New political era:
compromise between the world working class and US bourgeoisie
Donald Trump’s
answers to the status quo
By Daniel Paquet dpaquet1871@gmail.com
Since the return to capitalism in Soviet Union, world stagnates
in a stalemate; we could say, rather in an apprehension of a World War III … to
overpass the situation (with the looming of economic warfare). There was no possible way out. With the election of a pragmatic billionaire
in USA, Mr. Donald Trump, there could have been a détente in the universal class struggle. First let us have a look to the economic
situation in North America, chiefly in financial terms.
“Despite the recent rise in long-term interest rates, monetary
policy in advanced economies remains highly accommodative, including the use of
unconventional policies, and has helped support elevated asset valuations
globally across most asset classes.
Since the June Financial System Review
(FSR), corporate spreads have edged down and stock markets have rallied in the
United States and Canada. The volume of corporate bond issuance in the United
States is at a historical high. Concern
about the capitalization of some European banks has also increased over the
past six months, however. This concern
is compounded by uncertainty around potential public sector’s support for these
banks, and the situation has weighed on their stock and bond prices.”[1]
Economy was in a mess, especially in USA. “Who deserves to go to prison more, the bank
executives who almost destroyed the global financial system in 2008, rigged
market and broke sanctions or the auto executives whose diesel cars were
stuffed with illegal software designed to falsify tailpipe emissions? (…) If
the White House under President Barack Obama had gone after reprobate bankers
with the same alacrity with which it’s going after reprobate auto executives,
maybe the anti-establishment tide that swept Donald Trump to election victory
might not have been so successful. (…) Why the United States is letting bankers
who behave badly go, but not the auto guys, is an open question – is it because
Volkswagen is a foreign company?
Whatever the case, the Obama White House and the Democrats in general
did themselves zero favours by going easy on the bank bosses. Bankers are unpopular, and immoral bankers
who walk free are especially unpopular – hated even. Their free passes no doubt help to stoke the
anti-establishment sentiment that propelled Mr. Trump to power.”[2]
“The hectoring of three global giants in the world’s
largest manufacturing industry by the most powerful politician sent shudders
through head offices from Japan to Detroit to Ontario. The threat of tearing up NAFTA or imposing
big tariffs on vehicle exports into the United States is a serious one as Mr.
Trump seeks to force companies selling in the U.S. market to keep jobs in the
country.”[3]
“But the NAFTA deal was not without controversy –
especially when maverick presidential candidate Ross Perot got some traction
with his campaign against it. ‘If you’re
paying $12, $13, $14 an hour for factory workers and you can move your factory
south of the border, pay a dollar an hour for labour … and you don’t care about
anything but making money, there will be a giant sucking sound going south,’ he
said in one presidential debate.”[4]
“(The industry is much interconnected and it’s much
related :) Mr. Trump’s hostility toward NAFTA and its threats to impose tariffs
of a much as 35 percent on vehicles made in Mexico (explains why).”[5]
“’I think we have one of the great cabinets ever put
together, ‘Mr. Trump said. We will have
it to history to judge. The one thing
they are most definitely not, however, is representative of the working-class
Americans who voted for Mr. Trump. (…) Negatives aside, they are successful and
experienced, and they are not stupid.
Mr. Trump – who has zero government experience – is supposed to rely on
their advice and their abilities in order to manage the vast American federal
bureaucracy. (…) The worry with Donald
Trump is that there is nothing left to learn (but) the expectation that
everything will work out just because ’Trump’ says it will.”[6]
There are two arguments here: since we cannot make Trump change his mind, let us put some pressure on his
cabinet; and rather unusual (and since it is convenient) let us call on the
working class to contest, as the cannon fodder, Trump decisions in his war
against the establishment. Of course, it
is political opportunism, since the bourgeoisie does not expect the workers to
make more gain under Trump’s administration; at least anything more than they
did with Barack Obama. We will take some
space to deal with the current figures related to the working class in USA.
“U.S. employment increased less than expected in
December, but a rebound in wages pointed to sustained labour market momentum
that sets up the economy for stronger growth and further interest rate
increases from the Federal Reserve this year. ‘Job creation and overall labour
market conditions remain solid. With the
potential for stronger fiscal stimulus in the form of infrastructure spending
and tax cuts, job creation appears likely to remain on a solid footing in
2017,’ said Jim Baird, chief investment officer for Plante Moran Financial
Advisors in Kalamazoo, Mich.”[7]
Organization becomes
a necessity for the worker, now faced by big capital. But is it possible to organize a motley mass
of people who are strangers to one another, even if they work in one
factory? (…) The joint work of hundreds and thousands of
workers in itself accustoms the workers to discuss their needs jointly, to take
joint action, and clearly shows them the identity of the position and interests
of the entire mass of workers. (…) The struggle of the workers against the employers
turns into a class struggle. All the employers are united by the one
interest of keeping the workers in a state of subordination and of paying them
the minimum wages possible. And the
employers see that the only way they can safeguard their interests is by joint
action on the part of the entire employing class, by acquiring influence over
the machinery of state. The workers are likewise bound together by a common
interest, that of preventing themselves being crushed by capital, of upholding
their right to life and to a humane existence.
And the workers likewise become convinced that they, too, need unity,
joint action by the entire class, the working class, and that to achieve this
they must secure influence over the machinery of state.”[8]
The US national bourgeoisie is uniting around Donald
Trump: world war would have been too
near with tandem Clinton-Obama and the Democrats altogether. US working-class has now a big
challenge. The new Party of Communists
USA has a trump nevertheless.
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[1] Bank of
Canada, Assessment of Vulnerabilities and Risks, Financial System
Review, Ottawa, December 2016, page 2
[2] Reguly,
Eric, Who got a free ride? Bankers, not car execs, The Globe and
Mail, Report on Business Weekend, Saturday, January 14, 2017, page B4
[3] Keenan,
Greg, Auto sector nervously awaits the Trump card, The Globe and
Mail, Report on Business, Toronto, Weekend, Saturday, January 7, 2017, page B6
[6] Editorial, L’état,
c’est Trump?, The Globe and Mail, Toronto, Saturday, January 14, 2017,
page F6
[7] Mutikani,
Lucia, U.S. job growth slows, but wages rebound strongly, The Globe
and Mail, Report on Business Weekend, Toronto, Saturday, January 7, 2017, page
B2
[8] Lenin,
V.,I., On the International Working-Class and Communist Movement, Foreign
Languages Publishing House, Moscow, pages 16-18
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