Donald Trump’s fascist political ascent is not a mere historical anomaly or an unpredictable deviation from the norm. On the contrary, it represents a predictable and deeply entrenched political outcome, that is, the logical, albeit unsettling, culmination of a long-standing bipartisan reorganization of the United States political economy. This restructuring can be understood as a coherent and potent neoliberal project, meticulously designed to reorder American capitalism around the central tenets of maximizing corporate power and diminishing the role of the state in social welfare.
In pursuit of these objectives, this neoliberal project systematically dismantled the post-World War II social contract, characterized by relatively strong labor unions, progressive taxation, and the expansion of moderate social safety nets. It aimed to balance capitalist accumulation with, to a certain extent, social equity and economic security for the working class. Over time this foundational agreement was incrementally eroded. Policies favoring deregulation, privatization, free trade agreements, and supply-side economics dogma became paramount, leading to a significant redistribution of wealth upwards for the few and stagnant wages for the many. This long-term trend of prioritizing corporate interests over collective well-being created fertile ground for populist discontent and the rise of figures who, like Trump, could tap into widespread frustration with the established political and economic order.
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