Texas Tribune Festival: Warmongering, racialist politics and calls for … – WSWS

Advertisement for The Texas Tribune Festival featuring Nikole Hannah-Jones and Republican Texas Senator Ted Cruz. [Photo: Texas Tribune]

On September 21, a broad assortment of reactionary figures, ranging from far-right to pseudo-left, converged on the capital city of Austin, Texas. The occasion was the annual Texas Tribune Festival, hosted by the eponymous newspaper which was founded by venture capitalist John Thorton in 2009. Speakers included election denier Ted Cruz, racialist falsifier of history Nikole Hannah-Jones, and DSA member and congressman Gregg Casar, along with other anti-working-class politicians, corporate media hacks, and academics.

The festival held events at three venues in downtown Austin: the Omni Hotel, St. David’s Episcopal Church, and the Paramount Theater. All are located just one street over from 6th Street, infamous for its homelessness. It was a stark image to see well-dressed, well-fed political celebrities promenading the same streets on which homeless people live in utterly degrading conditions, and all left to brave the Texas heat, which broke records this summer. Among the sponsors of the event, which was held without any precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19, were JPMorgan Chase & Co., Chevron, Pepsi, and the American Federation of Teachers.  

The event was advertised as a platform for a wide range of “bold ideas” open to the public. The “boldness” on show at this circus of right wingers was redolent of the “bold” restructurings carried out in industries entailing mass layoffs and deep cuts to wages; or the menacing “boldness” of Joe Biden’s foreign policy in its reckless escalation toward nuclear war with Russia and China. Meanwhile, tickets for general admission sold for $250, prohibitively expensive for the average working person. Far from providing a forum for democratic discussion, the Texas Tribune Fest reflected the lurch to the right of the entire political establishment and exhibited a rigid conformity to the stifling framework of the two-party system. 

A plea for bipartisanship

Ultimately, the Festival was a grand gesture of courtship made by the Democratic Party to a section of  “moderate” Republicans, which the Democrats deem necessary as a bulwark against a Trump presidency and essential to maintain support for the unpopular war in Ukraine. The general character of the “centrist” Republicans that the Tribune could scrounge up were former Maryland Governor Larry Hogan, who, during his one-on-one, held Ronald Reagan up as a model for a return to “traditional, big tent” Republican politics; and New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, who has previously stated, “I’m a Trump guy through and through.” In delivering the opening keynote address, the latter still refused to rule out the possibility that he would support Trump in a general election.  

A major theme of the Festival was bipartisanship. This sacred principle apparently goes so far as to include the likes of fascist election-denier Ted Cruz. On the program for the festival, the one-on-one with Cruz was billed as “The junior U.S. senator from Texas on why he should be reelected to a third term.” No questions about the 2020 coup or his role in attempting to block the certification of the election results, which to this day he maintains was stolen, were posed. Instead, he was provided a platform to deliver an unhinged tirade on school choice, which he called “the most important domestic issue.”  

Cruz scandalized his audience by defending the repeal of Roe v. Wade and claimed the popular outrage toward Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court justice who aided Trump’s coup attempt, was only because “he is black and conservative.” Nevertheless, Cruz was able to harp on the bipartisanship promoted by the Democrats. He cynically referenced the far overdue end to the luxury tax on tampons, which has forced poor working class women to choose between period products and food, in Texas as a bipartisan victory. In a similar manner, he exploited the question of gun violence to promote the building up of the police and other repressive powers of the state. “We know who the trigger pullers are, and we want to arrest them but we can’t.” 

Minimizing the danger of fascism was one of the central tasks of the Festival. During his keynote address, Sununu blusterously declared, “Trump is too dumb to be a danger to democracy,” and was met with roaring applause. Anyone that sells this soporific after the vast majority of  Republicans in Congress voted against the certification of the 2020 election results, and after at least two Supreme Court Just—what is more likely—is terrified of rousing the masses to whom they have nothing to offer. 

Hysterically denying this fact, Evan Smith, co-founder of the Tribune, who moderated the keynote by Sununu, asserted that the crisis facing the Republican Party flowed from “the unwillingness of a certain someone to leave the political arena.” The most ambitious aim of the Democratic Party is to get a different Republican than Trump nominated. 

The war in Ukraine 

The real meat and potatoes of this “bipartisanship” is support for the US-NATO proxy war in Ukraine against Russia. Sununu spoke for the privileged social layer present when he declared he is “100% behind” the war. “We’re going to ‘put that tin can army [Russia] in its place,’” he cooed. Sununu then gave voice to American imperialism’s war aims: 

…we’re going to back Zelensky [but] that’s not just what this is about although that is right, and it is just and we should support freedom fighters around the world and families that are literally getting murdered by the thousands but still will fight.

It sends a message to our enemies we have resolve. Don’t think we’re gonna let our politics divide us and weaken us. It sends a message to our allies you can trust us. When we say we’re gonna back you, we’re gonna back you, and boy it really means a lot. “

A panel discussion entitled “Worth Fighting For,” was devoted to beating the war drum against US imperialism’s latest boogeyman, Vladimir Putin. The panelists included Democratic representative Jake Auchincloss, who had just come from a meeting with Zelensky in Washington on Thursday; Evelyn Farkas, executive director of the McCain Institute, named for the war criminal John McCain; Kay Bailey Hutchison, former ambassador to NATO; and Igor Khrestin, Managing Director of Global Policy at the George W. Bush Institute, also named after a war criminal. While repeating all the banalities and hypocritical lies about the war being a fight for “national sovereignty” and “democracy” in Ukraine, the panelists advocated for a reckless escalation, up to and including direct US-NATO intervention, in the conflict. 

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