He's run out of other cards.
Robert
Reich for Inequality.org
He can’t talk about the economy, because prices continue to
rise faster than wages, which means most Americans are getting poorer. He can’t
talk about foreign policy, because his war in Iran has been a debacle,
his tariffs are
an utter failure, and he obviously hasn’t settled the war in Ukraine on “Day 1.” He
can’t talk about immigration,
because his raids and mass deportations have
become so unpopular.
So, facing the midterm elections, what’s left?
He’s resorting to the oldest of right-wing tropes —
accusing Democrats (especially a rising generation of new, young, vigorous
Democratic politicians) of being commies.
He kicked off America’s 250th anniversary celebrations on
Friday with a speech at Mount Rushmore extolling American culture and warning
of a resurgence of the “communist menace.” With the granite faces of four of
his predecessors behind him, Trump took aim at what he called “radicals” and
“extremists.”
“There is now a resurgence of the communist menace in our
land, including from newcomers to our country who embrace ideas totally opposed
to our way of life and our great success. You can be a communist, or you can be
a patriot. You cannot be both.”
Oh, please.
But he hasn’t gotten anywhere because these initiatives are
supported by most Americans.
So now he’s throwing the commie label at the wall and seeing
if it sticks.
Communism was the scare word used by right-wingers after
World Wars I and II to crack the whip on the left. It provoked witch hunts and
ruined careers.
It made former Wisconsin Senator
Joe McCarthy a one-man bomb squad in the early 1950s, when he rid
iculed the
“pitiful squealing” of “those egg-sucking phony liberals” who “would hold
sacrosanct those Communists and queers,” and forced American citizens to “name
names.”
McCarthyism was a by-product of the Republican Party’s
postwar effort to eradicate the New Deal. The GOP had portrayed the
midterm election of 1946 as a “battle between Republicanism and communism,” and
the Republican National Committee chairman claimed that the federal bureaucracy
was filled with “pink puppets.”
Southern segregationist Democrats joined in the red-baiting. Mississippi senator Theodore Bilbo, a Klansman who filibustered to block anti-lynching legislation, described multiracial labor unions’ advocacy for civil rights as the work of “northern communists.”
Representative John Elliott Rankin, a racist and antisemitic Mississippi Democrat who helped establish the House Committee on Un-American Activities, called labor unions’ Southern organizing campaign “a communist plot,” fearing it would result in more Black people voting. “We’re asleep at the switch,” he warned. “They’re taking over this country; we’ve got to stop them if we want this country.”
The red-baiting was temporarily successful. In the 1946
midterms, Democrats lost control of both chambers of Congress. Wisconsin sent
Joe McCarthy to the Senate. California sent to the House a young Republican
lawyer who had already figured out how to use red-baiting as a political
tool: Richard
Nixon. Four years later it sent Nixon to the Senate.
It’s likely that Trump’s earliest political memories are of
Joe McCarthy’s red scare. Trump and I are the same age, and those are among my
earliest memories.
On June 9, 1954, I sat at my father’s side on our living
room couch watching the Army-McCarthy hearings. McCarthy had accused the U.S.
Army of having poor security at a top-secret facility, hinting at communist
subversion. He charged that one of the young attorneys on the staff of Joseph
Welch, who was representing the Army, was a communist. The charge could destroy
the young man’s career.
“Son-of-a-bitch!” my father shouted at McCarthy on
television. I hid my head.
As McCarthy continued his attack on the young attorney,
Welch broke in: “Until this moment, Senator, I think I never really gauged your
cruelty or your recklessness.”
I was only 8 years old, but I was spellbound.
McCarthy didn’t stop attacking the young attorney.
“Son-of-a-bitch!” my father shouted, even louder.
At this point, Welch demanded that McCarthy listen to him.
“Let us not assassinate this lad further, Senator,” he said. “You have done
enough. Have you no sense of decency?”
Almost overnight, McCarthy imploded. Welch had aroused the
decency of the American people. McCarthy’s national popularity evaporated.
Three years later, censured by his Senate colleagues, ostracized by his party,
and ignored by the press, McCarthy drank himself to death, a broken man at the
age of 48.
During those hearings, McCarthy’s chief counsel was Roy
Cohn, who had gained prominence as the Department of
Justice attorney who successfully prosecuted Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg for espionage, leading to their executions in 1953.
After McCarthy’s downfall, Cohn reinvented himself as a
power broker in New York who survived scandals, indictments, and accusations of
tax evasion, bribery, and theft — eventually to become Trump’s mentor.
So of course Trump would reach for the communist scare card
when he has no other cards left to play.
The problem for Trump is that the new stars of the Democratic Party whom
Trump wants to defile have nothing whatsoever to do with communism. They barely
have anything to do with socialism.
New York’s Zohran Mamdani, AOC,
Seattle’s Katie Wilson, Colorado’s Melat Kiros, and dozens of others —
including many who have won recent primaries — are popular because they’re
taking on corporate America, attacking political corruption by big
money, and dealing with the real problems of ordinary Americans.
Labels are becoming irrelevant, anyway. In an
Axios-Generation Lab poll of
young Americans, 67 percent say they have a positive or neutral association
with the word “socialism” compared with 40 percent who are positive or neutral
toward “capitalism.” A new national survey from the Cato Institute finds Zoomers
more supportive of socialism (53 percent) than capitalism (45
percent).
I can understand Gen Z’s growing disillusionment with
capitalism. They can’t afford a home of their own. They struggle to afford
health insurance. The job market is horrendous. They can’t afford to start a
family. In many ways, capitalism — or whatever you want to call our current
system — has failed them. And they’re the future of America.
So I doubt Trump’s resurgent red-baiting is going to
help Republicans in
the midterms.
To the extent Americans are thinking about the American
system as a whole, they seem more concerned about Trump’s self-dealing than
about socialism or communism. That same new Cato poll finds 56 percent of
Americans worried that the U.S. could stop being a free country within the next
50 years because of corruption and abuses of power at the highest reaches of
government.
Trump himself has no ideology, of course. He doesn’t give a
fig about capitalism, and he’s not worried about communism or socialism. He’s a
fanatical practitioner of narcissism, of the especially malignant variety.
Robert
Reich is professor emeritus of public policy at Berkeley and former US
secretary of labor. His latest book is the No. 1 New York Times best-seller,
"Coming Up Short."


