Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

Paul Krugman says democracy and Trump can’t coexist: ‘Either he or the republic will be gone soon’ – Raw Story

New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman believes there are only two ways Donald Trumps presidency can end: Either with his resignation, or the death of democracy.

In a tweet storm posted on Tuesday morning that analyzed the events of the past few days such asthe anti-immigration executive order that sparked chaos last weekend and the presidents continued assault on media outlets who dont give him positive coverage Krugman said that there was simply no way that a president with Trumps authoritarian tendencies can coexist with our constitutional republic.

In other words, writes Krugman, either Trump goes or our democracy does.

Given the rate at which things are coming to a head, President Trump the sort-of legitimate head of a republic wont last long, Krugman writes. Either he or the republic, in any meaningful sense, will be gone quite soon. I have a hard time seeing one year, let alone four.

What this means, Krugman says, is that absolutely no one should collaborate with Trump even if they happen to agree with him on a particular issue. The threat to democracy that Trump represents, according to Krugman, is too great to risk giving him legitimacy.

Anyone considering working for or with this White House Senators, officials, businessmen shouldnt, he concludes. Either youre going to go down with a disgraced president, or youre going to be complicit in the death of democracy. Just say no.

The whole tweet storm follows below.

Either he or the republic, in any meaningful sense, will be gone quite soon. I have a hard time seeing one year, let alone four 2/

Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) January 31, 2017

Either you're going to go down with a disgraced president, or you're going to be complicit in the death of democracy. Just say no 4/

Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) January 31, 2017

Excerpt from:
Paul Krugman says democracy and Trump can't coexist: 'Either he or the republic will be gone soon' - Raw Story

Former Ukraine finance minister: Russia wants to upend Western democracy – CNN

The Axe Files, featuring David Axelrod, is a podcast distributed by CNN and produced at the University of Chicago Institute of Politics. The author works for the podcast.

"The information attacks, the propaganda, the cyberattacks ... We've lived through all the things they tested first in Ukraine," Natalie Jaresko, the country's former finance minister told David Axelrod on The Axe Files podcast, a joint production of CNN and the University of Chicago's Institute of Politics.

"It's shocking that they would take the risk of doing that in the United States. And now it appears -- I've seen reports -- Germany, France and elsewhere. "

Jaresko, who was born and raised in the the suburbs of Chicago by Ukranian-American parents, says Russia's goal is to boost nationalist candidates who will turn away from global alliances.

"It surprised me only because I didn't expect that it could be possible in the United States," she said. "But this is about the Kremlin wanting to destroy the Transatlantic Partnership, wanting to destroy... the liberal post-World War II international order, which is based on democracy, human rights, territorial integrity, sovereignty of nations."

Jaresko, who served as Ukraine's finance minister from 2014 to 2016 and helped reform the country's economy, says she will take a wait-and-see attitude about the beneficiary of Russian meddling in the US election, President Donald Trump.

Trump has hinted at better relations with Moscow, including the lifting of economic sanctions imposed after Russia invaded Ukraine and effectively seized Crimea and portions of Eastern Ukraine.

Bur Jaresko warned against any thaw unless Russia withdraws from Ukraine and changes its behavior.

"The goal is to live in a world where we live by the values and the principles that we believe in," she said. "And so if Russia leaves Eastern Ukraine and returns Crimea, we're all for better relations. France and Germany are today allies, and they were terrible enemies at one time. That's all possible, but it's not possible at the cost of Ukrainian sovereignty."

Continued here:
Former Ukraine finance minister: Russia wants to upend Western democracy - CNN

What does democracy look like? – Patheos (blog)

Not this:

according to a couple recent articles that passed through my twitter feed recently.

Tablet published a piece by Lee Smith titled, The Arab-ization of American Politics, with a provocative subtitle: Why do so many Americans mistake what typically signals a failure of democracy for democracy itself?

The crux of Smiths argument is this: despite the protesters chant that this is what democracy looks like that we hear repeatedly at these marches,

American democracy is not about the size of crowds. Mass gatherings are not supposed to guide our democracy or protect our freedoms. Yes, the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly as well as freedom of speech, as it also guarantees, for instance, the right to bear arms. However, only a fool believes that democracy looks like collecting Nazi-era Lugers, or looks like a closet full of pornographic magazines. The actual mechanism of democracy is not people going to the street, but to the ballot box and voting for their chosen candidate.

The Founding Fathers did not need the example of the French Revolution birthed in blood and gore the same year the U.S. Constitution came into force in order to understand the dangers of people going to the streets to fight for their political ideas. The violence that frequently resultswhether ignited by the most radical protesters, or by the most radical protectors of orderwhen political power is counted in large numbers massed in public squares is a constant throughout human history. And thats exactly what the framers sought to save us from.

In fact, Smith says, mass crowds generally represent, e.g., in the Arab Spring, the failure of democracy Westerners took it for granted that the protesters against Mubarak in Tahir Square were pro-democracy because they equated protests with democracy, so they were unprepared for the Morsi government to embrace the Islamism of the Muslim Brotherhood; and subsequently, they were unprepared for the return of authoritarianism in al-Sisi because, after all, he came to power due to yet more protesters.

A second article, in City Journal, bySteven Malanga, The Book of Saul, addresses the particular question of the Democratic party. Referencing proclamations of success of the Womens March and the actual substantial advantages of the GOP at the state and national level, he writes:

The new Democratic Partythe one increasingly governed by identity politics and driven by special interestshas become so intoxicated by the nostrums of Saul Alinsky and his Rules for Radicals that it has forgotten how to operate in a democracy, where elections count more than revolutionary theater. Perhaps this is the inevitable result of elevating a charismatic former community organizer to the presidency. President Obama was a gifted campaign strategist and an appealing personality, but he convinced his party that the Alinsky model was a viable permanent approach to governing. True, it often worked for him, but success led him to use it as a crutch, even after he assumed the worlds most powerful office. Were going to speak truth to power, presidential advisor Valerie Jarrett once said when asked about media bias against Obamas policies. As political scientist Pete Peterson pointed out, however, [Y]oure the White House. You are the power.

Obama inspired a generation of like-minded Democrats to follow him into the protest-as-politics movement. Bill de Blasio has been an elected official in New York City for 15 years now, having served on the city council and as public advocate, and now as mayor. Yet, he attends protests as if he were a powerless outsider and occasionally invites arrest, according to the New York Times. In a city dominated by left-leaning Democrats, getting arrested on purpose is good politics.

So what is the value of protests in a modern, functioning democracy?

Last week we saw generically anti-Trump protests. On Friday, the March for Life took place. And this weekend, there were various protests at airports in reaction to individuals being detained and prevented from entering the United States despite previously-obtained visas or even permanent residency.

At the same time, flying across my facebook feed are calls to call Congressmen about the upcoming confirmation vote for Betsy DeVos and yet these facebook posts struggle with the question: what do you do if you know your Senators are firmly on one side or the other? One friend, in Michigan, hoped that there would be value in calling Senators in Ohio with the pitch that we have family and friends in Ohio but it seems to me that offices simply dont give the time of day to callers who arent constituents.

And of course, the increasing focus on battleground states and early-primary states has meant that many people feel keenly the irrelevance of their vote, and the uselessness of traditional activities like knocking on doors and passing out flyers.

Readers, thoughts? Are protests the cornerstone of democracy or one step away from mob rule?

Image: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ATrump-WomensMarch_2017-top-1510075_(32409710246).jpg; By Mark Dixon from Pittsburgh, PA (Trump-WomensMarch_2017-top-1510075) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

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What does democracy look like? - Patheos (blog)

Fake news inquiry by MPs examines threat to democracy – BBC News


The Drum
Fake news inquiry by MPs examines threat to democracy
BBC News
The inquiry will examine the sources of fake news, how it is spread and its impact on democracy. Claims that voters in the US election were influenced by fake news spurred the inquiry, the committee said. Damian Collins, the committee chairman, said ...
MPs to investigate threat to democracy from 'fake news'The Guardian
MPs consider the threat posed by fake news on democracyThe Drum
UK lawmakers look into fake news' 'threat to democracy'Fox News
The National -International Business Times UK
all 36 news articles »

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Fake news inquiry by MPs examines threat to democracy - BBC News

Trump, Breitbart, and the rejection of multicultural democracy – Vox

Amid reports that Trump elevated his chief strategist Steve Bannon to the National Security Council, as well as reports that he had a hand in shaping the executive orders banning immigration from several Muslim countries and refugees, understanding Bannons worldview has become all the more important.

Thats because Trumps executive orders should be interpreted as the outgrowth of a coherent ideological framework and set of ideas about American democracy.

Bannon's ideology is most clearly reflected in Breitbart, the right wing nationalist site Bannon headed for a number of years.

Over the past month, I spent some time doing close readings of Breitbart articles published during and after the campaign, and came away with an overarching conclusion: For Bannon and Trumps core group of supporters, the presidents victory was a rejection of multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism, and globalization, and the triumph of white, Christian populist nationalism.

Media and journalism matter for their both importance in shaping and reflecting the identity of their readers and for the information they provide. The articles published on Breitbart during and immediately after the election reveal the stories Trump supporters told themselves about American politics.

Bannons role in the new administration and the incredible reach and influence of this site during the election also speaks of its influence. Breitbart is the 44th most popular website in the United States according to Alexa, with over 2.3 million followers on Facebook, and it had 18 million homepage visitors a month during the election. Even more, Breitbarts mix of populist, anti-establishment themes, economic nationalism, and rejection of multiculturalism and globalization closely tracked Trumps own rhetoric during the election cycle itself.

Perhaps the most common theme to emerge in these articles was the general idea and refrain of taking back our country. Trump himself tweeted after Brexit, They took their country back, just like we will take America back. Across Breitbarts articles, Trump supporters were taking the country back from a litany of explicit targets including Democrats, the socialist left, the media, people of color, women, immigrants, establishment Republicans, free traders, Wall Street, and Washington, DC, insiders. Throughout many of these articles, the people on whose behalf the country would be taken back were characterized as middle America, real America, deplorables, and fly-over country all standing up, asserting themselves and their values, and rejecting those who would repudiate them.

Breitbarts writers very explicitly rejected the three pillars of multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism, and globalism they claimed represented Obamas presidency and candidacy. They also claimed these traits were linked to the fall of elites in Europe and the rise of right populism.

With respect to multiculturalism, Breitbart authors explicitly rejected immigrant incorporation, particularly for Muslims, into multicultural democracy. Numerous Breitbart contributors espoused the idea that Islam is incompatible with democracy, freedom of speech, and the peaceful and law-bound resolution of conflict. And, in a number of other articles, there was a broader critique of contemporary immigrants for their failure to incorporate themselves into American democracy. For example, in an article entitled The Emerging Trumpian Majority that entwines both ideas, James Pinkerton writes:

Once upon a time, immigration to the U.S. was a positive civic ritual that affirmed American values; that is, foreigners would come here legally, get a job, learn English, and embrace American ways. And presto! They too were Americans. Its hard to think of anything healthier for a countrys psyche than to see others come and adapt to its ways.

By contrast, today, the situation is much different; too many foreigners come here illegally, wangle (sic) their way onto public assistance, and then sit as unassimilated clumps at best, as terrorists at worse. No wonder the American people are angry. And the Republican Party, at least, is reflecting that anger.

Secondly, Breitbart contributors rejected cosmopolitanism in favor of US nationalism. In an article entitled The Ten Ideologies of America, the pseudonymous Breitbart writer Virgil defines cosmopolitanism as:

the view that we are all, everywhere, a part of a single world community, and that such things as nation-states, including the United States, only slow down the fulfillment of our true destiny coming together in a global harmonic convergence.Left Cosmopolitanism means support for open borders, of course, and also for multiculturalism. As might be said, Celebrate diversity or else! In addition, Left Cosmos love international organizations, such as the United Nations; to them, thats the future one big New World Order. Right Cosmopolitans also support open borders. In addition, being good capitalists, they support free trade and anything else that multinational corporations might wish for. And since they are private-sector-loving corporatists, they avidly embrace pro-business international combines, such as the World Trade Organization.

Broadly, Breitbart contributors espouse an American nationalism, one that explicitly turns inward to the United States for its source of moral values and strength. At the same time, this is linked to the critique of elites, who are seen as looking down upon ordinary Americans and their values in favor of an other-directed, outward-oriented, cosmopolitan outlook. Cosmopolitanism here is a cultural critique, linked to a perceived style of being and carrying oneself in the world, in sharp distinction to American identity and values.

The critique of globalism on Breitbart specifically offers an assault on global financial flows and international financial capitalism and free trade in favor of protectionism. For example, in a piece published in August titled The Worldwide Trumpian Majority: Lessons From Brexit, Britain, and the United States, Pinkerton writes:

Indeed, we can step back and see that around the world, the dueling forces are globalism, on the one hand, and nationalism, on the other.

Globalism, as we have observed, is a curious combination of socialism and capitalism that is, bureaucrats and bankers, working together to flatten national boundaries and, indeed, to flatten the nation-state itself

As for nationalism, thats the credo of all others, whether we like them or not. Trump, Farage, and LePen are nationalists, but then so, too, are the Russians, Chinese, and Iranians. In other words, just about all the peoples of the world are instinctive nationalists; its globalism that is the strange mutation, afflicting mostly the West.

Taken together, Breitbart offers a rather coherent and overarching critique of contemporary currents in politics and the existing Democratic and Republican establishments. What is striking is the degree to which Breitbarts positions which closely tracked Trumps own rhetoric during the campaign tell a clear political story. Breitbart is, in part, about defining the symbolic border of the nation and protecting the white, Christian body politic in a way that is premised on exclusion.

At the same time, the embrace of globalization and multiculturalism are cast in Breitbart as anti-civil: policies that result in the weakening of services for white, working-class Americans. Indeed, the interests of those pursuing identity politics, in Breitbarts view (contributors roundly fail to recognize their own arguments as a form of white identity politics), are seen as irreconcilable with those of real Americans. In The Ten Ideologies of America: As Donald Trump Overthrows the Old Order, A Look at the New, Virgil writes:

The old Democrats of FDRs time were happy enough with capitalism; they just wanted to extend solidaristic job-protections, and basic social-insurance plans, to all Americans.

By contrast, todays Democrats, filled with Cosmopolitan dreams, want to extend government benefits to the world and thats not just a budget-buster, its also a political loser.

In truth, todays Democrats arent much interested in the well-being of working stiffs. Instead, they are enraptured with new plans to advance identity politics, co-ed bathrooms, and #BlackLivesMatter. All the while, of course, keeping the border open and suppressing energy production and economic activity.

Rousseau argued long ago that crafting the identity of a citizen is difficult. People are more instinctively drawn to small groups, whether that is their local communities or their near to hand social affiliations and identities. Constructing civil solidarity on the basis of an abstraction such as a pluralistic and multicultural nation is difficult and, ultimately, fragile. Trumps election, and now these executive orders, have revealed the extent to which American democratic culture, norms, and institutions are very fragile.

Daniel Kreiss is an associate professor in the School of Media and Journalism, UNC-Chapel Hill. A version of this piece first appeared on Medium.

The Big Idea is Voxs home for smart, often scholarly excursions into the most important issues and ideas in politics, science, and culture typically written by outside contributors. If you have an idea for a piece, pitch us at thebigidea@vox.com

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Trump, Breitbart, and the rejection of multicultural democracy - Vox