Dylan Riley Robert Brenner, Seven Theses On American Politics, NLR 138, November December 2022
Dylan Riley Robert Brenner, Seven Theses On American Politics, NLR 138, November December 2022
Dylan Riley Robert Brenner, Seven Theses On American Politics, NLR 138, November December 2022
SEVEN THESES
ON AMERICAN POLITICS
I
n the weeks following the 2022 us midterms, the mood in the
intellectual penumbra of the Democratic Party swung wildly from
impassioned handwringing to euphoric self-congratulation. Dire
warnings of a ‘red wave’ delivering large congressional majorities
to the Republicans gave way to jubilation at the salvation of democracy.
In reality the results were decidedly mixed. The Republicans took the
House with a narrow majority, while Democrats retained their slim hold
on the Senate. The Republicans swept Florida and flipped a handful
of districts in New York. Reproductive rights had a fairly good night,
but Democrats continued to fare very poorly with non-college-educated
whites––according to one poll, Republicans won over 70 per cent of
white men without a college degree.1
Various explanations have been offered for the weaker than expected
Republican performance, in the context of a deeply unpopular President
and high inflation. Among the leading hypotheses is the poor ‘candidate
quality’ of many Trump endorsees; the Supreme Court’s overturning
of the constitutional guarantee of the right to abortion with the Dobbs
v Jackson ruling this summer; and—at 27 per cent—the relatively high
turnout among young voters. All these points have some plausibility, but
they miss the larger issue. American politics has undergone a tectonic
shift over the past twenty years, linked to deep structural transforma-
tions in the regime of accumulation. These transformations have not
been adequately sketched and theorized as yet; the unforeseen midterm
results are a good occasion to begin to do so.
What we offer here is not a finished argument but a set of seven tele-
graphic theses, flanked by empirical evidence, intended to provoke
1
‘Exit Polls 2022’, nbc News, source: National Election Pool, accessed 7 December
2022.
2
Robert Brenner, ‘Introducing Catalyst’, Catalyst, Spring 2017, p. 11.
3
Luigi Zingales’s A Capitalism for the People contains excellent descriptive
material on the phenomenon: 43 per cent of the agricultural giant Archer-Daniels-
Midland’s profits were tied to state-subsidized products like corn syrup and
riley & brenner: US Politics 7
openly and obviously political. They allow for returns, not on the basis
of investment in plant, equipment, labour and inputs to produce use
values, but rather on the basis of investments in politics.4 This new struc-
ture is the real basis of Piketty’s main finding: that the rate of return on
capital now outstrips the rate of growth (although Piketty himself, in our
view incorrectly, presents this as a return to capitalist normality after the
exceptional period of the long boom).5
ethanol, while the number of earmarks in Federal bills rose from 10 in 1982 to
4,128 in 2005. Zingales also provides a vivid account of the functioning of the mort-
gage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, described as huge private monopolies
which ‘use their political connections to make money at the expense of taxpayers’:
Luigi Zingales, A Capitalism for the People: Recapturing the Lost Genius of American
Prosperity, New York 2012, pp. 44, 79, 45.
4
The dramatic intensification of lobbying could be understood as a form of ‘politi-
cal accumulation’, different of course from its feudal forebear, but nonetheless
highly distinctive.
5
Thomas Piketty, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Cambridge ma 2014, pp. 449–
450. Piketty shows the rate of return on capital substantially outstripping the rate of
growth after 2012 but does not quite explain the meaning of this inversion.
8 nlr 138
First, the purpose of ‘class analysis’, in our view, is to identify the nerve
centre of the entire social order with a view to its possible transcend-
ence. It is not, therefore, pace the late brilliant Erik Olin Wright, a theory
of ‘social stratification’, or a procedure designed to provide a social car-
tography of ‘life chances’. In fact, the categories of mainstream social
science are far better at doing that than is class analysis. Olin Wright’s
work constitutes a tacit admission of this, in that his ‘class map’, which is
organized according to the criteria of property, authority and expertise, is
unrelated to his underlying Marxist theory of what class is: a set of inter-
locked positions constituted by relations of exploitation.6 Thus, especially
under capitalist conditions, there may be gaping differences in ‘life
chances’, income and lifestyle within the working class. Indeed, in the
normal course of affairs, we would expect real class relations to be almost
invisible as an everyday reality to most social actors, most of the time.
Second, and relatedly, in our usage the expression ‘class politics’ refers
to the politicization of the main relationship of exploitation in the class
structure under discussion. In capitalist society, this means the politi-
cization of the wage-labour/capital relationship—and, in particular,
attempts to exert political control over how the social surplus is invested.
Class politics in this sense is a rare event; in advanced-capitalist societies,
most politics tends to be non-class politics, as explained in Thesis One
below. Finally, our argument is that a new structure of exploitation is in
the process of emerging in the advanced-capitalist world; accordingly,
6
For an excellent exposition of the difference between class as ‘life chances’ and
class in the Marxian sense, see Erik Olin Wright, ‘The Shadow of Exploitation
in Weber’s Class Analysis’, American Sociological Review, vol. 67, no. 6, 2002.
Unsurprisingly, dividing the population by occupation rather than class provides
a much more accurate account of ‘life chances’; see for example Kim Weeden
and David Grusky, ‘The Case for a New Class Map’, American Journal of Sociology,
vol. 111, no. 1, July 2005.
riley & brenner: US Politics 9
Thesis One. A new non-class, but robustly material, politics has emerged since
the 1990s. The us political scene has long displayed a profoundly para-
doxical aspect: while ubiquitously structured by class, it is marked by an
almost complete absence of ‘class politics’.7 The parties, at their apexes,
minister to different fractions of capital, but at their bases are oriented
to different fractions of workers. Thus, neither the Republican nor the
Democratic Party is, or has ever been, a ‘working-class party’; it is correct
to interpret these parties as parties of capital. Yet despite this fundamen-
tal orientation, they must both seek to appeal to the material interests
of those who ‘own only their own labour power’, since this sector makes
up the vast majority of the American population. Any party that com-
petes in electoral politics must to some extent respond to working-class
interests. Despite the talk of identity politics and ‘post-material values’,
us politics has a clear material mass base. But it is not a class politics,
because naturally neither Democrats nor Republicans seek to mobilize
the many workers who vote for them against capital; nor do they attempt
to exert effective political control over capital, especially in the era of
‘political capitalism’. Thus we have, in our formulation, material-interest
politics without working-class politics.
7
As Mike Davis put it, speaking of the late nineteenth century, ‘The increasing
proletarianization of the American social structure has not been matched by an
equal tendency toward the homogenization of the working class as a cultural or
political collectivity. Stratifications rooted in differential positions in the social
labour process have been reinforced by deep-seated ethnic, religious, racial and
sexual antagonisms within the working class.’ Davis offers an account that could be
read as a materialist version of American exceptionalism: Mike Davis, ‘Why the us
Working Class Is Different’, nlr i/123, September–October 1980, p. 15.
10 nlr 138
8
Robert Brenner, ‘The Paradox of Social Democracy: The American Case’, in Mike
Davis, Fred Pfeil and Michael Sprinker, eds, The Year Left: An American Socialist
Yearbook, New York 1985, p. 39.
riley & brenner: US Politics 11
Since the 2010s, there has been an uptick in class struggle, but members
of the working class continue to pursue their interests overwhelmingly
9
Rosa Luxemburg, ‘The Mass Strike, the Political Party and the Trade Unions’
[1906], in Peter Hudis and Kevin B. Anderson, eds, The Rosa Luxemburg Reader,
New York 2004, p. 182.
12 nlr 138
as owners of labour power, rather than as a class. This is not to say that
nothing has changed. For one thing, there is now a wider variety of
bases from which class-collaborationist or status-group politics can be
pursued.10 Up until the 1980s, these politics could broadly be described
as reformist, or ‘social-democratic’—premised, like all social-democratic
politics, on the prospect of economic growth. But the politics of the
present period does not hold out even the hope of growth. It is a politics
of zero-sum redistribution, primarily between different groups of work-
ers. It is distinct from social-democratic politics, not because it is not
a class politics—that is equally true of social democracy––but because
it is not a growth politics. Thus the two main us political parties no
longer appear as alternative growth models, but rather as different fiscal
coalitions: maga politics, which seeks to redistribute income away from
non-white and immigrant workers, and multicultural neoliberalism,
which seeks to redistribute income toward the highly educated.11 Both
tend to atomize and fragment the working class.
10
Brenner, ‘The Paradox of Social Democracy’, p. 85.
11
Dylan Riley, ‘Faultlines’, nlr 126, November–December 2020.
riley & brenner: US Politics 13
12
This also corresponds to Piketty’s research, which shows that the bottom 50 per
cent of the income distribution owns almost nothing. Of the us, Piketty writes: ‘the
top decile owns 72 per cent of America’s wealth, while the bottom half claims just
2 per cent: Capital in the Twenty-First Century, p. 322.
14 nlr 138
13
For a vivid description of the inequalities produced by the tertiary education sys-
tem in the us, see David Grusky, Peter Hall and Hazel Rose-Markus, ‘The Rise
of Opportunity Markets: How Did It Happen and What Can We Do?’, Daedalus,
vol. 148, no. 3, Summer 2019, pp. 19–45. The authors describe the vast resources
that ‘middle-class’ families spend on private education. What they do not adequately
emphasize is that the families who most assiduously pursue these strategies are
still wage earners, as their children are likely to be.
riley & brenner: US Politics 15
population over 25 has a ba certificate, and around 38 per cent have only
high school or equivalent. This leaves 29 per cent having ‘some college’,
often a two-year ‘associate’s degree’ in a professional skill, such as nurs-
ing. At the higher levels of the tertiary education system, the percentages
are quite small. Only 9 per cent have a master’s degree, and barely 2 per
cent have either a ‘professional school degree’, such as the md required
to become a medical doctor, or a ‘doctoral degree’, such as a PhD. It is
worth emphasizing that a plurality of the us population faces the labour
market as basically unskilled labour.
The us working class is of course also deeply split by ‘race’. About 70 per
cent of the population identifies as ‘white’ and around 13 per cent as ‘black’,
but regional variations are wide; for example, 56 per cent of Californians
identify as ‘white’ and 6 per cent as ‘black’. Furthermore, the category
of ‘Latino’ or ‘hispanic’ cuts across the ‘white’ category. Nationally about
10 per cent of the ‘white’ population identifies as ‘hispanic’ or ‘Latino’,
meaning that ‘non-hispanic whites’ make up about 60 per cent of the
us population, and around 40 per cent in the large immigrant states
of California, Texas and Florida. These identities famously constitute a
fertile terrain for non-class or status-group politics.
it not only rivalled the cares Act in size but would have introduced
new moves, however limited, towards universal health insurance, paid
family leave, subsidized childcare and early childhood education. Its
shrunken descendant, the Inflation Reduction Act (ira) signed into law
in August 2022, provides $738 billion over ten years, through a fiscal
mix of two-thirds tax cuts, one third direct expenditure, to stimulate
green capitalism—solar and nuclear power companies, agribusiness,
home-energy efficiency, electric vehicles—lower the price of medicines
and extend the existing subsidy to the Affordable Care Act ($64 billion,
over three years).
The new agenda embodies two peculiarities, however. The first con-
cerns its conditions of emergence. Although the American version of
the Keynesian welfare state was never the direct consequence of class
politics—it had at least as much to do with wartime mobilization—
historically, it was premised on a prior wave of working-class militancy.
By contrast, the post-2020 expansionary policy has no such basis; it is
largely a fortuitous response to the Covid pandemic and perhaps also
to the rivalry with China—indeed, the continuity between Bidenomics
and Trumponomics lies precisely here.14 The second peculiarity is
the economic environment in which the new agenda operates. Every
other Keynesian welfare state has been based on a booming economy;
Bidenomics, in contrast, is a programme of deficit spending with-
out growth. There is very little evidence of a real return to American
manufacturing profitability.
14
‘Bidenomics could be seen as a step towards recasting the centrally monetized,
debt-driven capitalist regime in a more compensatory form—a neo-third way,
driven both by the populist shock and, above all, by competitive friction with a ris-
ing China’: Susan Watkins, ‘Paradigm Shifts’, nlr 128, March–April 2021.
18 nlr 138
economic growth. Had Clinton won, this would have represented the
ongoing hegemony of multicultural neoliberalism in its pure form.
Trump’s surprise victory blocked that path. This electoral break with
multicultural neoliberalism was then compounded by the pandemic.
Although Trump himself resisted at every step of the way the obvi-
ous and rational response to the Covid-19 crisis, his Administration
nonetheless opened a path towards a new form of politics due to the
unavoidable necessity of countering the pandemic. The Federal state
intervened massively to sustain the lives of many ordinary working-class
Americans—the opposite of what Trump and his collaborators pro-
claimed they wanted. This produced a bizarre situation, in which Trump
discredited the very policies his Administration had pursued, especially
with regard to masks and mass vaccination.
15
Jill Colvin, ‘Trump reveals he got Covid-19 booster shot; crowd boos him’,
Associated Press, 20 December 2021.
riley & brenner: US Politics 19
10
16
See Richard Duncan’s three-part series, ‘2008 vs 2020’, Macro Watch, Third
Quarter 2022.
17
Amina Dunn, ‘Biden’s job rating is similar to Trump’s but lower than that of other
recent presidents’, Pew Research Center, 20 October 2022.
20 nlr 138
Karp, at one time us politics was class politics, but now it is structured
by identity.18 The ‘class dealignment’ analysis undergirds a politics that
would seek to repolarize the population in class terms, which, so the
thinking goes, was the basis of reformism in its New Deal and Great
Society manifestations. This position both over-emphasizes the class
character of American politics prior to the collapse of the New Deal coa-
lition and under-emphasizes its robustly material but quite obviously
non-class basis in the current period.
18
See Matt Karp, ‘The Politics of a Second Gilded Age’, Jacobin, no. 40, 2021. Karp
writes: ‘Blue-collar workers remained fiercely divided by geography, race, religion,
ethnicity, and culture—in a word, identity—with white Southerners and Catholics
voting for Democrats, while northern Protestants and African Americans (where
they could vote) backed Republicans’: p. 99. We would not dispute that these splits
were crucial; but we would challenge the idea that they involved identity as opposed
to material interests. In fact, the identity splits within the American working class
are profoundly material.
riley & brenner: US Politics 21
19
Thomas Piketty is on the right track here when he writes, ‘If the Democratic Party
has become the party of the highly educated while the less educated have fled to the
Republicans, it must be because the latter group believes that the policies backed
by the Democrats increasingly fail to express their aspirations.’ Capital and Ideology,
Boston ma 2020, p. 834.
20
The programme of working-class Republicanism is well drawn by Nicholas
Lemann in ‘The Republican Identity Crisis after Trump’, New Yorker, 23 October
2020. Lemann sketches out a scenario of ‘reversalism’, in which the gop, perhaps
under Marco Rubio or Josh Hawley, becomes the natural home of the American
working class.
22 nlr 138
21
The two are not equivalent. It is likely that ‘nativism’ will become more promi-
nent than ‘racism’ if Republicans manage to exploit their appeal to the entire
non-degree-holding fraction of workers.
24 nlr 138
11
Thesis Four. The Democrats’ relative success in the 2022 midterms is a reflec-
tion of its particular social base. Given the character of the mass bases of
the Republican and Democratic parties, it is unsurprising that Democrats
now seem to outperform the Republicans at midterm elections. They
will undoubtedly continue to do so because the Democrats’ base, being
more educated, is more likely to be engaged in electoral politics. While
the gop currently benefits most from the inequities of the Constitution,
Republicans now have the disadvantage of being firmly tied to the frac-
tion of the electorate that is less likely to turn out for the midterms.22 In
the terms of our analysis, the Democrats’ very success in this electoral
cycle is premised upon, and likely to reinforce, the fragmented nature
of the us working class, rendering it even less likely to act as a coherent
social force. To put the point as directly as possible: Democrats do not turn
out their base by appealing to working-class politics, but rather by appealing to
workers in explicitly non-class terms.
12
Thesis Five. The American left is in the grip of three illusions about domestic
politics. In understanding us politics, it is of the utmost importance to
grasp the electoral strategy of the Democratic Party. In this regard, three
common illusions have plagued left analysis. The first is the notion
that the obvious path to electoral success is to appeal to the American
working class in ‘class terms’. The Democrats have rarely done this,
even, indeed especially, in their New Deal heyday. This illusion relies
implicitly on a prior misconception: that the Democratic Party has been
an electoral failure in recent years. In fact, the question is not why the
Democrats haven’t won more seats, but why they have done so well in
the last three cycles, since 2018. The 2022 midterm results, which seem
again to have defied much common-sense thinking, were successful
by comparable historical standards. They followed a 2020 election in
which the Democratic challenger defeated an incumbent president with
22
By contrast, as Matt Karp has observed, for the Democrats ‘migrating to a more
upscale electorate means that electorate is more likely to vote in off-year elections’.
See the interview with Seth Ackerman, ‘Democrats May Have Won More Suburban
Votes in the Midterms. That Doesn’t Bode Well’, Jacobin, 11 November 2022.
riley & brenner: US Politics 25
a super-energized base, who won more votes than any other candidate in
history—apart from the one who defeated him.
The second illusion common in left analysis is the idea that the Biden
Administration has pursued timid, weak or disappointing domestic
policies. This flies in the face of the whole historical experience since
early 2020. In fact, no administration since lbj has proposed the sort of
domestic initiatives Biden has; this would have been absolutely clear if
the Administration had enjoyed a slightly greater advantage in Congress.
As discussed above, Bidenism has been beset by contradictions, but it is
not lacking in ambition on the domestic front.
The third, corollary illusion puts together the two preceding ones to claim
that Biden’s unpopularity and the party’s electoral struggles derive from
his policy timidity. But since Biden, and the Democrats more broadly,
have actually been remarkably successful in electoral terms, and since
they have also pursued some strikingly ambitious policies, this position
can only be described as a compounded illusion. The political problems
Biden has faced in fact derive from the constraints of political capitalism
as a system of accumulation. The new political structure to which this has
given rise prevents the construction of hegemonic growth coalitions and
the associated phenomenon of massive electoral landslides. It produces
instead a vicious, narrowly divided politics of zero-sum redistribution,
largely axed on conflicts of material interest within the working class.
26 nlr 138
13
14
All of this is worlds away from the notion of democratic control over the
social surplus. We need a language to describe the new Bidenist project;
‘neo-progressivism’ is perhaps the best term. In content and intention
it remains as far from socialism as its social-democratic and neoliberal
riley & brenner: US Politics 27
15