This from Robert Reich. Please follow link to original.
Donald Trump’s warning that he
might not accept the results of
the presidential election exemplifies his approach to everything: Do whatever
it takes to win, even if that means undermining the integrity of the entire system.
Trump isn’t alone. The same approach underlies Senator John
McCain’s
recent warning that Senate Republicans will unite against any Supreme
Court nominee Hillary Clinton might put up, if she becomes president.
The Republican Party as a whole has embraced this philosophy for
more than two decades. After Newt Gingrich took over as Speaker of the House in
1995, compromise was replaced by brinksmanship, and normal legislative
maneuvering was supplanted by threats to close down the government – which occurred at the end
of that year.
Like Trump, Gingrich did whatever it took to win, regardless
of the consequences. In 1996, during the debates over welfare reform, he racially stereotyped African-Americans. In
2010 he fueled the birther movement by saying President Obama exhibited “Kenyan,
anticolonial behavior.” Two years later, in his unsuccessful bid for the
Republican presidential nomination, he called President Obama the “food stamp
president.“
As political observers Norman Ornstein of the
American Enterprise Institute and Thomas Mann of Brookings have
noted, “the forces
Mr. Gingrich unleashed destroyed whatever comity existed across party lines.” Gingrich’s
Republican Party became “ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved
by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of
the legitimacy of its political opposition.”
In truth, it’s not
just Republicans and not just relationships
between the two major parties that have suffered from the prevailing
ethos. During
this year’s Democratic primaries, former Democratic
National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz and her staff showed
disdain for the integrity of the political process by discussing ways to
derail Bernie
Sanders’s campaign, according to hacked emails.
The same ethos is taking over the private sector. When they
pushed employees to open new accounts, Wells Fargo
CEO John Strumpf and his management team chose to win regardless of
the long-term consequences of their strategy. The scheme seemed to work, at
least in the short term. Strumpf and his colleagues made a bundle.
Mylan Pharmaceuticals CEO
Heather Bresch didn’t worry about the
larger consequences of jacking up the cost of life-saving EpiPens from $100 for
a two-pack to $608, because it made her and her team lots of money.
Martin Shkreli, former CEO of Turin Pharmaceuticals, didn’t
worry about the consequences of price-gouging customers. Called before Congress
to explain, he invoked the Fifth Amendment, then tweeted that the lawmakers who
questioned his tactics were “imbeciles.”
A decade ago, Wall Street’s leading bankers didn’t worry about
the consequences of their actions for the integrity of the American financial
system. They encouraged predatory mortgage lending by bundling risky
mortgages with other securities and then selling them to unwary investors because it
made them a boatload of money, and knew they were too big to fail.
Even when some of these trust-destroyers get nailed with fines
or penalties, or public rebuke, they don’t bear the larger costs of undermining
public trust. So they continue racing to the bottom.
Some bankers who presided over the Wall Street debacle, such
as Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, remain at
the helm – and are
trying to water down regulations designed to
stop them from putting the economy at risk again.
Meanwhile,
according to the New York Times, Newt Gingrich is positioning
himself to be the politician best able to mobilize Trump supporters going
forward.
“I don’t defend him [Trump] when he wanders off,” Gingrich
recently told ABC News. But “there’s a big Trump and there’s a little Trump,”
he
said, explaining that the “big Trump” is the one who has created issues that
make “the establishment” very uncomfortable. “The big Trump,” he said, “is a
historic figure.”
By stretching the boundaries of what’s
acceptable, all the people I’ve mentioned – and too many others just
like them – have undermined prevailing norms and weakened the
tacit rules of the game.
The net result has been a vicious
cycle of public distrust. Our economic and political systems appear to
be rigged, because, to an increasing extent, they are. Which makes the public ever
more cynical – and, ironically, more willing to believe half-baked conspiracy
theories such as Trump’s bizarre claim that the upcoming election is rigged.
Leadership of our nation’s major institutions is not just about winning. It’s also about making these
institutions stronger and more trustworthy.
In recent years we have witnessed a massive
failure of such leadership. Donald Trump is only the latest and most extreme example.
The cumulative damage of today’s ethos of doing whatever
it takes to win, even at the cost of undermining the integrity of our system, is incalculable.
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