's legal team argued that Vance's attempt to uncover the records amounts to "harassment," even after the U.S. Supreme Court handed down a major ruling last month stating that Trump's presidency does not make him immune to criminal investigations or state court rulings.

"Despite his best efforts to stymie this investigation into his criminal wrongdoing, this decision affirms that Donald Trump is not above the law," said Ryan Thomas, spokesperson for Stand Up America. "However, it's incredibly telling that Trump doesn't want congressional and criminal investigators to see what he's hiding in his tax returns."

Following Marrero's ruling, Trump's lawyers requested a delay in enforcing Vance's subpoena to allow for an appeal. Vance's office agreed to a one-week delay.

After the Supreme Court decision last month, a grand jury issued a subpoena to Mazars USA, the president's accounting firm. In addition to seeking eight years of business and personal tax records pertaining to payments to the two women, for which Trump reimbursed his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, Vance is also reportedly probing possible bank and insurance fraud by the Trump Organization.




Following the indictments and convictions of a number of the president's close associates—including former adviser Steve Bannon on Thursday—Marrero's ruling will bring investigators one step closer to proving that "Trumpism is just another word for criminality and corruption," said Thomas.

Law professor Jennifer Taub tweeted that considering Bannon's indictment and the ruling were announced within hours of each other, "I hereby declare August 20 to be Nobody is Above the Law Day."



Following the ruling in Manhattan, the president complained to the press about what he called "a continuation of the witch hunt, the greatest witch hunt in history," and said that "the Supreme Court shouldn't have allowed this to happen."

The ruling, wrote Stern, means that regardless of Trump's protestations, "the grand jury is getting its hands on those tax returns."

"Today's decision was inevitable—the Supreme Court left Trump no real wiggle room to challenge this subpoena," he wrote.

'Complete Bombshell': Former Top USPS Official Reveals 'Disturbing' New Details of DeJoy Selection and Mnuchin Sabotage of Mail Service



According to David Williams, Mnuchin required members of the USPS Board of Governors to "come to his office to kiss the ring."

by
Jake Johnson, staff writer

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/08/21/complete-bombshell-former-top-usps-official-reveals-disturbing-new-details-dejoy




In his first public remarks since resigning from the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors in protest at the end of April, David Williams on Thursday offered a number of alarming new details surrounding the selection of Trump megadonor Louis DeJoy as postmaster general and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin's efforts to exert influence over mail operations and finances.

Williams, the former vice chairman of the USPS Board of Governors with decades of federal government experience, testified to the Congressional Progressive Caucus that what he witnessed in his final months at the Postal Service was unprecedented, detailing how Mnuchin required members of the supposedly independent board to "come to his office to kiss the ring and receive his blessing before confirmation" and made "illegal" demands of officials.


Williams told lawmakers that the removal of USPS mailboxes in several states was specifically advocated by Mnuchin, a former Goldman Sachs executive who was reportedly involved in the recruitment of DeJoy for the postmaster general position."The Secretary has called over board members to provide instructions and requests and express his displeasure, which is really striking. I'm not sure I've run into that before, where one department is trying to run another department," said Williams, who previously served as USPS inspector general. "Normally you would simply reject the effort and report it to Congress."

"The blue boxes were maybe the most interesting of all," said Williams, a Democrat who was appointed to the Board of Governors by President Donald Trump. "Those were not part of ongoing plans. To my knowledge, as a matter of fact... Secretary Mnuchin wanted that done. His study of the Postal Service asked that it be done."

In response to Williams' account of Mnuchin's interference at the independent agency, Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) said the treasury secretary should be called—and, if necessary, subpoenaed—to testify before Congress.

"This hearing is a complete bombshell," tweeted David Dayen, executive editor of The American Prospect, which first reported that Williams resigned from the Board of Governors in protest.






Williams also offered an inside look at the process that led to the Board of Governors' selection and May appointment of DeJoy, a former logistics executive with zero experience working for the Postal Service.

Asked whether the board interviewed other qualified candidates for the postmaster general role, Williams answered in the affirmative and characterized DeJoy as uniquely unfit for the job, recounting that he had to be coached through his interviews. Williams said DeJoy's appointment was pushed by John Barger, a board member and Republican donor who—according to Williams—helped DeJoy "finish a number of sentences where he got stuck" and "explained to the board what Mr. DeJoy meant during the presentation."

Rep. Andy Levin (D-Mich.) called Williams' description of the selection process "very, very disturbing." Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said Williams' testimony was "stunning."


Williams' revelations came just hours before DeJoy is set to appear before the Republican-controlled Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, where he is expected to face questions about his sweeping policy changes that caused massive mail backlogs across the nation.

A day after DeJoy vowed to suspend the operational changes until after the November election, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a statement that the postmaster general "frankly admitted" to her that he has "no intention of replacing the sorting machines, blue mailboxes, and other key mail infrastructure that have been removed and that plans for adequate overtime, which is critical for the timely delivery of mail, are not in the works."

In a letter to the USPS Board of Governors on Wednesday, 90 House Democrats demanded the immediate removal of DeJoy for using his brief tenure as postmaster general "to sabotage the United States Postal Service."

"Despite recent claims by Mr. DeJoy that implementation of certain changes may be delayed," the lawmakers wrote, "he has already done considerable damage to the institution and we believe his conflicts of interest are insurmountable."







REVEALED: US Operating In 22 African Nations

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7eJhQvgOWw


The US Shadow Wars in Africa

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9e0_UCAXwc


Danny Sjursen: War, War, and More War

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyxVLn02hXw