By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, December 06, 2024
Do you know who complains the loudest about self-dealing
in the “swamp” of Washington? People who want in on it.
Donald Trump’s “drain the swamp” talk has always been the
most cynical kind of public-relations horsepucky. For one thing, Trump was for
most of his life a minor swamp creature: not a big player like the National
Association of Realtors or those ethanol bastards, but a guy who bragged about
buying political favors both in New York and in Washington—it probably says
enough to note that he put
money into Kamala Harris’ campaign coffers back before he ran against
her.
But there is another element in play more serious than
mere hypocrisy: Donald Trump is, at heart, a corporatist, and collusion between
Big Business and the state is his preferred mode of economic activity. There is
a reason he speaks with such undisguised
admiration of Beijing’s party-dominated, top-down state capitalism and
seems to believe that the U.S. energy industry operates—and should
operate—according to the same principles at play in Russia and Saudi Arabia,
where politically
managed cartels and state-dominated
enterprises are superimposed on the markets. Trump is not a free-market
guy—he is a guy who assumes that the government’s job is to broker deals
encompassing both private profit and public interest. His economics are an
illiterate version of something you might take from Émile Durkheim or even
Frederick Winslow Taylor. And that isn’t unusual: The notion of treating the
overall economy or the nation as a whole as though it were one big factory had
more than a little appeal to such titans of American business as Henry Ford and
John Pierpont Morgan. The notion that we should “run government like a
business” is common Chamber of Commerce stuff—and, perversely enough, it
is the heart of Marxism, too. Or so V. I. Lenin thought.
As a practical matter, the corporatist mode always goes
along with corruption. And, to no one’s great surprise, the Trump Organization
is positioning itself to profit from Trump’s next administration, even to the
extent of abandoning
its prior commitment to forgoing foreign deals during Trump’s time in the White
House. All that talking-to-rubes-in-Midwestern-diners stuff is over: Eric
Trump isn’t going to be in rural Maine talking to “real Americans” next week
but in Dubai, drumming up business. The Trumps’ crypto venture, World Liberty
Financial, already has them in business with a shady
Chinese “entrepreneur”—the guy who ate that $6 million banana, currently
under fraud and market-manipulation investigation by the SEC.
The first Trump administration was not exactly a paragon
of propriety, and the second one will have fewer ethical guardrails than the
first.
And, of course, personnel is policy. For all that “drain
the swamp” talk, Trump consistently recruits precisely the kind of grasping
political insiders and revolving-door careerists he claims to despise, from
lobbyists such as attorney general nominee Pam Bondi (whose
clients included Amazon and the Qatari state) to a raft of sundry
billionaires including
hedge-fund chief Scott Bessent, corporate and political insiders of various
stripes—the usual suspects. Trump is, of course, a felon, as is Robert F.
Kennedy Jr., the conspiracy kook Trump means to put in charge of HHS, while his
key trade adviser, straight-up crackpot Peter Navarro, is freshly out of
prison. Which is to say, Trump apparently means to “drain the swamp” with
lobbyists and hedge-fund bosses, political cronies, and convicted
criminals.
I’d bet on the swamp. The swamp’s going to be just
fine.
But the real problem isn’t the opportunities Trump’s
sycophants and hangers-on will have for grift, nest-feathering, and petty
corruption. The big problem is that corporatist philosophy itself. When the
ladies and gentlemen who run the state of California sit across the table and
“negotiate” deals with the public-sector unions and other entrenched
interests—many of them the politicians’ former or future employers and business
partners—they aren’t (usually) breaking the law or even violating any particular
code of ethics. Neither (usually) are the people who administer programs such
as Texas’s
economic-development funds, which reliably do a lot of very nice things for
people who support the right politicians. What they are doing is (usually)
legal, but it is morally wrong and economically destructive, shunting vast
streams of capital away from their most productive uses toward … whatever it is
the politicians who control the process and the funds happen to prefer at any
moment for any reason. Even with the best of intentions, this way of doing
things generally goes wrong–and only a fool could believe that the best of intentions
are at work with Trump and his associates.
The notion that the ladies and gentlemen in Washington or
any other world capital are like chess masters looking down on some vast
chessboard—that they are like the gods playing with figurines
in the miniature amphitheater in Clash of the Titans—is one
of the most destructive delusions in the history of political ideas. Healthy
economies and societies are organic and constantly in flux, responding to
information that is local and specific and contingent and as ungraspable as
quicksilver. We have seen the man-behind-the-curtain model of politico-economic
life fail a thousand times in a thousand contexts. The same con artists and
fanatics promise efficiency and rationality, fairness, competitiveness vs. our
foreign rivals, and reforms that will “drain the swamp.” And what do they
deliver?
More swamp.
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