Blackmailing Millions of Suffering
Americans Until Corporations Get Immunity from Coronavirus Litigation
By David Cay
Johnston, DCReport Editor-in-Chief
By Ed Hall |
The Trumpians are actively ruining
our economy because, in a perverse way, they share the belief of the Black
Lives Matter protesters that the American justice system can’t be trusted.
Both Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) cruel recalcitrance on coronavirus relief and the Black Lives Matter demands are about accountability in the courts.
Both Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) cruel recalcitrance on coronavirus relief and the Black Lives Matter demands are about accountability in the courts.
I’ll explain that troubling nexus,
but first, let’s understand the awful reality that Trump and Radical
Republicans in the Senate have created and why it can only make our economic
disaster worse.
Because of Trump’s mismanagement,
America has been in economic freefall since March as the Grim Reaper roams
freely.
Thanks to Trump’s denial of science
and idiotic ideas about the coronavirus, the pandemic grows worse and worse
even as Europeans and others are tamping down the pathogen.
Because of Trump’s mismanagement,
America has been in economic freefall since March as the Grim Reaper roams
freely.
GDP Down 33%
In the second quarter, from April 1
to June 30, the economy shrank at a rate never before seen, not even during the
Great Depression or the horrible economic panics of the late 19th Century.
“Real gross domestic product (GDP)
decreased at an annual rate of 32.9% in the second quarter of 2020,” the
Commerce Department announced Thursday.
During the Great Depression, the
economy decreased by 36%. But that was after more than three years while the
Commerce Department announcement was about a one-year rate.
If our economy continues contracting
at its current rate in three years, we’ll have the economy when Jimmy Carter
took office in 1977. That would be a 60% smaller economic pie to be split among
50% more people. For most people, the slices would be very thin, too thin for a
decent life.
The economic impact of COVID-19 in the U.S.
Accelerating Economic Collapse
Trump and his Radical Republican
allies are accelerating our economic collapse by cutting off, effective today,
the $600 of weekly relief payments going to 17 million people without jobs.
Collectively those out-of-work
Americans will lose $10 billion of income next week and another $10 billion the
week after that and on and on.
This will force overall spending in
America to drop by about 2.5 cents on the dollar, a severe new constraint on
the economy.
This cut off of relief money is not
just a disaster for those without work. It means that grocery stores, hardware
stores, utilities, and landlords will collect $10 billion less per week. In
turn that will force more layoffs and will push some small businesses into
bankruptcy, not to mention the adults and children who will go hungry.
Evicting Families
Adding to this Trumpian misery, the
CARES Act moratorium on evictions ended last week. That means landlords can
throw families into the street starting Aug. 24. Where landlords
will find new paying tenants is a mystery. What we know for certain is that
mass evictions will overwhelm local governments, social services agencies and
charities.
Next, on Oct. 1, the airlines will
be free to start layoffs. Congress gave $58 billion in coronavirus relief to
the airlines on the promise that they keep people employed through the end of
September. Even with that, Delta says it persuaded 17,000 workers to retire or
take buyouts.
More than 60,000 workers are expected
to lose their jobs at just two airlines, American and United, come October. In
all more than 100,000 airline workers are likely to get the boot just before
the Nov. 3 presidential election. That, in turn, will mean even less spending
and thus pressure on more small businesses to fold, causing those fired small
business workers to need relief.
And, atop this, Trump wants to get
rid of the United States Post Office, throwing its 496,000 staffers into the
unemployment lines.
And why is this happening? What’s
behind this economic injustice of throwing the economy off a cliff during the
deadliest public health crisis in a century? The answer lies in the Washington
cult of corporatism and its mantra of freedom from accountability.
Courts Not Trusted
Mitch McConnell believes that the
civil courts simply are not just. The senate majority leader fears that workers
who are hired back and then contract COVID-19 will sue their employers and then
collect huge jury awards.
So, McConnell says, there will be no
jobless relief or help for small business until Congress grants corporations
absolute immunity from coronavirus litigation.
Never mind that there is no
evidence to support his fear, that the courts have made lawsuits much harder to
file, especially class action lawsuits, and that McConnell has packed the
federal bench with Trumpians.
On one level this is part of the
long-term trend in America of giving corporations more and more power while
simultaneously requiring less and less accountability.
Trump has slashed all manner of
environmental and other regulations, pretty much stopped enforcing job safety
laws and made it much more difficult to file complaints with regulatory
agencies, which even when a complaint is successfully made do next to nothing.
Trumpian Immorality
Giving corporations a pass on
coronavirus litigation would encourage the worst business practices. Many
companies act responsibly. Regulations exist to protect us from the worst
operators. Awful employers would benefit from McConnell’s position, which is
the soulless idea that being American means you enjoy the right to behave
badly, especially if you are rich enough to own a business.
In the immoral world McConnell
favors, and Trump has lived in since birth, businesses are not privileged
creatures of the state allowed to exist so long as they operate thoughtfully.
No, to these two men and their confreres, controlling an American corporation
means being free to act dangerously while the state protects you from
accountability for your bad deeds.
Why spend money on personal
protection equipment for workers during a pandemic? Why slow the production
line for disinfecting? Why widen distances between workers when you can just
pack them close enough so they breathe one another’s droplets? And when those
droplets are laced with coronavirus, causing workers to get sick and die, why
should widows and orphans be able to sue?
Black Lives Matter
This is the perverse place where
Trump, McConnell and Senate Republicans meet Black Lives Matter.
The Black Lives Matter movement
doesn’t trust the justice system, either. But its concern runs in the opposite
direction. The Black Lives Matter people want to remove the institutional,
legal and cultural shields that protect violent police officers.
They don’t trust
the system to hold police accountable and provide recompense to innocent
victims like Breonna Taylor, shot to death by Louisville police who broke into
her home March 13 with a no-knock warrant.
Even if the House Democrats wilt and
give McConnell the corporate favor he wants, the Kentucky senator says he won’t
allow the $600 weekly relief payments. He wants the benefit cut by at least two
thirds to $200 per week.
The tragedy of the Trump and
McConnell position is that this goes far beyond their shared contempt for the
51 million Americans—roughly one of every three workers—who have filed for
unemployment benefits in the last 17 weeks.
Trump and McConnell are so eager to
concentrate economic power even more than today that they will make millions
suffer. And it’s not just the jobless today, but those who will be laid off as
the lack of relief payments forces more business to tighten up, shut down and
even file for liquidation in federal bankruptcy court.
One last, and troubling, note…
Even if McConnell folds today and
agrees to resume relief payments, the money will not flow smoothly or swiftly.
Only 14 of the 50 states have modernized their systems for paying jobless
benefits.
In California it will take as many
as 20 weeks to
restart payments and add new people to the relief roster, Sharon
Hilliard, who heads California’s Employment Development Department, told a
legislative committee Thursday.
That means some of the unfortunate
who have or will lose their jobs due to the coronavirus can expect their next
federal relief the week before Christmas, assuming they still have an address
and we still have a Post Office.