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Title: Trumpocolypse
Author: Anarcho-Syndicalist Review
Date: January 31, 2017
Language: en
Topics: Donald Trump, apocalypse, Anarcho-Syndicalist Review
Source: Retrieved on 28th January 2021 from https://syndicalist.us/2017/01/31/trumpocolypse-2/
Notes: From Anarcho-Syndicalist Review #69, Winter 2017

Anarcho-Syndicalist Review

Trumpocolypse

Despite losing the election, Donald Trump will be installed as U.S.

president on January 20. Just over 25 percent of eligible voters cast

ballots for Trump or Hillary Clinton, about 47 percent didn’t vote, and

the other 3 percent voted third party. (Millions more aren’t permitted

to vote.) Clinton – a right-wing politician with a long history of

war-mongering, mass incarceration, environmental devastation and

neoliberal economics – received some 2.7 million more votes than did

Trump. And exit polls and referendum results suggest that most voters

are far to the left of either party. Voters in several states raised the

minimum wage, legalized marijuana (not that this will stop the feds from

throwing potsmokers in jail), and rejected anti-labor measures.

Why, then, did Trump win the presidency (despite getting fewer votes)?

In large part, for the same reasons both houses of Congress are

dominated by Republicans despite Democratic candidates (as a whole)

receiving more votes. This is in large part an artifact of

gerrymandering, in individual districts and entrenched in an Electoral

College designed to ensure that popular revulsion could not force an end

to slavery. Also contributing was a barrage of voter suppression laws

that prevent millions from voting. In Wisconsin, for example, 10 times

as many voters were disenfranchised in the last few years as provided

Trump’s margin of victory.

But the main factor seems to have been widespread disgust. Voter

turn-out was down by 10 million since 2008, even though the number of

people eligible to vote is much higher. Trump received fewer votes than

did Mitt Romney four years ago (and also fewer than John McCain or John

Kerry), even though he ran slightly stronger (though still quite poorly)

among Black and Latino voters. But Trump did much better than Romney in

rural areas and in depressed mining and industrial regions.

While many pundits blamed white working class voters for Trump’s

victory, exit polls indicate that Clinton carried the votes of those

earning less than $50,000 a year, and Trump those earning more. But huge

numbers in both categories stayed home, unwilling to pull the level for

either of the millionaires on offer.

Since the election, we have seen waves of mass protests, calls for a

general strike on Inauguration Day (though no major union has endorsed

these), and nominations of right wing hacks and millionaires to serve in

the new Trump administration, including a climate change denier to head

the environmental protection agency, an anti-civil rights zealot to head

injustice, an anti-minimum wage fast food mogul to head labor, the man

responsible for killing coal miners at the Sago Mine to head commerce, a

charter school fanatic with no education experience to run education,

etc. Trump is sending a clear message that he intends an all-out assault

on the environment, on workers’ rights, on women and minorities, on our

very ability to survive as a species.

It is not enough to say – true though it is – that the majority have no

illusions that either political party serves their interests. The

question is what they are going to do about it – whether we can build a

movement inspired by a vision of the world that could be, and willing to

act to bring it into being. We asked several of our readers and

contributors to reflect on this challenge…