From WSWS
The Trump administration's attack on the democratic rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people is the implementation of a reactionary political strategy. It seeks to combine appeals to homophobic hysteria, religious bigotry, the glorification of police and xenophobic American nationalism to encourage the growth of a fascist movement.
Embroiled in perpetual crisis, the Trump administration is attempting to establish a base of political operations centered around the demagogic president and outside the existing structure of the two-party system. By firing former Republican Party Chairman Reince Priebus as chief of staff and replacing him with Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, Trump has taken another step toward his goal of establishing a personalist executive, comprised of a close group of fascists, generals, family relations and billionaire oligarchs.
The pattern of Trump's maneuvers this week proves the attack on LGBT rights is central to this strategy.
On Wednesday, the Department of Justice filed an advisory "friend of the court" brief in a private New York lawsuit, arguing that corporations can fire LGBT people because of their sexual orientation, on the pseudo-legal grounds that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 does not protect LGBT people. After half a century marked by growing social acceptance and advances in the legal rights of LGBT people, millions of LGBT workers are again at risk of immediate firing because of their second-class legal status.
Earlier on Wednesday, Donald Trump tweeted an announcement that his administration would bar transgender people from military service "in any capacity," on the reactionary grounds that transgender people cost the military too much and because of the "disruption that transgender in the military would entail."
The same day, Trump announced the nomination of Kansas Governor Sam Brownback as the State Department's ambassador at large for international religious freedom. This move is aimed at bringing the evangelical and Catholic organizations that bankrolled Brownbank's short-lived 2008 presidential campaign into a bloc with Trump. After the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in 2015, Brownback issued an executive order prohibiting the state government from suing or punishing churches that refuse to provide marriages and other social services for LGBT people.
White House sources told the Daily Beast that Trump and Bannon are working closely with Vice President Mike Pence, who has the closest ties to the evangelical establishment and who personally orchestrated the transgender ban tweets. According to the unnamed sources, Trump, Pence and Bannon thought that the move would be popular "with his base." The fact that military advisors said they were not consulted about the tweets, confirms the fact that Wednesday's policy announcements were conceived within the West Wing.
Wednesday's policy announcements were bookended by two major speeches, the first on Tuesday night in Youngstown, Ohio, which set the political tone for the moves. Paying tribute to "our values, our culture, our borders, our civilization and our great American way of life," Trump told a raucous crowd that "family and faith, not government and bureaucracy, are the foundation of our society." He continued: "In America, we don't worship government, we worship god." This out of the mouth of a man who has never worshiped anything but money and himself.
Speaking yesterday in Long Island, New York, Trump addressed another of his key constituencies: police and immigration officers. He announced a major escalation of immigration raids to be carried out under the pretext of fighting the El Salvadoran gang MS-13.
"We have blood-stained killing fields," Trump said, describing in gruesome detail the violent tactics of the gang. Police and immigration officials "are liberating our American towns," he added, and told officers he loved watching criminal suspects "get thrown into the back of a paddy wagon." He appealed to the country's over 1.1 million full-time police officers in the United States, 50,000 border patrol agents, and 20,000 ICE officials: "Please don't be too nice."
The official response of the Democratic Party has been remarkably restrained, with criticism limited to arguing that Trump's transgender ban would weaken the military.
Given the significance of Trump's attacks, the muted character of the Democratic Party's response contains a real warning. None of the democratic rights gained over the last century are secure so long as their enforcement is left in the hands of one or another faction of the ruling class, and are therefore vulnerable to shifts in the political winds.
The Democratic Party has dropped all references to democratic questions such as immigration, LGBT rights and abortion in its new "Better Deal" agenda, announced last week. Defending the new program, Democratic Minority Whip Steny Hoyer told reporters that social issues such as the rights of LGBT people and immigrants "won't be the focus" of the new agenda. "Essentially," he added, "what we don't want to do is distract people... we don't want to distract ourselves." In other words, the Democratic Party leadership is appealing to social reaction and religious bigotry to win votes in the 2018 midterm elections.
Several Democratic leaders have expressed concerns over the "Better Deal" program's failure to mention any democratic or social questions, and many will oppose the Trump administration's attack on LGBT rights. But the decision to promote a policy based on a pledge to "aggressively crack down on unfair foreign trade" (as the program states) will only fan the flames of nationalist chauvinism and further strengthen Trump's maneuvers.
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