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PAUL JAY: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in Baltimore.
We're continuing our series of interviews about the American governing elite and where
they're leading all of us. The U.S. presidential elections we're focusing in on. And in this
segment, we're going to talk about Mitt Romney and the Republican Party with Jeff Faux, who
now joins us from our studio in D.C. He's a distinguished fellow at the Economic Policy
Institute in Washington, D.C. He's written extensively on the economy and neighborhood
development and globalization. And his latest book is The Servant Economy: Where America's
Elite Is Sending the Middle Class. Thanks for joining us again, Jeff.
JEFF FAUX: Good to be here, Paul.
JAY: So, once again, if you haven't watched the other parts, you should, 'cause we're
just going to pick up the discussion. In the last segment, we talked about President Obama's
vision. And now--or lack thereof or lack of implementing thereof. And now we're going
to talk about Mitt Romney and his economic vision. And I expect he would probably do
a little better at implementing the vision he articulates then President Obama did. So
kick us off with what Romney is saying and what you make of it.
FAUX: Well, you know, Romney, like his opponent, is saying what he thinks he needs to do to
be reelected, but of course his basic proposition is dissolve the New Deal, bring us back to
where we were sometime in the past, which is romanticized, where business decisions
determine the future. I don't think Romney is going to be quite as draconian as some
of the people in the House of Representatives, but who knows?
You know, it's not that you're voting--you're really not voting so much for a person as
you're voting for a group. And in Romney's case, the death of the liberal Republicans
in the Republican Party means that all the people who are going to take the jobs in a
Romney administration are going to come from the extreme right. And, you know, I wouldn't
be surprised if Romney turns his back on some of the most extreme cost-cutting, budget-cutting
proposals of the Republican right. But it is going to be an age of super austerity.
Presumably, Romney comes in with a Republican majority. It's going to be, in a way, the
George Bush economic program, which was to give away what was--what's left of the government
treasury to the business community. So it's pretty reactionary.
Labor unions in particular are going to do a lot worse under Romney than they did under
Obama. The Democrats are not against labor unions. They're kind of for them. But they
haven't been doing much to help them, even though they depend on it. The Republicans,
on the other hand, clearly are against the unions.
JAY: Alright. So Romney's thesis is get the private--unfetter the private sector, stop
all this money being tied up by governments, so the same amount of capital, supposedly,
is now going to be available to the private sector to invest, and it's going to be better
for workers 'cause there'll be more jobs and all of this. And so what is your sense of
that? And how will ordinary workers with jobs--and also those without jobs--how will they do
under all of this?
FAUX: Well, under Romney the lowering and the decline of real incomes and wages is going
to be accelerated. I mean, the social safety net, which is very important to bolster workers'
bargaining position, is going to be lowered drastically; if not, it's going to disappear.
Unions are going to be under attack. I mean, they're already under attack. And the Obama
people can be helpful in specific kinds of instances. Without that, the trade unions
are going to be up against the wall. And if you have four years or eight years of this
kind of reactionary Republican regime, you can kiss trade unionism in America goodbye.
Now, I happen to feel like in the long run unions are inevitable. They'll come back.
But it could be your grandchildren who will finally form the labor union after eight years
of Romney.
It's not like--the position of the United States is a lot more vulnerable than it was
under George Bush. You know, we saw what happened under Bush. The crash of 2008, the crash of
2009 is an inevitable result of that kind of social Darwinist economics.
JAY: And what do you make of, you know, the section of the working class that should know
better? And I don't mean necessarily workers in small towns and rural areas that traditionally
have, you know, been a little more Republican for various reasons, but there seems to be
some inroads being made in the urban working class, which should know better and are still--there's
sections seem to be considering voting for Romney. And, you know, some of these votes
are so close between Obama and Romney that it kind of boggles my mind what is going through
the heads of these people. As much as I'm critical of Obama, like you've mentioned,
Romney will be a disaster. And what is going through the--why is Romney having some success
with these people?
FAUX: Yeah. Well, we'll see how much success he has. But I think to the degree that he
has, it's, one, because people--the working class in urban areas has not seen the recovery,
has not seen the improvements. Wages have declined, and we still have high unemployment
among all segments of the working class, which is 80 percent of our population, so that they
haven't seen that.
I don't think, by and large, the average American spends a lot of time thinking about economic
policies. What they sort of get quickly on the TV is here's one guy; and the press says,
well, that's his argument: here's the other guy; the press says, that's his argument.
Trade union workers will still vote Democratic.
But there's something else going on, I think, in among the average American voter, and that
is there's some denial. If you ask--the polls have shown, if you ask the average American,
do you think the next generation is going to be worse off than this generation, you
get overwhelming majorities yes. But then if you ask, do you think you personally are
going to be worse off, the answer is, oh, I'm going to be okay, my kids are going to
be okay. There's a disconnect that's going on, and I think in part it's because they
haven't been inspired by anything political, and they're sort of coming back and internalizing
all of this and hoping that whatever happens, they're going to be okay. This is a common
psychological, you know, problem of denial.
JAY: They also seem to have had some success in getting sections of private sector workers
in on blaming public sector workers, and then that also has electorial implications.
FAUX: Yes. Jay Gould, who was the robber baron of the late 19th century, once said he could
pay half of the working class to kill the other half of the working class. Now, I don't
think that's quite true, but there is a--the sophisticated Republican conservative program
that we know has been--being operated since that famous memo of Lewis Powell to the Chamber
of Commerce in the early 1970s, the propaganda about the world which pits private sector
employees against public sector employees and have as--trade unionists in New York,
for example, backing cuts to pensions for public workers. That's what happens. When
you undercut the trade union movement, you isolate it and fragment it, you get internal
conflict.
JAY: There's another part of it, is there not, that as well, President Obama and the
leading Democrats, you know, they fight somewhat in defense of this idea of government and
public sector, and in the campaigns there's some of that kind of language used. But during
this last four years, the Democrats--certainly under Clinton, too--they buy into some of
the underlying assumptions that they actually share with the Republicans, which gives it
a kind of credibility. And then what are people left with? Then it's just, okay, I like this
guy or that guy, you failed, let's try him. I mean, nobody has any ideological moorings
anymore.
FAUX: Right. I think one of the great tragedies and failures of the Democratic Party is that
ever since Clinton--and, quite frankly, even at the end of the Carter administration they
bought into the propaganda campaign against government. And so you have Obama repeatedly
saying, well, we're not for big government. You got the disaster of that health care plan,
when you and I and most Americans know that the only way to deliver health care and get
those insurance costs down and the prescription drug costs down is to have a single-payer
program for this country. That's clear. And if Barack Obama and you and I were sitting
in a bar, I believe that's what he would tell us. Instead, in order to avoid the big government
issue and not confront it and not deal with it, instead they develop this sort of Clintonesque,
complicated piece of legislation that no one can understand, and it becomes terribly, terribly
vulnerable.
This is a big country. We have big problems. We need big government to solve them. The
idea that we could solve these problems that face the American middle class with a government
the size of Honduras's is insane. And yet that is the ideology that the Democrats themselves
keep reinforcing.
JAY: Which opens up a whole 'nother line of questioning on the democratization of this
government, 'cause if it's going to be big government that plays a role and government
at all kinds of levels that is a big piece of the answer to all of this, then, of course,
so is democratization of all of this, because right now big government can also mean big
bailouts for banks--it may not mean anything good for ordinary people.
Anyway, we're going to continue this discussion. There--not right away, but Jeff is going to
come back soon, and we're going to pick up another series of talks. We're also going
to, if Jeff agrees--and I think if I do this while we're live, he's going to agree--he'll
come back for maybe some live Q&A with viewers.
FAUX: Ah. Sure. I'd love to do that.
JAY: Okay. So we'll--maybe the next time you come in, we'll let everybody know, and we'll
take people's questions, and we'll make that part of format.
At any rate, if you want us to keep doing this, don't forget there's a "Donate" button
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can't keep doing this. Thanks again for joining us on The Real News Network.