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Trump's Populism... Trumps Clintons Establismentism...

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    Trump's Populism... Trumps Clintons Establismentism...

    Cox: Trump set to invade Davos if in spirit only
    By Rob Cox January 19, 2016
    Tags: DAVOS | ECONOMY | EUROPE | POLITICS | SWITZERLAND | UNITED STATES
    The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

    Donald Trump’s presence will be felt at the World Economic Forum this year even though he isn’t actually due to attend. The populism driving the blustery real estate developer’s unlikely campaign for the U.S. presidency finds its roots in the inequality that the annual gathering in Davos represents – and which the world business and political leaders in attendance will, again, talk about solving.

    While Trump’s tangerine visage will hang heavy over this Swiss mountain town in 2016, he’s just the most imposing of a long line of politicians who, particularly since the great financial crisis that began in 2008, have rallied voter discontent in ways that are upending the establishment.

    The disruption that Trump and his ilk represent can, theoretically, be a good thing. A corrupt status quo with entrenched political and corporate interests will, over time, erode faith in democratic institutions. History suggests that can lead to economic instability, even violent revolution. Certain types of populist movements, however, carry their own, equally frightening risks.

    “The history of populism in democracy is not great, and it’s not self-correcting in a lot of cases,” said Ken Jacobs, chairman and CEO of international investment bank Lazard during a Breakingviews Predictions panel discussion last week. “You only have to look to Europe between the two wars and to a number of the Latin American countries pre-war and post-war to see that.”

    What’s inarguable is that all variations of modern populism share a similar root: disaffection with the social contract, and an abiding sense that the benefits of economic progress are not just asymmetrically distributed, but potentially no longer available to ordinary citizens.

    On this front, charity Oxfam, in its regular party-pooper report ahead of the World Economic Forum, provides some startling evidence that this may indeed be the case today. It’s not just in the United States either, which holds a presidential election in November, but across the globe.

    Just 62 individuals – 53 of them men – control the same amount of wealth as 3.5 billion people, or the poorer half of the human race, according to Oxfam’s findings. Just five years ago, 388 individuals controlled that level of wealth. Moreover, the riches of these 62 people have nearly doubled since 2010, reaching an absolute figure of $542 billion.

    The billionaires, chief executives and prime ministers convening in Davos from Wednesday to Saturday are acutely aware of the underlying problem of wealth and income inequality, as they have been since the financial crisis. The program this year is actually dedicated to “Mastering the Fourth Industrial Revolution,” a nod to forces like technology and automation which are exacerbating the wealth divides, and peppered with sessions like “Politics of Inequality” and “The Inequality Challenge.”

    It’s a shame that populism isn’t specifically on the agenda, even if it can be diagnosed as a byproduct of inequality. Not all forms of mass insurrection are bad. Spain’s political system, for example, has reformed since the emergence of the so-called “indignados” movement a few years ago, which gave rise to parties like Podemos and Ciudadanos. This has beneficially challenged a two-party system – not to mention monarchy – long calcified by corruption.

    Scholars have argued that relatively bloodless reforms, like America’s New Deal nearly a century ago and China’s shift toward a market economy over the past two decades, were at heart populist movements. Both marked massive shifts in the established order and had the effect of lifting millions of people out of poverty and into the middle class.

    The belief that whatever compact existed as a result of the New Deal and its many more recent derivatives has shattered is what leads to the seemingly unstoppable rise of Trump in the race for the Republican nomination. A similar phenomenon is happening in the Democratic Party. Socialist Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has taken front-runner Hillary Clinton by surprise.

    Both have engaged in the sort of scapegoat tactics that often characterize the bad form of populism. Sanders rails against the moneyed elite – basically Davos Man. Trump targets Muslims and Mexican immigrants, linking the woes of his base, the underemployed American with authoritarian inclinations, to globalization, which is a precondition for the very existence of the World Economic Forum.

    The central difference is that Sanders’ targets are amply endowed to refute or undermine his assertions. That’s not the case with the voiceless, mostly poor, immigrants that Trump, and his emerging nemesis in the GOP, Texas Senator Ted Cruz, have sought to vilify. Without any ability to push back publicly, Trump is able to whip up the angry and undereducated in ways that worryingly echo the worst populist movements of the recent past, particularly National Socialism in Germany.

    “The contract around American capitalism used to be pretty simplistic – it was basically I don’t mind you getting rich as long as I have the chance to get rich,” said Jacobs, who will be among this week’s Davos attendees. “The challenge for us right now is whether that has fundamentally broken down… the sense that I can’t make it next is pervasive.”

    #2
    i can not believe you posted that Tom.
    it makes too much sense.
    but did you read it , esp. the last 2 paragraphs.

    Comment


      #3
      Sawfly,

      Politically Correct Politics... Just as with my posts on C02... are about real issues... facts... cause and effect... and our need to grasp reality to plan logically for the future.

      Our farms... and our farm management... cannot afford to lose track of ground rules... i.e.. common sense discussions that lay out real issues... for real solutions.

      If we realize what is coming at us... we can plan for successful management of possible future events.

      Comment


        #4
        If times were good Trump would not be noticed. Messiahs like Trump only prosper when there is discontent. If there was a food shortage Trump would gain more support.

        Comment


          #5
          On the surface Trump has the advantage of being beholden to no one because he is self financed. I think the average American is tired of political correctness and being told what to think and say. Trump comes across as nothing but a shock jock but it is certainly fun to watch him stir the politically correct pot!

          Comment


            #6
            NEWS
            Ethanol Takes Center Stage
            Candidates Push for Biofuels Backing; Trump Throws Support Behind RFS

            Todd Neeley DTN Staff Reporter
            Bio | Email
            Tue Jan 19, 2016 07:23 PM CST
            ALTOONA, Iowa (DTN) -- Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad called out Republican presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz for his so-called anti-ethanol positions, while fellow Republican Donald Trump told a packed house at the Iowa Renewable Fuels Summit Tuesday that he would support and defend the Renewable Fuels Standard as president.


            Donald Trump told ethanol producers Tuesday he would support and defend the Renewable Fuel Standard, during the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association summit in Altoona, Iowa. (DTN photo by Todd Neeley)
            Pundits who may question ethanol's prominence in presidential politics would need only to spend a day at the IRFA summit -- Trump headlined a speaker lineup that included presidential candidates Carly Fiorina, Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack also attended the event.

            "The RFS is an important tool in the mission to achieve energy independence in the U.S.," Trump told the largely pro-biofuels crowd. "I will do everything as president to reach that goal. As president I would end regulations from keeping higher blends from being sold."

            Trump took a swipe at the EPA adjustments to mandated RFS volumes, saying the country could be farther down the road to energy independence had the original law been left untouched.

            "What's going on with ethanol and biofuels, we could have been there a long time ago," Trump said.

            The self-made billionaire said unlike other candidates he would not be beholden to special interests such as the oil industry.

            "I'm not asking you biofuels people 'give me your money,'" Trump said. "I do what's right. When I want to go with ethanol I go with ethanol. I'm going to do what's right for the country ... You're going to get a really fair shake from me."

            Trump said he became convinced of the merits of biofuels following a recent visit to ethanol plants in Iowa.

            "These people wanted me to see more plants and I said I don't need to," he said. "You convinced me."

            IOWA RACE

            Trump and Cruz have been neck and neck for the top spot in the Republican Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1, according to public opinion polls and are considered to be favorites to win the state. Cruz wasn't invited to the annual summit because he has said he would do away with the RFS if he became president. Earlier this month, Cruz told Iowans at town-hall meetings he would keep the RFS but create a "five-year phaseout." Branstad sent a ripple across the Iowa GOP and presidential campaign Tuesday by publicly declaring a Cruz presidency would hurt Iowa's ethanol industry.

            Fiorina, another GOP presidential candidate, pointed to EPA's actions on the RFS -- as well as the waters of the United States rule tied up in court -- as examples of government run amok. "What's going on with the Renewable Fuel Standard is an example of what's wrong with our government," said the former Hewlett Packard CEO.

            "I believe the people of America are being told to sit down and be quiet. I don't think we can do that anymore. We can't settle for a government that no longer works for us. Think about what's really happened with the Renewable Fuel Standard. Politicians got pressured by the oil industry. EPA became the vehicle that changed that contract. We can no longer settle for a nation where a government makes a deal with you and doesn't keep it."

            CHALLENGING TRUMP'S POLICY POSITIONS

            Fiorina challenged Trump's trade positions, as well as claims that he isn't politically beholden to special interests. Fiorina said Trump has "made billions sitting outside the system and buying influence in the system."

            On issues of trade, Fiorina said Trump's idea of a 40% tariff on products imported into the United States from China "isn't going to help you."

            While Fiorina said she supports expanding trade for agricultural commodities, she has concerns about the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement awaiting approval from Congress.

            "When you're able to compete on a fair playing field, you win," Fiorina said. "When all is said and done, more trade is better than less. I'd feel a whole lot better knowing what's in it (TPP). We win when we get to trade."

            SANTORUM, HUCKABEE

            Fellow presidential candidate Rick Santorum threw a political Hail Mary of sorts with the hope of regaining the magic that led him to a 2012 Iowa Caucus win. He told the Iowa crowd he voted for the RFS when he was senator and hasn't wavered in his support of biofuels. However, most public opinion polls in Iowa show Santorum has very little traction at the moment.

            "Seems like the more experience you have, the lower your poll numbers," Santorum said. "I know you're angry. It's your country. How many candidates have a record you can trust? I understand you're frustrated. You sent folks to Washington who didn't do what they said they will do. If Iowa isn't going to stand up for the RFS, who's going to?

            "If you stand behind the candidate you know you can trust, then you show something Washington doesn't think you have. You want to show some muscle. There's only one candidate you should vote for. You make a statement that we want someone we can trust. You have been given great responsibility and great power. Use it wisely."

            Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, another GOP candidate who has lost some shine from 2012, also took a swipe at Cruz's opposition to the RFS and at other candidates who are spending time in Iowa but don't know much about agriculture.

            "A lot of people in America don't appreciate the value of agriculture," Huckabee said. "There is a clear divide between urban and rural. People are not appreciating what agriculture does."

            Huckabee said the RFS is one of few times when a government policy that sets mandates has worked.

            "The program actually worked," he said. "It's rare when the government comes up with a mandate that works, but this does. It has given agriculture a marketplace. Maybe we ought to get rid of the candidates that don't have a clue about agriculture."

            Leading up to the Iowa caucuses, Huckabee said he believes Iowans will support the candidates they trust on issues affecting agriculture and ethanol.

            "They're not going to vote for someone who will cost them 75,000 jobs" in the biofuels industry, he said. "I said these things that I said eight years ago. You're not going to find something that will shock you. I've been vetted."

            Earlier in the day, Vilsack, a former Democratic governor of Iowa, said farmers and ethanol producers should question presidential candidates on specifics such as where they stand on blender pumps, E15 and other issues.

            "They'll come prepared to talk about the RFS, at least most of them," he said. "Some will try to change their positions. If they can talk about these things, then you've got something."

            Todd Neeley can be reached at todd.neeley@dtn.com

            Follow him on Twitter @ToddNeeleyDTN

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