OXFORD, Miss. – It’s hard not to feel a little politically
homeless these days. I’m thinking of that old folk song, “Sometimes I feel like
a motherless child.”
I see the cabinet choices of President Trump, and if there
ever was a group of “deplorables”, this is it: A Treasury nominee whose nickname is “Foreclosure King”; a Labor nominee who prefers robots to
workers because they don’t want vacations or pay raises; a Commerce nominee who
sees the “1 Percent” as victims and who helped transfer the U.S. textile
industry to Asia.
Then I see this same president sign an executive order
withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, an Obama-supported
secret deal that would have allowed private corporations to sue nations that
pass environment or worker-friendly laws inhibiting their profits. Trump has
also given notice that he may be targeting NAFTA, a similar bad deal for
workers.
Those are good, long-overdue actions that neo-liberal,
corporate friendly Democrats like Bill and Hillary Clinton would have never done
despite candidate Hillary’s shallow assurance she had switched from supporter
to critic of TPP.
On the Democratic Party side, I see a party truly in
shambles with devastating losses not only in Washington, D.C., but also in
legislative halls and governor’s mansions across the nation. A time for some
good soul-searching and change in leadership and direction, right? Not so fast.
A lot of the same old faces are still around, including 76-year-old U.S. House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.
Then there’s U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., in the news recently after
suffering a “Twitter Attack” from the president, who essentially told Lewis to
mind the business of his district instead of telling everybody Trump was not a
“legitimate president.”
Lewis is a bona fide civil rights hero, but let’s face it. He
started that fight with Trump. Furthermore, Lewis diminished himself in my view
during the campaign primaries when he questioned Bernie Sanders’ civil rights
credentials. Sanders was an activist in Chicago who was even arrested for his
pro-civil rights protests. Where was Lewis’ preferred candidate, Hillary
Clinton, back in those days? Besides, one warrior doesn’t attack a fellow
warrior for political expediency.
I know Democrats who applauded U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio,
R-Fla., when he sanctimoniously went after Trump’s Secretary of State nominee,
Rex Tillerson, during confirmation hearings for not declaring Russian President
Vladimir Putin a “war criminal”. This is the same Marco Rubio who hired “The
Vulture”, hedge fund billionaire Paul Singer, as his campaign finance chairman
during the presidential election. Singer successfully soaked financially
strapped Argentina for nearly $5 billion on a $50 million investment, helping
to spiral that country into economic chaos.
By the way, for all his grandstanding, Rubio ended up
supporting Tillerson’s nomination.
Here in Mississippi, the Republican takeover in Washington,
D.C., has emboldened state GOP leaders like Gov. Phil Bryant and his kindred
conservatives in the Legislature. These so-called fiscal conservatives—that
description becomes a joke when the issue is corporate largesse—continue to
squeeze the state budget, underfunding roads and highways, the state trauma
care system.
Now Bryant says it’s time for the state to consider
instituting a lottery, a way to raise needed funds without raising taxes. It’s
a lot of baloney. As with casinos, a state lottery would just provide another
excuse for lawmakers to cut taxes on corporations and the rich while letting
the rest of us poor suckers spend our money in the hope of getting the lucky
number that will make us rich!
The real hope out there are the activists on the front lines
working hard for the people, not themselves or their friends, activists like
Bill Chandler and his team at the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance.
They’ll be fighting at least a half-dozen or more anti-immigrant bills this
legislative session that echo Trump’s anti-immigrant rants.
These people-serving activists include the United Auto
Workers and students at Tougaloo College, Jackson State University, and the
University of Mississippi who’ll be leading the “March on Mississippi” March 4
in Canton to protest voter suppression efforts and the failure of Nissan to
provide an intimidation-free atmosphere for union-sympathetic workers at its
Canton plant.
In fact, activists as far away as Nashville, Atlanta and
Greensboro, N.C., were already on the streets in January protesting the
conditions at the Nissan plant. Of course, protesters of all stripes have been
taking to the streets ever since Trump’s election, pledging their support for
women’s rights and other issues.
What the populist revolts of both Trump’s campaign and the
Bernie Sanders campaign in the Democratic Party showed was a deep revulsion
against the political establishment. People indeed do want their country back.
Like me, a lot of them feel kind of homeless these days, something the
political establishment has rarely felt.