Is Donald Trump a Bernie Bro?

In fairness, Steve Bannon has never really pretended to be a conservative.

“I’m a Leninist,” Steve Bannon told Ronald Radosh, back in 2013. “Lenin wanted to destroy the state, and that’s my goal, too. I want to bring everything crashing down, and destroy all of today’s establishment.”

That included, of course, such antiquated ideas as free markets, fiscal conservatism, and small government. “Like [Andrew] Jackson’s populism, we’re going to build an entirely new political movement,” he boasted to Michael Wolff back in November 2016. “The conservatives are going to go crazy. I’m the guy pushing a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan. …. It will be as exciting as the 1930s, greater than the Reagan revolution—conservatives, plus populists, in an economic nationalist movement.”

In retrospect, the reference to the 1930s—not an especially great decade for conservative policy—ought to have been a tip-off. So it probably should not come as a great shock to hear that Trump’s chief ideologist’s grand new vision includes incorporating a socialist as a part of the future of his movement, while flirting with the far right European parties.

“Europe is about a year ahead of the United States. … You see populist-nationalist movements with reform [here]. … You could begin to see the elements of Bernie Sanders coupled with the Trump movement that really becomes a dominant political force in American politics.”


Of course, it’s tempting to brush this off as Bannonite grandiloquence, but the crossover between Trumpism and Bernie-ism has always been an undercurrent of Bannon’s vision and Trump’s campaign.

Whether they fully grasp it or not, many Republicans seem to be embracing that post-conservative vision, especially as Trump flirts with trade wars and his administration openly contemplates forcing the use of coal and nuclear power on the nation’s grid operators.

The department’s strategy, outlined in a memo obtained by Bloomberg News, would use authority granted under a pair of federal laws to establish a “strategic electric generation reserve” and compel grid operators to buy electricity from at-risk plants. The steps are necessary, the memo says, to protect national security. [Emphasis added.]


Bernie would be proud.

Bloomberg notes that Trump’s proposal to use national security powers to override market decisions in the energy sector, comes as the administration uses similar arguments “to justify market interventions aimed at protecting other treasured political constituencies—steelworkers and automakers—at the expense of U.S. allies.”

John Shelk, who runs the Electric Power Supply Association noted the irony: “National security is being invoked by people who once favored markets.”

As both Bannon knows, many former free-market conservatives are likely to fall in line with such Bernie-esque policies, given what Axios’s Jim VandeHei aptly calls Trump’s “mind control super powers.”

In our lifetime, no president has matched Donald Trump’s ability to summon the power of pulpit + friendly media + the tweet-by-tweet power of repetition and persuasion to move minds en masse …
You see this in the silence of Republican critics; the instant shifts in GOP views of the FBI, Putin and deficits; and the quick, widespread adoption of his branding efforts around “deep state,” “Spygate” and “no collusion.”


This also seems to be true on issues involving free markets, state intervention, and his attacks on private industry. Case in point, Trump’s attempt to use government power to punish Amazon.

He threatened the company behind the scenes, then publicly, while privately pushing U.S. Postmaster General Megan Brennan to double Amazon’s package rates.
This was quickly forgotten even though it’s highly abnormal for presidents to use their voice and power to pick on one specific public company using misleading data points.


Of course, this all has less to do with Trump’s super powers than it does with the fecklessness and malleability of a movement that once knew what it stood for.

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