Will Trump Create a Permanent Republican Majority?

More voters have no college degrees than do.

To belabor the obvious, a winning political coalition must win the loyalty of most voters, regardless of education level. President Franklin Roosevelt did this.

To those of us who want to stop endless wars, spend money domestically so the U.S. provides the same social benefits as European social democracies offer and regulate business to protect consumers and prevent runaway rents, enlisting all voters into a dominant coalition is a progressive necessity.

It is not enough to win landslide elections. Obama did that, Reagan did that, even Jimmy Carter did that. “To achieve … enduring realignment, a party’s approach to policy has to mesh with its approach to politics. …[The policies must] actually benefit the constituencies … .” Put simply, you can fool the people some of the time, but if the administration takes care of the prosperous and ignores the rest of us, the voters will look for new leadership. This is the conclusion of two political scientists focused on the obstacles to a progressive coalition. Ruy Teixeira and John B. Judis’s aptly titled book Where Have All the Democrats Gone? draws its lessons from recent political history.

In 1971, for the first time in the 20th century, the United States started importing more than it exported, running a negative trade balance. The new left, invigorated by its agitation over the Vietnam War and Jim Crow was joining forces with the labor movement. This coalition, which now included black voters, might dominate the Democratic Party and control its agenda.

Business took notice and organized. They hired lobbyist and ramped up campaign contributions. With these moves, the business community and its wealthy allies were no longer vulnerable and became dominant.

During the ‘70s, the U.S. economy spurred by Vietnam War expenditures, operated at full tilt, unemployment was low, and wages were rising even in the non-union South. Companies began to flee the United States to set up subsidiaries in low-wage nations. Even with the expense of transportation, the imported goods offered bigger profits than the goods made in the U.S. Globalization was starting and it would have a disastrous effect. A factory leaving New York City was a hiccup compared to a plant closing in Akron, Ohio or heavy industry leaving big cities like Pittsburgh. “By 1974, the largest American companies, including Ford, Kodak, and Procter & Gamble, employed more than a third of their workforce overseas.”

Industries moving overseas was a body blow to communities all over the United States. Unlike New York City, when smaller communities lost their biggest employer, their civic life suffered. Too often the young despaired, turning to drugs and even suicide. The future looked bleak and states like Iowa, Democratic since FDR, gradually welcomed the Republican Party.

Republicans were no more willing than the Democrats to pursue policies that helped workers. The book offers a clear definition of the working class: working for wages not an annual salary, having no college education, and no real authority over the products they make.

Unlike Senator Bernie Sanders, who includes schoolteachers in the working class, the authors’ definition describes a group whose potent asset is their numbers. United they can make their political party a winner. Judis/Teixeira believe in this possibility, but the political party must win these voters’ loyalty just as FDR did in 1933.

It was Trump’s innovation that put this group’s problems on the political frontburner. He didn’t blame the employers; he blamed China and tax laws for taking jobs overseas. Categories popular among workers became recognized by political elites. There are the “nationalists” and the “globalizers.” Workers fighting for jobs in the U.S. were nationalists, all too often the globalizers were college graduates. Far more numerous than they had been in the 1960’s they formed a voting bloc. They were comfortable with cultural changes, from feminism to opposing racism and choices about sexuality. These differences are fault lines that should be bridged, but so far the Democratic Party fails to unite the diversity in its ranks.

Teixeira and Judis reject the notion that racism has driven whites into Republican arms. These political scientists argue that when George Wallace stopped running for President after 1972, the nation and the white working class learned to live with Civil Rights. That year George McGovern got clobbered by Richard Nixon in one of the most lopsided Presidential votes in U.S. history. The Democrat won only Massachusetts and Washington D.C.

But the book’s most important lesson is that landslide elections are only half the battle; the party’s policies must satisfy the voter.

While racism exists, it doesn’t make a Democratic victory impossible, as demonstrated by Obama’s victories in 2008 and 2012. If Nixon clobbered the Democrats in 1972, Obama trounced the Republicans in 2008. Neither victory brought a new political coalition that dominated the nation the way FDR’s New Deal made the United States Democratic.

Recent history shows voters shifting from one party to the next. A victory for Obama in 2008 was followed by a Republican landslide in the 2010 off-year election. Teixeira and Judis suggest neither party is establishing policies that offer real relief to a public hungry for economic growth and good paying jobs. As a result, first one party dominates, then another. In this theory, the decline in Democratic votes that marked Vice-President Harris’s defeat is temporary, unless Trump’s administration really brings peace and prosperity to the U.S. If his policies bring real change, then the ’24 election might signal a realignment placing the Republicans into a quasi-permanent majority, but don’t bet on it.

Obama offered a similar opportunity for the Democrats, but rather than staying populist and enlisting the public to join political disputes on issues that separated the working class from the rich, he sought compromises and followed the advice of budget hawks and the rich. He had the rhetorical skills and intelligence to win political quarrels, yet time and again he avoided public disputes by seeking policies acceptable to Democrats and Republicans. When he left, Clinton lost, and Trump won.

It was a missed opportunity. Like FDR, Obama took office during an economic crisis. He won the election by presenting a plan for economic recovery that made his Republican opponent look like an amateur. The economists in Obama’s administration “calculated that it would take a $1.8 trillion stimulus” to turn the economy around. After meeting with business interests and conservative appointees, the final plan allocated “between $600 billion and $800 billion.”

Obama kept the budget deficit down, but he also let down the voters. The 2010 Republican triumph illustrated the seesaw pattern.

Businesses going overseas created a great divide in the U.S. Communities dependent on technology and finance prospered. Their educated middle-class prospered. Goods manufactured overseas meant globalists could buy their goods cheaply. Immigrants working cheaply meant low food prices. Nothing illustrated the “globalist” blind spot than the preference for foreign cars.

Immigrant rights became an albatross, undermining a Democratic majority. Working class voters understood that these new arrivals work for less money and drove wages down. If Democrats understood this they certainly did so quietly. They didn’t want to offend left voters who wanted an open-door policy. Nobody publicized the extent that immigrant rights were backed by corporate America. Making the left a partner of the corporate elites.

Democrats may benefit from Trump’s failures, but a true victory requires that Democrats make government responsive to the people, even if it makes budget deficits go up.

Hunter’s Pardon Can Lead To A New Justice System

Joe Biden, showing a father’s love, pardoned his son Hunter shortly before a federal judge was expected to impose a jail sentence on this man for misdeeds committed years ago while he was getting trashed daily. That kind of drug use is in Hunter’s past, and his pride and his sense of achievement following the breaking of his habit radiates through the media cloud that has shadowed him for years.

It is my belief that this act of charity and love could be the start of something big—ending a blight on American Justice that equates being tough on crime with being mean to criminals. Jailing a person for lying on a form in order to complete a legal purchase of a gun or being a wealthy tax cheat who paid his bill, albeit late; evidence showed these offenses presented no threat to public safety. Hence, a jail term imposed in accordance with sentencing guidelines is just plain mean.

Mean to him and mean to others in similar situations. Want to know why the United States jails more people than other developed countries? Without the pardon, Hunter would join the incarcerated. It would be good for justice and good for the United States to use Hunter’s case as the reason for reform.

Hunter was forced to hire a lawyer and go before the Judge. For him as well as countless others, it is a sobering experience and often is sufficient punishment.  The procedure makes it clear as crystal that these acts are illegal and criminal. It is reasonable to assume Hunter or other defendants would receive and understand the message.

But the law pushes judges to be mean and impose jail time lasting many months for what are only malfeasances. Hunter will at best be a footnote in histories of Genocide Joe’s presidency, but we shouldn’t let that happen. It should be the start of a new mood in U.S. criminal justice. This country jails more people than any developed nation. It is repugnant to the notion of justice that this nation is number one in this category.

There are reasons for optimism. Donald Trump has made a firm commitment to free the prisoners convicted for their acts during the Jan 6, 2020 assault on the U.S. Capitol. An illegal riot to stop Biden from becoming president. This group put their bodies on the line to help Trump stay in office. Their prosecution was political and sensible. A large group probably thousands in all thought they could coerce the government into overturning the election. They didn’t do this legally and they didn’t do it peacefully.

The Jan 6 prosecutions showed angry Trump supporters that the law governing elections had teeth. Recent history suggests the lesson has been learned. During his criminal trial in Manhattan Trump reached out to his supporters, and they didn’t show up. His militant backers had learned their lesson.

As a result of these trials, the more cautious friends of these militants, those who said, “Don’t be foolish, go the rally and stay away from the riot” became the smart ones; their advice was the smart move. This is how criminal justice should work.

These lessons will not go away even if Trump cuts these prisoners loose. The President can be loyal to his supporters, and they will still remember: they don’t want to go back to jail. Letting the rioters out of prison is a defensible act—proof that justice demands charity, being mean is a defect in a system striving for justice. In other words, Republicans might abandon their tough on crime mantra.

This is a dramatic development. Only the Republicans can do this; Dems fear Republican attack if they are “soft” on crime. In other words, Dems and Republicans might work together and still confront crime while also preserving compassion. It would be good for American justice, a new mood.

A reason for optimism is that Republicans are changing because the shoe has begun to fit. Their supporters and they have faced criminal sanctions, hence they want criminal justice reform. Getting tough has worked; it is time to show charity.

During the election, Trump got hit daily with the pseudo fact that he was a “convicted” criminal. It is a half-truth. Yes, a jury found him guilty, but his case was on appeal, and early indications suggest that the appeals will help Trump. It is possible that the charges will be minimized on appeal. Trump would seize on these decisions to justify his claims that the cases were political.

In truth, laws are political. They are written by politicians in legislative bodies. Consequently, these officials can change the laws. The presidential candidate and his supporters felt the wrath of the criminal justice system.  It seems possible that Trump will free Black and Spanish speaking prisoners cementing his growing strength in these voter blocks. If this happens, Democrats should insist that every convict be given new options.

Hunter Biden’s pardon creates a political possibility that Dems and Republicans may work together to change the law, including making prison sentence softer and shorter.  

Democrats Must Fight Back Now

Don’t look back. Look ahead. Get ready for 2026. We can learn from the past if we are guided with a purpose: doing better next time.

Don’t spend time blaming the Vice-President’s campaign.

Donald Trump pounded the message: “Kamala is for ‘they/them.’ President Trump is for you.” It’s a brilliant tag line and a direct hit on Kamala Harris as being for those people who sign their messages They/them.

What can be done?

Senator Bernie Sanders insists voters are angry, but that anger is not Democratic or Republican. They know the economy is rigged; the rich get more while the rest of us just get by. They/them isn’t the problem. Democrats, he believes, must tap into this anger to prove they are for people who live paycheck to paycheck. Don’t let Republicans define the message. They/them isn’t the problem; high rents, evictions, and food costs are.

Why should food companies raise prices when their profits are soaring is a Bernie Sanders focus. Democrats should choose sides and make it clear that the food companies are a problem.

The Vermont socialist has an answer to Republican charges of elitism: “the Democrats lost this election because they ignored the justified anger of working class America.” In this election, the Party “became the defenders of a rigged economic and political system.”

Trump controlled the debate. He was able to convert the anxiety/hostility towards trans persons and immigrants into a general attack on Democrats. “Trump’s ‘genius’,” Sanders wrote “is his ability to divide the working class so that tens of millions of Americans will reject solidarity with their fellow workers and pave the way for huge tax breaks for the very rich and large corporations.”

Don’t let the Republicans define the issues. Focus on making the economy work for everyone.

Trump’s campaign got away with nonsense. He rebelled against the woke culture. “They/them” isn’t a serious problem. Healthcare that doesn’t “cover home health care, dental, hearing, and vision” is a national failure. Democrats should urge the public focus on these issues.

Sanders presses the Democrats to change the conversation. Why should the Citizens United decision allow billionaires to buy elections? He offers fourteen proposals that work, but only if the Party feeds voter anger.

He would campaign to raise the minimum wage and pass the Protecting the Right to Organize Act to make it easier for workers to unionize. These ideas don’t raise taxes or government spending. Other ideas, like expanding Medicaid and Medicare coverage, have big costs. But he argues they are so popular that the costs, offset by smaller payments to the pharmaceutical industry, would be acceptable to a majority.

His fourteen proposals are tactically sound. Some would provoke Republican tax arguments; others would make the economy fairer, that is where the Democrats will gai strength.

And he wants Democrats to start now. They should offer the public a choice between Democrat and Republican plans. The Democrats should offer a real choice that exposes the Republican’s vacuous ideas. For example, support making all public colleges tuition free. In this way, Democrats can build solidarity in many groups simultaneously. The focus becomes the idea and “they/them” stops being a roadblock and becomes a bump in the road.

In this election, the Republicans increased their vote. Trump received 75.6 million, [as of November 15 76.4] compared to 74.2 million in 2020. The Republican gains were moderate while Democratic losses were a landslide. Harris received 71.8 million, [as of Nov 15 73.7] compared to Biden’s 81.3 million votes in 2020. 9.5 million [7.6M as of Nov 15] fewer votes ought to spur the Democrats into publicizing an American future drastically different from Trump’s MAGA vision. Democrats shouldn’t wait even though they are in the minority; they should start offering a real choice.

Clearly, the Democratic left and center must cooperate in developing these new rationales. This is a task for the whole party. Centrist Democrats have to stop blaming the left for their problems. Why not use the left for inspiration?

Immigration Crisis

In case you missed it, the growing number of immigrants in this country is a major political issue. Whether Kamala Harris or Donald Trump becomes the new President, they and their political party must deal with the political fallout.

The arrival of hundreds of thousand of Venezuelans will move the nation to the right. They and most U.S. journalists have an easy explanation for their plight: socialism. Venezula used to be a wealthy Latin American nation until it took control away from the U.S. oil companies pumping black gold from the nation’s large reserves. This political act forced Venezuela into poverty. According to the U.S. version of events, President Nicolas Maduro led a reign of political oppression, stifling Venezuelans who supported the privileged position of the big oil companies.

It wasn’t U.S. wealth and prosperity that brought the Venezuelans to the U.S. border. It was the turmoil and economic downturn in their country that persuaded Venezuelans to make the long journey.  

A U.S. embargo against the “authoritarian” regime of President Maduro prevents the country from using U.S. dollars in its trade. Like most countries, Venezuela depends on imports for vital supplies; no dollars meant no supplies. Venezuelan doctors have complained about severe shortages of medicine. In any case, the political turmoil from the U.S. blockade has led to the emigration of seven million Venezuelans.

In Haiti, the breakdown of the government led to severe lawlessness. Gangs took over the country. Thousands fled, many reaching the United States border. These are the people Trump claimed ate the pets of Ohio residents. In Texas, the flood of Haitians has created grave tensions among Mexican Americans, many of whom have families and friends in Mexico. Border crossings that used to take a matter of minutes can now take hours.

Immigration will be a central issue in the United States, no matter who wins the election. The arrival of Venezuelans who believe their nation was ruined by socialism means they will be a conservative force. If either Democrats or Republicans make a plausible case that a new policy is socialist, we can expect the Venezuelans in the United States to oppose it. Most likely these new immigrants, like the Cubans who fled Fidel Castro, will become stalwart Republicans. Democrats will no longer assume that immigrant voters are supporters.

The point of this article is that a world government, in all likelihood, would prevent these mass migrations. The collapse of the Haitian government would automatically lead the United Nations, assuming it had become the global sovereign, to send armed forces to restore order in Haiti and provide assistance to this beleaguered nation.

The complaints of the United States about Venezuela could then be adjudicated by a world court, which could use soldiers to enforce its decisions. In this way, world government prevents crises that force thousands, if not millions, of people to leave their homes searching for safety. For example, migrations, from North Africa especially, shattered German political coalitions and forced Angela Merkel, surely one of the great leaders of this century, to resign.

It is easy to understand that Americans would be skittish about giving up sovereignty and placing it in the hands of the United Nations, whose authority would increase drastically if it became the sovereign responsible for making the Earth’s people cooperate and stop crises from developing.

Crises in far away countries are causing political turmoil in the wealthy nations. A world government can moderate, perhaps even prevent, the turmoil that convinces families to leave their native land in the hopes of finding a better future.

This is hardly the only benefit of world government. Indeed, a chief objective is preventing wars that plague the world. But by forcing nations to justify their actions and consider the impacts on other countries there would be a substantial increase in world cooperation. One obvious benefit is international cooperation to deal with climate change and reclaim desert lands. As these arid regions acquire water, transported across national boundaries, they will help feed the world’s growing population.

We live in a global economy and the advent of new information technologies like computers means that one institution, the U.N., can keep track of the world’s problems and offer assistance.

Such assistance will not always be welcome. Israel recently banned U.N. relief workers from their nation. The United States’s 62-year blockade of Cuba was recently rejected by 187 nations in the General Assembly. Only the United States and Israel supported the continued isolation of Cuba, which has found itself so short of petroleum that there have been electrical blackouts.

A major reason for the U.S. blockade are the Cuban-American votes in Florida, which are hardly a majority but are sufficiently large to make candidates lose if they support reform of U.S. Cuban policy. World government removes this obstacle.

World government is no panacea. Undoubtedly, nations will have conflicts and political groups will demand governmental reforms. But what world government promises when these conflicts occur is that the nations or their dissident citizens resolve their arguments with lawyers, not bullets. This is surely such a great benefit that the United States and other nations in the world should consider giving up their sovereignty in favor of making the United Nations the chief government in the world.

Trump DEFIES THE CONSTITUTION BY SAYING THE ELECTION WAS STOLEN.

I have previously taken the Republicans to task for their constant opposition to taxes. A government with funds is clearly stronger than a poor government. There is a second serious problem with Republicans. The Republicans are not listening.

Every ten years, as required by the Constitution, a census is taken that determines how many members of Congress each state has. In January 2010, as the new census was started, the Supreme Court issued a decision called Citizens United, which permitted unlimited secret donations by corporations and wealthy individuals. The census determines how many members of the House of Representatives each state should have and how many Electoral College votes each state will have to elect the President of the United States. The total number of Electoral votes for a state is the two Senators plus the number of members of the House of Representatives, so if a state has 10 members [n the House of Representatives then it has 12 electoral votes. The census has always been a big deal in determining the relative strength of the political parties and who has the advantage when running for President. The process is considered fair because the census counts the number of individuals in the United States.

So when the conservative judges on the Supreme Court handed down the Citizens United decision in 2010, they knew full well that the money they were permitting would go to help conservatives get positive results from the census from 2010.

Boston College professor Heather Cox Richardson, in a crisp book for the interested reader states that by 2012 there were over 300 million dollars in dark money political donations. The 2012 election was a presidential election for Barack Obama’s second term and the election of a new Congress. Democrats received 1.4 million more votes for members of the House of Representatives, but the Republicans won a 33-seat majority. The Republican’s big victory enabled them to “hamstring” Obama’s agenda in his second term. This is political hardball and offends millions of fair-minded Americans, but it is far-removed from the sins committed by Donald Trump.

Professor Richardson’s “Democracy Awakening” is one of the books that damns Republicans and is written by a historian with Democratic leanings. It is thoughtful and persuasive. But a second book is written by a member of Republican royalty, whose family have been leaders in the Republican party since the Civil War.

Liz Cheney, whose father was vice-president to George W. Bush, is one in a long line of Republicans. She lives in Wyoming. While Professor Richardson takes the historian’s long view, Liz Cheney’s book puts the microscope on President Trump and his activities after the November 3, 2020 election. In “Oath and Honor,” she relies heavily on fellow Republicans to prove that Donald Trump was told by members of his campaign staff and presidential advisors that Joe Biden had won. This deep dive into Republican leadership gives her bestselling book an intimate view of efforts by Republicans who wanted the truth of Biden’s victory to guide decisions but were stymied by President Trump’s reliance on the big lie that his election was stolen.

Cheney, the third-ranking member of the House Republican leadership, presents a devastating portrait of Kevin McCarthy begging for Trump’s approval when his funding prowess dissipated and his willingness to say one thing one week and the exact opposite the next week. McCarthy resigned from the Congress in December 2023.

Cheney is not settling scores. She describes incidents, many of which were seen by the viewers of Fox television or the readers of the daily press. The power of her book comes from its reliance on Republican sources.

When it became clear that McCarthy and Cheney had irreconcilable differences, Cheney left her position in Republican leadership and became a member of the House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack.

At times her book reads like an adventure story, when members of Congress hunker down in a House Committee room while the mob tries to break down doors. At other times, she sounds like a super capable lawyer explaining the evidence collected by the Select Committee on the January 6 Attack—facts pile on facts, almost always from Republicans or members of the Trump administration, demonstrating that a bullheaded President refused to listen to the legal opinions stating that the election results were conclusive.

The dry language in the opening paragraphs of the U.S. Constitution turn into clear directive that the President is elected by the count of the members of the Electoral College, who are selected in the Presidential election. What seems obscure, to this reader, in the Constitution gains clarity as the lawyers explained the process to the President. An argument that gains heft as we learn that this is the way it has always been done since Washington was elected President.

Liz Cheney describes the steady accretion of evidence unearthed by the Select Committee. A desperate Trump of course insisted that the State legislatures could ignore the Electoral College, or he even told elected officials “to find” the votes he needed to win. Trump’s absurdity and corruption of legal procedures comes into full view. It’s a scary portrait she draws of an egotistical man who will listen to nobody but those who will support his wish for a victory despite the evidence of defeat. The conclusion isn’t novel, but the clarity of the evidence and the reasons why Trump is wrong make this a powerful book. Both Professor Richardson and Liz Cheney describe a dangerous situation where Trump would like to be President and rule the USA without opposition.

Liz Cheney argues that despite the knowledge by Republicans that this is dangerous and illegal they are unable to stop Trump. Thus, this year’s election has one party, the Democrats, supporting free elections, and the other major party bowing to Trump and asserting that his election was stolen. Democracy in the United States faces the greatest danger since the Civil War.

Face Masks for All

Bernie Sanders is displaying his savvy political instincts and moving the United States in a good direction.

His proposal “Face Masks for All” giving everybody 3 reusable masks- is a masterstroke. The Government buys them, the post office delivers them. The nation gets the message use these without the hostility and law enforcement threats.

Trump’s learning disabilities cripple his understanding the policies that to stop the virus: shutting down the economy creates social distance therefore subsidies should replace the lost income. In that manner the hardships of social distancing become tolerable. A feisty spirit that we are all in this together becomes possible.

Trump foolishly lent the prestige of his office to dividing the nation over the use of face masks. Stifling the outrage that says wearing a face mask is a necessary project.

A sequence of events around the Roger Stone pardon have a surprisingly positive ring. Stone appeared in public with a chic black face mask reading “Free Roger Stone.” Softly, but clearly this archdeacon in the political operators church reminded conservatives that face masks are no socialist plot.

Of equal importance, the black mask was vaguely menacing satisfying Trump’s fear of empathy. You could wear it and be virile.

 Shortly after that Trump wore a face mask in public. Anybody who thought Trump was becoming rational were quickly disabused when he suggested postponing the election adding to the evidence that his favorite government is dictatorship with him in charge.

Now Bernie is urging Congress to say please wear the masks and we will help you do it. Even with a vaccine next year, it will still be 2022 before masks become optional. Creating a consensus around this habit is desirable.

That process is now underway and hopefully will be part of the final deal for the new subsidy package.

A mask is no more a restriction on liberty than insisting persons cover their genital in public or people wear seat belts. It is an opportunity for showing off just like any other clothing which was exactly Roger Stone’s point.

Bernie’s proposal is a chance for our political system to make lemonade. We need examples like this because the vaccine will create tensions with the anti-vaxxers. Fashioning an agreement will be difficult finding a way out of the face mask dilemma would be a good precedent.

With his Masks for All proposal Bernie is showing how medicine with no out of pocket expenses can make governing easier and popular.

No New Money, No New Ideas in Trump’s Opioid Response

This article appeared on GayCityNews.com on Oct. 30, 2017

BY NATHAN RILEY | Donald Trump’s declaration of a public health emergency to end the epidemic of opioid overdose deaths wraps itself in virtue, but avoids the burning question about the nation’s drug policy: What works?

During the 1990s, Switzerland and Portugal were among the nations that experienced the growth in opioid use seen here in the US as well. In those two nations, however, the response was radically different than in the US.

Switzerland and Portugal asked public health officials to solve the problem and minimized law enforcement activity in response. As a result, there, drug use seldom involves criminal sanctions and services are provided by health and social workers comfortable in working with drug users. The Swiss offered medically-assisted therapy with methadone, and for a smaller group of users medical heroin itself. Programs were geared toward aiding drug users in managing their habit. There were never grand declarations to “end” drug use.

The Swiss program — designed by doctors in tandem with users — conflicts with basic American attitudes toward drug use. A cardinal principle is that the user picks their dose. Overdose levels, of course, bring intervention, but the program design is clear that the user must determine their comfort level. After 20 years without a major backlash, heroin users, over the long run, tend to abandon their habit. And, crucially in the context of the link between drug use and other criminal behavior, most live without relying on illegal activity to pay for their habit.

Drug users have easy access to medically-assisted treatment. Those users permitted access to medical heroin in Switzerland must stop over a three-to-10-year period. The number of Swiss narcotics-related deaths in 1995 was 376; by 2012, it had fallen two-thirds to 121.

These nations have housing and psychological services available to all, one of the key demands of drug reformers. The presidential commission appointed by Trump and headed by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie endorsed that idea, but there is no money in Medicaid for these services.

Donald Trump had two ways to go — finding more money for health services or making bold but empty promises. If he had declared a “national emergency” — as he initially pledged — it would have created claims on a $53 billion federal fund. For the “public health emergency” he declared last week, there is currently $57,000 in the kitty. Hence the Times’ headline: “Trump Declares Opioid Crisis a ‘Health Emergency’ but Requests No Funds.”

A swift warning came from Gay Men’s Health Crisis about the “potential efforts under the Public Health Emergency Declaration to redirect funding from HIV/ AIDS programs.” The Daily News also voiced suspicion that money would be siphoned from AIDS/ HIV services.

But the biggest howl of fury came from the new executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, who blasted the president’s speech saying it showed “a profound and reckless disregard for the realities about drugs and drug use.” Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno, a human rights activist who replaced Ethan Nadelmann, challenged Trump, poopooing his recommendation that drug prevention programs revive the “just say no” evangelizing of Nancy Reagan and his faith that public service announcements would “prevent” drug use.

“He made a big deal” about taking a pharmaceutical opioid off the market, she scoffed, noting that such a strategy is years out of date. “The opioids involved in overdoses are mostly coming from the illicit market” today, McFarland Sánchez-Moreno said. Drug users have gone from the gray market to a wholly criminal underground market of drugs laced with fentanyl — a transformation that is a damning indictment of the prohibition and the criminalizing of drug use. Drug deaths have been rising for years. Last year, there were 64,000 overdose deaths — roughly equal to all Americans killed in the Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan conflicts combined.

Trump also showed his ignorance about how drugs enter the US, when he spoke lovingly of how his Mexican border wall would halt the inflow. McFarland Sánchez-Moreno was unconvinced; the illicit drug trade, she said, “always” finds ways to “get around the walls and barriers the US has put up to block it,” with many drugs smuggled inside freight containers as part of our heavy border commercial traffic with Mexico.

Pointing his finger at immigrants, she added, has a sinister motivation. Trump blames “immigrants for bringing drugs across the border, ignoring that immigrants are overwhelmingly more law-abiding than US citizens,” McFarland Sánchez-Moreno said. The entire presidential declaration, she said, provided yet another excuse for “talking about criminal justice answers to a public health problem, even though the war on drugs is itself a major factor contributing to the overdose crisis.” Trump is still trying to use a hammer to smash the drug problem, with immigrants hit with a special ferocity.

The president’s plan, McFarland Sánchez-Moreno charged, will spread pain and misery, “condemning even more people to death, imprisonment, and deportation in the name of his war on drugs.”

Sadly, as if on cue, Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the US Senate, answered Trump’s call, finding $12.5 million to fund a new DEA team to focus on the smuggling of fentanyl at Kennedy Airport. Look for the arrest of black and brown baggage handlers.

Nobody expects this one unit to make a real difference, but it points up drug reformers’ fears that in a nation that refuses to give up its belief that criminal law protects its young from drug addiction, law enforcement will get the bulk of any new funds identified. A public health approach, based on strategies that “work,” remains the low man on the budget totem pole.

Drug Reformers Declare Solutions Must Be Sweeping

This article originally appeared in Gay City News.

http://gaycitynews.nyc/drug-reformers-declare-solutions-must-sweeping/

Added by paul on October 26, 2017.Saved under Nathan Riley
Tags: Ethan Nadelmann, Jerry Brown, Drug Policy Alliance, medical marijuana, Donald Trump, opioid crisis, “The New Jim Crow”, Michelle Alexander, crack epidemic, mandatory sentences, mass incarceration, drug legalization, Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno
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Michelle Alexander delivering the plenary address in Atlanta. | DOUG McVAY/ INTERNATIONAL DRUG POLICY REFORM CONFERENCE

BY NATHAN RILEY | Activists from across the globe gathered in Atlanta October 11-14 to plot strategy for defanging drug prohibition in the United States. The conference, called by the Drug Policy Alliance, scrambled to balance recognition of the limited possibility for gains and the conviction that justice demands sweeping reforms.

Michelle Alexander, whose 2010 book “The New Jim Crow” laid out in damning detail the harsh penalties imposed on black and brown communities under the guise of fighting drugs, gave the plenary address, which took on the puzzle of President Donald Trump’s election.

In a fierce display of racial solidarity, she said, voters in 30 states supported Trump’s “deliberate appeal to white racial resentment and anxieties” while at the same time voters legalized pot in four states and led four more states to enable medical marijuana programs. A greater turnout by black and brown voters would have defeated Trump in states like Florida, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.

PERSPECTIVE: The Long View

The results don’t represent a paradox, insisted Alexander, but fit the longstanding pattern of Jim Crow justice. Last year, 64,000 Americans died from drug overdoses, she said in a fiery speech, a number greater than the total of all the soldiers killed in Vietnam.

“Yes there is an outcry, but it is relatively muted compared to the crack epidemic,” she said.

Crack “killed just a tiny fraction of those dying of opioid overdoses and yet a literal war was declared on poor people of color — a militaristic war” during the height of crack use, she argued. There were “round-ups of people herded into courtrooms.

“Things are very different this time around. The white face of medical marijuana and the white male face of drug heroes such as those in ‘Breaking Bad’ make it possible for white folk to feel a kind of empathy that was utterly impossible 20 years ago in the midst of the crack epidemic.”

Alexander warned that the contrast between white people’s ability to sympathize with Caucasian users and their indifference to the suffering in black and brown communities is more than a weakness in drug policy. As Trump’s election demonstrates, she said, that disparity in attitudes threatens democratic government.

A racially mixed crowd of 1,500 gathered in Atlanta as Alexander insisted that whites must break out of the cocoon that shields them from appreciating the suffering of other communities.

Citing sentencing reformer Marc Mauer’s book, “Race to Incarcerate,” she explained, “The most punitive nations in the world are the most diverse; the nations with the most compassionate, or the most lenient criminal justice policies, are the most homogenous. You know, we like to say that diversity is our strength when it may actually be our Achilles heel.” Jim Crow justice, Alexander said, threatens civil liberties in the US and it fosters a failed government that could undermine “the future of the globe.”

The argument that whites must check their privilege and make common cause with immigrants, blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans was a constant conference theme. A true interracial majority coalition is a key objective of the Drug Policy Alliance.

There are hopeful signs. Harm reduction programs are spreading in the South, and in California a new law reduced mandatory sentences, with Governor Jerry Brown signing the RISE Act just as the conference convened. The measure ends sentencing enhancements that have added three years to drug convictions for every prior conviction. Long sentences are cruel and cause the pernicious pattern of mass incarceration.

Other good news: in Atlanta, the mayor signed a bill decriminalizing marijuana possession, and there are rumors that communities across New York State are prepared to move toward experimental safe consumption spaces where drug users are in the presence of an overdose prevention worker who can intervene immediately if things go wrong.

This conference was the first hosted by Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno, who has replaced Ethan Nadelmann as the Drug Policy Alliance’s executive director. McFarland Sánchez-Moreno has done human right work in drug war battlefields in Peru and Columbia, and during her tenure as co-director of US Programs at Human Rights Watch, her team pushed against racial discrimination in policing, excessive sentencing, and unfair deportation policies that tear families apart.

The Drug Policy Alliance first championed medical marijuana as a first step in unwinding prohibition, but the organization’s program has expanded and now calls for decriminalization of all drugs. Essentially, the group wants the police to arrest no one for drug possession, but instead steer a drug user to a harm reduction program. This is the policy in Portugal and is being tested in Seattle.

The unhappy truth, however, is that this approach would have only a tangential impact on harsh Jim Crow justice.

Possession seldom brings long sentences; these sentences are imposed on sellers. The opioid crisis has brought a new wave of arbitrary penalties. Sellers are seen as murderers because their product includes fentanyl. Yet they don’t make the product, and in the northeast US virtually 100 percent of the street product is fentanyl or laced with it.

Dealers have no control over the ingredients, but they are sentenced as though they created the system.

A sweeping opposition to the criminalization of poverty and drug use forms the radical core of the Drug Policy Alliance, and Atlanta made that ultimate objective abundantly clear.