© AP Photo/ Charles Dharapak
Politics
18:32 15.10.2016Get short URL
Ekaterina Blinova
51269150
The Bushes and the Clintons, the two "political dynasties" expect that
Hillary Clinton will maintain the established status quo, if elected,
and do not want Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump to occupy
the Oval Office, US-based journalist and editor-in-chief of News Junkie
Post Gilbert Mercier told Sputnik.
The US' 2016 presidential election resembles nothing so much as a
reality show, Gilbert Mercier, a US-based French journalist, author and
editor-in-chief of News Junkie Post, deems.
However, to understand the underlying "forces" that drive today's
election one should look back into the US' history.
"Just like in the mafia crime families whose influence reached its apex
between the 1920s and the late 1950s, to fade away in the late 1970s,
the US rival political families are in many ways organized in clans with
their own structure of don, capo, consigliere and hatchet men. The
Rockefellers and Kennedys operated like this. Since the election of
Reagan, the two dominating clans have been the Bushes and the Clintons,"
Mercier suggested in his interview with Sputnik.
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton (L) applauds his wife, Democratic
U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (R), as they appear with
their daughter Chelsea (C) at Mrs. Clinton's caucus night rally in Des
Moines, Iowa February 1, 2016
© REUTERS/ Brian Snyder
Political Dynasties: Why Hillary Likely to Become Next US President No
Matter What
In his book "The Orwellian Empire" Mercier noted that the rise of George
H.W. Bush — the founder of the Bush political dynasty — started in 1980
when he officially became Vice President to Ronald Reagan, the 40th
President of the United States from 1981 to 1989.
Previously, Bush served as director of the Central Intelligence Agency
between 1976 and 1977.
"The Clinton dynasty came along in 1992," the author wrote.
After inking the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and
reversing the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated commercial banking
from investment banking, Bill Clinton "became a favorite of Wall
Street's investment banks, such as Goldman Sachs," he pointed out.
Interestingly enough, in his recent interview with Sputnik Canada-based
political analyst Oussama El-Mohtar suggested that there appear to be a
number of "policy centers" in Washington. The clashes of interests
between them, according to the scholar, could have been behind the US'
inconsistent policy in Syria and the collapse of the US-Russian
agreement.
"That might have been the case, but the notion of 'centers of power' is
getting more and more diffuse. It started with the election of Ronald
Reagan in 1980 and has become increasingly monolithic," Mercier noted,
commenting on the issue.
"In the early 1990s, their [the Bushes and the Clintons'] interests
sometimes still clashed, but very quickly, as Bill Clinton became in
Bush Sr.'s eyes 'almost a son,' their interests started to coincide
almost always in an implicit agreement to pass the baton of power from
one clan to another every four or eight years," the journalist assumed.
F-22 Raptor
© AFP 2016/ USAF
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Course
Mercier argues that the year 1980 was the beginning of the end of the US
as a republic with a two-party system.
"It is when the US became a full-fledged empire with two mafia-type
dynasties taking turns in power," he suggested.
"John Kerry was part of the Kennedy clan, and for this reason a bit of
an outsider. Informed observers hoped that he would offer an alternative
and challenge Hillary Clinton during the primary. He had the
intelligence, the poise and the credentials to do so; however, he made
the choice to join the Clinton clan instead," Mercier told Sputnik.
Therefore, it is hardly surprising that George H.W. Bush, his
daughter-in-law Laura Bush and his granddaughter Lauren Bush Lauren,
signaled that they will most likely vote for Democratic presidential
nominee Hillary Clinton.
"Former President George H.W. Bush said Monday that he will vote for
Hillary Clinton in November, according to sources close to the 41st
President — an extraordinary rebuke of his own party's nominee," CNN
reported on September 21.
For his part, Michael A. Cohen of The Boston Globe highlighted that "for
a former Republican president, the father of a two-term Republican
president, the son of a Republican senator, and Ronald Reagan's vice
president, to vote for a Democratic candidate for president is
extraordinary."
Republican US presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democratic U.S.
presidential nominee Hillary Clinton greet one another as they take the
stage for their first debate at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New
York, U.S. September 26, 2016.
© REUTERS/ Jonathan Ernst
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Remarkably, on October 12 The Hill reported that 12 former Republican
officials who served top roles in President George W. Bush's
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Department of Transportation
(DOT) claimed that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump "is not
qualified to hold the office."
It looks as if the two powerful political clans do not want an
"outsider" to come out on top.
"The two leading political clans are not in conflict at all. In their
power sharing agreement everybody gets a very nice share of the pie,"
Mercier explained, "It has worked well for the Bushes under Clintonite
Obama, and of course 'Empress Hillary' would maintain the status quo."
"This form of government is corrupt to its core, and this is why
somebody like Trump appeals to anti-establishment voters. People are fed
up. They do not precisely know what they want, but they are certain
that the system is rigged and are ready to reject it," the journalist
stressed.
Gilbert Mercier is the author of The Orwellian Empire and the editor in
chief of News Junkie Post.
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