Fascism or genocide How a decade of political disorder broke American politics

Ross Barkan

Book - 2025

"Fascism or Genocide is New York Times Magazine writer Ross Barkan's sweeping report on the 2024 US election and the decade of political upheaval leading up to it. As in 2020, Joe Biden campaigned on a platform to save democracy, but fewer voters were persuaded this time. During the Democratic primary season, more than half a million Americans cast votes for "Uncommitted" ballot options to send Biden a message about the urgent need to end the killing in Gaza, with some tagging him "Genocide Joe." In contrast, mainstream liberals backed the Democratic ticket in the belief that Trump would put America on the road to fascism. As the director of an influential Palestinian advocacy group tells Barkan, "It'...;s a choice between fascism or genocide." Biden's withdrawal from the election and Kamala Harris's subsequent nomination barely changed the narrative. Millions of Democrats stayed home after souring on the party, while others switched allegiance and got behind the Trump team. Fascism or Genocide takes a hard, informed look at the election, focusing on the future of the Democratic Party, the influence and potential of the progressive "Squad," and ongoing culture wars within the party"--

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  • 1. The Squad
  • 2. Trump
  • 3. Biden
  • 4. Social Justice
  • 5. Israel
  • 6. Culture
  • 7. The Election
  • 8. The Changing Resistance
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Barkan (The Prince) provides a searing chronicle of the political contortions that culminated in Donald Trump's reelection. Barkan opens with the June 2024 New York congressional primary race between democratic-socialist incumbent Jamaal Bowman and moderate challenger George Latimer. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee--an organization "funded by right-wing Republican donors"--"unleashed nearly $15 million" to "obliterate" Bowman for describing events in Gaza as a genocide. For Barkan, the fate of Bowman is emblematic of its political moment, which he describes as a revanchist reaction to the progressive wave that was itself a reaction to the first Trump presidency. Barkan posits that the "social justice politics" of the left were effectively co-opted into a nastier form of "grievance politics" by the right, noting that Republicans had become "identity and language obsessed... whining about... female sports" and Israel's "oppressed" status. Of Joe Biden's cognitive decline, Barkan lays fault with the media for failing to report the truth. Indeed it's the media that is subject to his harshest critique; he knocks the poll-driven "weathervane" politics that he says fueled the centrist backlash to progressivism, and skewers "the many ponderous New Yorker writers" and others whom he sees as legitimizing the overly polished style epitomized by Kamala Harris. More than the anti-progressive backlash, Barkan argues, it was Americans' disgust with such disingenuous slickness that led to the "raw, crude, hilarious" Donald Trump's reelection. Narrated with verve, wit, and spine, this is an essential view of the present moment. (July)

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