Trump, the Slater/Lusk conspiracy, Bryce Edwards’ revolution and how Gareth Morgan gets to 5%

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George Monbiot explains how neoliberalism has robbed us

Thatcherism and Reaganism were not ideologies in their own right: they were just two faces of neoliberalism. Their massive tax cuts for the rich, crushing of trade unions, reduction in public housing, deregulation, privatisation, outsourcing and competition in public services were all proposed by Hayek and his disciples. But the real triumph of this network was not its capture of the right, but its colonisation of parties that once stood for everything Hayek detested.

Bill Clinton and Tony Blair did not possess a narrative of their own. Rather than develop a new political story, they thought it was sufficient to triangulate. In other words, they extracted a few elements of what their parties had once believed, mixed them with elements of what their opponents believed, and developed from this unlikely combination a “third way”.

It was inevitable that the blazing, insurrectionary confidence of neoliberalism would exert a stronger gravitational pull than the dying star of social democracy. Hayek’s triumph could be witnessed everywhere from Blair’s expansion of the private finance initiative to Clinton’s repeal of the Glass-Steagal Act, which had regulated the financial sector. For all his grace and touch, Barack Obama, who didn’t possess a narrative either (except “hope”), was slowly reeled in by those who owned the means of persuasion.

As I warned in April, the result is first disempowerment then disenfranchisement. If the dominant ideology stops governments from changing social outcomes, they can no longer respond to the needs of the electorate. Politics becomes irrelevant to people’s lives; debate is reduced to the jabber of a remote elite. The disenfranchised turn instead to a virulent anti-politics in which facts and arguments are replaced by slogans, symbols and sensation. The man who sank Hillary Clinton’s bid for the presidency was not Donald Trump. It was her husband.

The paradoxical result is that the backlash against neoliberalism’s crushing of political choice has elevated just the kind of man that Hayek worshipped. Trump, who has no coherent politics, is not a classic neoliberal. But he is the perfect representation of Hayek’s “independent”; the beneficiary of inherited wealth, unconstrained by common morality, whose gross predilections strike a new path that others may follow. The neoliberal thinktankers are now swarming round this hollow man, this empty vessel waiting to be filled by those who know what they want. The likely result is the demolition of our remaining decencies, beginning with the agreement to limit global warming.

Those who tell the stories run the world. Politics has failed through a lack of competing narratives. The key task now is to tell a new story of what it is to be a human in the 21st century. It must be as appealing to some who have voted for Trump and Ukip as it is to the supporters of Clinton, Bernie Sanders or Jeremy Corbyn.

Trump manipulated those who globalisation has left behind.

As Michael Moore pointed out months ago, the Democrats didn’t explain how they would help the 30million white uneducated male voters get ahead.

Those are the voters who have seen their factories closed down and jobs shipped off to Mexico. They are the voters competing with illegal migrant labour. They are the voters who have to enrol in the Army and have bits of their body blown off. They are the voters who come back to veteran services that are underfunded.

Trump articulated their rage and he has reaped an unthinkable victory. If the progressive left can’t look past their own cosmopolitan elitism and understand why poor white people would reject neoliberalism, then we’ve failed as a movement.

The pressure to support Clinton because she was a woman and the myth her gender would be good enough for progressives was a false narrative…

One conclusion we can draw from recent commentary is that mainstream feminist politics has some soul-searching to do. Many feminist writers shifted their politics to the right by supporting Clinton. Rather than discussing the failings of a structure that rules for the wealthy and political elite, they argued that integrating a woman into this structure represented feminist progress. Many effectively sided with power over people.

…and the flawed social media forces within mainstream media that didn’t see this are now clear…

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

The forces that drove this election’s media failure are likely to get worse. Segregated social universes, an industry moving from red states to the coasts, and mass media’s revenue decline: The disconnect between two realities shows no sign of abating.

…journalists who spend all day chatting with each other on Twitter & congregating in elite social circles are to blame for our collective ignorance.

The one word that almost every political pundit in America has not uttered as they scramble to explain their ignorance is ‘class’.

Were there racists and sexists voting for Trump, of course there were, but Trump didn’t win because of them, he won because white working people who have been left behind by globalisation voted for him. Attacking them as racist and sexist when 54% of white women voted for Trump, when many of these voters voted for Obama twice and when 50% of union families voted for Trump is deeply counter productive.

The lessons from Trumpism and how to defeat it by offering a genuine counter to neoliberalism seem utterly lost on the Left as they go into collective shock and ‘hug boxing‘.

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Have I got a scam for you

 

Interestingly enough, this attempt to activate the angry white vote in NZ was something that has already been attempted. Cameron Slater and Simon Lusk were caught trying to do this in 2012…

National Party had high-level concerns over member’s influence

Confidential minutes of a National board meeting in March reveal high-level concerns over the influence of party member Simon Lusk in the party.

But Prime Minister John Key, who was absent from the board meeting, suggested he did not share that view: “I don’t have any great concern.”

Mr Lusk, who is based in the Hawkes Bay, has been a campaign strategist and adviser to MPs at various times and runs his own private candidates college that is not sanctioned by the party.

In an embarrassing leak, the March minutes have been obtained by Labour MP Trevor Mallard, who in the past has accused Mr Lusk of having orchestrated the Act leadership coup against Rodney Hide.

The minutes reveal that senior whip Michael Woodhouse reported to the board he had spoken to MPs with “an involvement” with Mr Lusk.

“He [Mr Woodhouse] has let them know that it is not appropriate for any MPs to engage with any alternative candidates’ school that is not sanctioned by the party,” the minutes said.

“He said this has been understood by all.”

It also said Mr Woodhouse had had a”disturbing discussion” with Mr Lusk and that Mr Woodhouse believed that it highlighted Mr Lusk’s motivations and “a very negative agenda for the party”.

…the idea was to wipe out weak National MPs and replace them with hard right ones by activating the angry white vote in NZ.

Lusk and Slater’s problem was in the activating of the angry white vote, Bryce Edwards has been writing up a storm with his thoughts on anti-establishment forces that could become politically revolutionary in NZ, but the fundamental problem for Bryce and Lusk/Slater is the one ingredient Trump and Brexit had – fury.

In NZ, who has neoliberalism hurt the most?

Gen Xers, precariat workers and beneficiaries.

Gen Xers were robbed first by neoliberalism, the precariat are the manifestation of neoliberalism and beneficiaries are permanently trapped by it.

So how does that translate into fury and political revolution?

I would argue very easily and that Gareth Morgan could be the unlikely contender to not only generate that fury, but reap from it politically.

One of the most interesting pieces of research brought up by those studying the precariat is that they don’t see the hegemonic structures of power in a society. They don’t look at their shit work conditions and connect it to John Key, they only look directly above them and see their arsehole boss. I would argue that beneficiaries are exactly the same, it’s not John Key they curse, it’s the WINZ Officer who makes their life hell, it’s the CYFs worker who takes their kids, it’s Housing NZ who kick them out, it’s the Ministry of Social Development who put them up in a motel and then hand them a $50 000 bill.

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Over 1000 beneficiaries turned up to the Auckland Action Against Poverty beneficiary clinic set up outside WINZ earlier this year. That’s a 1000 people so upset with the current system they begged advocates to help them.

It’s the neoliberal welfare state stupid.

Imagine if Morgan launched a damning attack on the Welfare State, held up the horror that is CYFs, held up the abomination that is Housing NZ, held up the appealing manner people are treated by WINZ and he did it with intemperate and inflammatory language.

How would beneficiaries respond?

If Morgan attacked the State services that have been degraded by neoliberalism while promoting a Universal Basic Income, how many beneficiaries, members of the precariat and Gen Xers who live from tiny contract to tiny contract would suddenly sit up and listen?

Labour can’t criticise the deplorable way people are treated by the Public Service because they need the Unions on board. National won’t criticise them because they want the Public Services to be awful to stop people using them. But Gareth Morgan could.

At first I thought Morgan’s appeal would just be urban, educated male  voters who vote National out of default because they are made to feel guilty for having a penis by Labour and Green activists, but if Morgan promoted a UBI off the back of intense criticism of those public services that make those using them feel sub-human, imagine the rush to support Morgan.

  • Criticise CYFs for failing children and their families.
  • Criticise the Child Support system that sees so many Fathers in debt that they will never pay.
  • Criticise ACC and their corrupt ways of not paying people who are hurt.
  • Criticise Housing NZ for kicking people out into the street.
  • Criticise WINZ for the way they dehumanise beneficiaries.
  • Criticise Ministry of Social Development for their inane and counterproductive policies.

Morgan has been attacked for having a UBI that is too low, but for Gen Xers and Precariat workers who get nothing from the current neoliberal welfare state, that’s not an issue and if you talk to many beneficiaries, not having to deal with the social services and the constant threat of having their benefits taken from them would be worth a lower rate.

There is a deep anger from those who have been forced to use a neoliberal welfare state and those who earn a pittance too much to even be eligible for them.

Those are the ones who have been left behind by neoliberalism and it is there that Gareth Morgan would have his best chance of sparking a political revolution.

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36 COMMENTS

  1. I agree with most of what you are saying but think it is too simplistic. For a start to say that people vote for Trump because they have been left behind by neoliberalism is not necessarily true.

    I think there are people who actually are doing ok under neoliberalism but still are rejecting it, because they are concerned by the erosion of civil liberties under (left and right parties) and the lack of fairness being taken out of the justice system. Those people might not vote at all. They may have voted Bernie Sanders but they won’t vote Clinton or Trump. Or they might be so angry they vote Trump in protest.

    The erosion of civil liberties is showing itself in mass surveillance, lack of transparency in government and corporations, free trade agreements that clearly don’t make any sense but are pushed by both parties (i.e. ISDS that allows corporations to sue governments but not governments to sue corporations – really who the fuck would sign that in good faith?), nonsensical and complicated rules such as the EU hedgerows or VAT on butter vs chocolate.

    The idea that Obama ordering the highest assassination killings by drones without a legal trial to the victims getting the peace prize for many is a step too far into the twilight zone, the renditions, the torture, as is the constant black police killings in the USA that are rarely leading to any charges against the killer.

    So my view is that there are many people who used to vote left, not left behind by neoliberalism in the financial sense, but are not prepared to vote for the left wing parties in their current form any more due to their schizophrenic policy.

    For example LabourTony Blair entering the Iraq War and essentially ramming it through. The UK now has one of the worst surveillance laws in the world for spying on citizens. At the same time politicians are saying they are so frightened they need this massive surveillance regime they also want to open immigration, foreign investment and so forth. For many the strategy makes zero sense. Spy on citizens and then give massive investment to Chinese or anyone else to build nuclear power stations for example in the UK? Of course many people’s pockets are being lined in these non sensical decisions.

    The global .1% are taking over with the politicians at the wheel driving the changes. It is not about ethnicity, gender or nationality anymore.

    Those in the ‘club’ who meet at Davos or what the Fuck they call it, have joined forces to enrich themselves anyway they can while screwing over their countries. In their eyes I’m sure they think they are doing the world a favour under their benevolent (for most) stewardship. But if anyone comes up against them, then they will face a dirty war and not succeed (Bernie Sanders, Corbyn even Trump) so in a sense democracy is dying.

    That is why both liberals and Nationalistic people are angry. Citizens don’t wants to go back to Imperialism and being controlled by a bunch of dangerous, deluded out of touch nobs. The empire failed because countries and citizens want autonomy.

    We are getting the opposite.

    Many are worrying about Trump being a fascist – I would say we already have closet Fascism under the current system, a form of radical authoritarian globalism influenced by international syndicalism. It’s just in plain sight, with renditions, torture, surveillance, political attacks, one world MSM, integrated trade that fails most citizens etc etc

    Yes many do not notice while watching TRHA, but more voters are noticing and voting to disrupt the march of international fascism.

  2. P. S I’m not sure Gareth would get to 5% but I do think Labour could try to recruit him.

    And Labour should be saying if elected they would have a referendum on a UBI.

    They need a big ticket policy explainable in one sentence that will appeal to many and represent a change of direction.

  3. Interesting, Martyn.

    I would liken Cameron Slator with Steve Bannon from Breibart News. Two angry, white, reactionary males with inflated egos, wayward moral compasses, and outrageous sense of entitlement.

    Could Morgan be our “Trump”? Unlikely. The NZ psyche doesn’t take well to noisy, hairy chest-thumping demagogues. Even Peters in his hey-day managed only 16 or 17% of the MMP vote.

    Perhaps that is our saving grace; MMP. It was intended to dilute the power of politicians and thus far has done a fairly good job. Even Key, the darling of propertied middle classes managed only 47%, and their puppet, Act, are on terminal life support.

    • Almost certainly. We must keep repeating, Trump is an imbecile and only won because racism, and Labour’s current parliamentary caucus is the ideal vehicle to channel an anti-establishment zeitgeist.

      • “We must keep repeating, Trump is an imbecile and only won because racism”

        Keep repeating untruths. Trump is clearly not an imbecile, and there is no evidence that his win was because of racism.

        Your line of reasoning is precisely why Trump won, and people like him will continue to win until you get it.

            • Well that’s the ultimate test. My view is that all in all, the Clintons had to be stopped, at any cost. That accomplished, it remains to be seen whether Trump is going to produce yet another sleazy republican administration or something different.

              At the end of the day, republicans at their worst are the guys who managed to tip the biggest economy in the world down the drain and into the sands of Afghanistan and Iraq while shattering the myth of American conventional military supremacy. Their nukes may still be feared, but not so much their troops.

              If Trump turns out not to be an enabler of classic republican incompetence, then things could indeed get interesting. If the factories start coming home, then taken alongside Brexit and the increased fracturing of the EU, we could see a reindustrialisation and the return of something reminiscent of the post-WW2 consensus in the west. There would be a certain poetry in having the left’s ‘told you so’ moment on the outsourcing of industry being delivered from the right.

              • Cemetery Jones;

                Agreed. Brilliant.

                Trump is to set up an investigation into the
                vaccine autism link.

                His tax plans include NO TAX PAID under $40,000.

                Dismantle ObamaCare and encourage competition.

                A future investigation into use of glysophate
                (Roundup) would not surprise.

                No TPPA

                More. Click site name for Home.
                https://www.donaldjtrump.com/policies/

                Trump will not let us down. Promise.

                Cheers.

  4. Welcome back Martyn. Now you are on fire again. I thought we had lost you with the way you fawned over Hillary !
    I think you might be hoping for more than Gareth will deliver though.

  5. Yeah. Great Post @ Martyn Bradbury.

    I just wish I hadn’t been dipped in scepticism then pan fried in hatred for all and any who said/say they are for the common person.
    They lie their way into your bed, fuck you over, then leave you to it without the kissing. That’s the way it’s been for more than thirty years.
    Gareth Morgan has an up hill struggle on his hands if he wishes to convince me otherwise.

    Source Wikipedia

    Helen Clark stood down as leader of the Labour Party and was succeeded by

    Phil Goff (2008–2011),

    Phil Goff ! Yay! Oh, wait…? Awwwww…
    then
    David Shearer (2011–2013)

    David Shearer ! Yay ! Oh wait ….? Awwwww…
    then
    David Cunliffe (2013–2014)

    David Cunliffe ! Yay ! Oh wait….? Awwwww…
    then
    Andrew Little (2014–present).

    Andrew Little ! Yay ! Oh, wait…? Awwwww…

    Anyone else see a pattern here?

    There’s a vast and raging human war machine in the counrty, towns and cities just waiting to be ignited and that worries Labour just as much as National and the thought of that must cause them to soil their pricy little panties of a dark and quiet evening.

  6. Total pipe dream, Bomber. Morgan is a non-event at best, and will gift National a fourth term at worst. Is he campaigning in Mandarin? Uncle Winnie for first Maori PM!

    • Castro;

      “Uncle Winnie for first Maori PM!”

      AGREED.!! The logical conclusion.

      The lesson to be learned here (endorsed by pundits globally) is that

      ALT/SOCIAL MEDIA TRUMPED MSM !! They are now at their weakest.

      Winnie needs to carefully prepare powerful one liners and short extracts that
      will both resonate with the public and bring/exspose the MSM et al to it’s knees.
      ie Our own ‘home truths’ and ‘narrative’ that our own people of influence/politicians never talk about but everyone is thinking.
      Stuff that has the potential to go viral on Facebook,twitter and other platforms.

      He needs to prepare the strength and fortitude necessary to withstand the assault and onslaught from MSM,other Parties/politicians and Globalist Entities that is probably being prepared and planned ‘as we speak.’

      Maybe he needs to engage/employ his very own Steve Bannon.

      Cheers.

      Let us not forget his Scot/Celt pedigree that had so much influence on
      America’s Republic Constitution.

  7. But , but , but … Ronnie and Maggie were right , really , honest ,.. they were !!! They were !!!

    Even the NZ Herald said so this morning. And the NZ Herald is the most honest, enlightened source of true journalism in this country today. And one of the people in an interview said this :

    { ‘ ManufacturingNZ and ExportNZ executive director Catherine Beard said the best-case scenario for New Zealand exporters would be that Trump’s anti-trade views mellowed and the pro-trade factions of the Republican Party prevailed.

    “The markets help keep governments honest and I’m sure there will be a lot of policy advice given to the incoming president to take sensible approaches to things, so let’s hope that common sense prevails,” Beard said.’ }

    See ? see?

    And the TTPA is good for us and Donald Trump is bad , bad , bad.

  8. I agree with this post, but it’s taken a long time before you’re finally starting to “get it” (i.e. that Trumpism can exist in a progressive Western country). After all, you were one of the many bloggers and MSM saying Trump voters were little more than knuckle dragging rednecks, xenophobes and misogynists on this very site (on numerous occasions). Voter demographics simply don’t support that (well they were never going to – since ultimately this IS still the same America that voted in Obama TWICE), something you are now finally acknowledging.

  9. Also, we need to talk seriously about Monbiot; he’s a pussy, and has zero chance at winning anything. He’s a green globalist, which means that for all his fancy talk, he’ll never really understand Brexit or Amexit because they are fundamental rejections of globalism. To understand them is to understand that he’s pissing in the wind – and he can’t do that.

    Take this for example:

    “As I warned in April, the result is first disempowerment then disenfranchisement. If the dominant ideology stops governments from changing social outcomes, they can no longer respond to the needs of the electorate.”

    I remember this article; he was talking about neoliberalism, but voters whose actions he couldn’t fathom were thinking the exact same thing about the European Union, which he supported. He won’t treat green globalism or the EU with the same honesty he will view ‘neoliberalism’ in. But the EU and green globalism are neoliberal structures.

    I’m amused at the lack of agency he ascribes to Trump as an ’empty vessel’ waiting to be ‘filled’ by neoliberal think tankers. The guy who picked his own move well before Monbiot figured it out is the empty vessel and Monbiot the genius who is calling it? Yeah, no.

    “Those who tell the stories run the world. Politics has failed through a lack of competing narratives. The key task now is to tell a new story of what it is to be a human in the 21st century. It must be as appealing to some who have voted for Trump and Ukip as it is to the supporters of Clinton, Bernie Sanders or Jeremy Corbyn.”

    But this is the problem, Monbiot; the narrative will not be a globalist narrative, which means you won’t be the one getting to write it. And that’s gotta bug the hell out of you.

  10. Sometimes typos are quite funny.

    “the appealing manner people are treated by WINZ”

    yeah, right. Appalling, surely.

  11. Trump didn’t win Clinton lost.
    The Republican vote was almost the same as at the previous two elections, the difference was a big drop in Democrat votes – looks like a huge number couldn’t hold their nose and vote for Hillary so they just stayed home, also giving the House and the Senate to the Republicans.
    There was no big swing to Trump – there was one away from the Democrats, well Hillary in particular.
    So let’s be careful when trying to draw local parallels.

  12. I would vote for Gareth Morgan if he did that. Been waiting for Labour to show some courage but that’s never going to happen. And I am a woman, Māori, 61 and have 4 tertiary qualifications including a law degree. So it sort of defeats your point that only white uneducated males would vote for Trump. A range of people voted for Trump but your MSM news source focuses on these people, of which there were no doubt many voters – but definitely not solely. http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2016/08/dr-martin-luther-kings-niece-endorses-donald-trump-believe-many-things-hes-saying/

    • Good on you Winifred. And you would be the typical wasted vote. You are wasting your time waiting for whatever it is you want Labour to do if they don’t know it. Wouldn’t it be useful for you to join the Labour Party and put yourself forward as a candidate or just become active. There was an opportunity for anyone to put their names forward for the policy committee after the last election. Where were you. What’s the point in having 4 Tertiary qualifications if you are just going to use it writing comments on TDB. It was obvious that it wasn’t just the white middle class males who voted for Trump. There is a class of Americans who are the Average American. Their daughters train as chearleaders. They wouldn’t be voting for The Hilary’s of this world. They fill the football, baseball and basketball stadiums every weekend. They drive like lunatics on I 80 on Sunday mornings to get to the game in the Bay Area. There are 300 million of them. They are terrified of socialized medicine. They watch unmitigated crap on TV. They cue up at In-Out Burger, God knows why. They go to Disney world for their annual holiday. They own pit bulls and hand guns to protect themselves. And they shop at Walmart. They voted for Trump because he represents Average America. They are and were conned.

  13. No mention of the importance of religion to the US election result. As much as anything, Trumps victory was pushback by Christians against a secular society and abortion in particular. I personally know about seven Trump supporters in my social circle. One of these sees him as fighting the establishment, one didn’t like Clinton because of conspiracy theories, and the other five are all Christians.

  14. What is the basis for imagining that Morgan would do ANY of these things?? I’ve not heard him say anything that would irretrievably ruffle the feathers of your average predatory Capitalist.

  15. To find a spokesperson for the dis-empowered you need someone who speaks their language and who can appeal to a wide enough section of the rest of the population as well. It is possible that Morgan can peel off enough of the bored but excitable population to hand marginal victory to the Left, maybe, but not to foment sweeping political revolution. The people you hope to energize are simply not a majority. The end.

    No, if it were up to me, I would plan to flip Richie. What about a honey trap with Jacinda?…KIDDING…KIDDING…Grant…

    Seriously, there is already a joined-up narrative available, not simply a return to the social politics of the fifties, but also recognizing the needs of the environment and the individual along with the opportunities afforded by collectivism and State intervention, but what is likely to be needed for this kind of policy to prevail, is the right kind if messenger. I’m not sure that person has come to the surface yet. In the meanwhile let’s live in the real world, show a little discipline and support those who are at least trying to promote some sort of progressive agenda. We may not have everything, so let’s work with what we do have.

    Next year’s election is there to be won. So let’s win it.

  16. Attack politics do not serve the left. Their most important effect is not to win votes for the right, but to make the whole of politics look like scary mud wrestling, and intimidate people out of being actively involved, which allows the right to win even with beatable vote counts around 30%, as both Key and Trump did. What we need is a vision of our potential future that has both inspiring and practical aspects.

  17. His only voter he’ll attract will be the Blue/Green Nick Smith types …not from Labour or from the Greens. It’ll be the type of people that consider themselve hip neolibertarian-capitilists-with a touch of a conscience, to make a buck out of the brand.

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