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The real reckoning

The Trump and Sanders campaigns aren't aberrations. If elected, Hillary Clinton will have to face up to the problems of our democracy that have led to anti-establishment political campaigns.

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Aaron P. Bernstein/Reuters
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton speaks at Fort Hayes Metropolitan Education Center in Columbus, Ohio.

In her speech accepting the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton said the nation was at 鈥渁 moment of reckoning.鈥

She鈥檚 right, but the reckoning is not simply the choice voters face this fall between her and Donald Trump. The real reckoning is larger and it will extend beyond Election Day.

Yet Washington insiders expect a return to politics as usual.

I鈥檓 already hearing Republicans dismiss Donald Trump as a weird aberration. 鈥淥rdinarily, Trump wouldn鈥檛 have stood a chance,鈥 a Republican operative told me. 鈥淗e won because he didn鈥檛 have a clear opponent until the very end. And Cruz is almost as crazy as Trump.鈥

I get a similar story from Democrats trying to explain Bernie Sanders. 鈥淗is campaign was a freak,鈥 a longtime Democratic adviser told me.聽鈥淗illary will be elected and then Washington will go on as if nothing happened.鈥

They want to return to business as usual because many of them make their bread on that business 鈥 working for big corporations, Wall Street, or wealthy individuals as political consultants, lobbyists, corporate lawyers, government-relations specialists, public-relations specialists, trade association staff, and paid experts.

But Donald Trump isn鈥檛 just an aberration and Bernie Sanders wasn鈥檛 just a flash in the pan. Both, in very different ways, reflect a crisis in our political economy.

In a Gallup poll taken in mid-July, before the conventions, 82 percent said America was on the wrong track. In an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll just before that, 56 percent said they preferred a candidate who would bring sweeping changes to the way the government functioned, no matter how unpredictable those changes might be.

The major issue the public is reacting to isn鈥檛聽terrorism or racism. We didn鈥檛 see these numbers after 9/11. We didn鈥檛 even get these sorts of responses in the late 1960s, when American cities were torn by riots and when the Vietnam War was raging.

It鈥檚 the rigging of our economy 鈥 the increasingly tight nexus between wealth and political power. Big money has been buying political clout to get laws and regulations that make big money even bigger.

As Hillary Clinton said in her acceptance speech, 鈥淚 believe that our economy isn鈥檛 working the way it should because our democracy isn鈥檛 working the way it should.鈥

She鈥檚 correct, but she didn鈥檛 finish the logic. Democracy is not working the way it should because it鈥檚 being corrupted by big money. That big money is altering the rules of the game to generate even bigger money.

Americans now pay more for pharmaceuticals than the citizens of any other advanced nation because Big Pharma is setting the rules 鈥 extending the life of drug patents, prohibiting Medicare from using its bargaining power to get lower drug prices, and blocking consumers from buying cheaper drugs from Canada.

We pay more for Internet service, health insurance, airline tickets, and banking services because the increasing market power of key players in these industries lets them raise prices. Antitrust enforcement has been systematically weakened.

The biggest Wall Street banks continue to reap the financial benefits of being too big to fail. Hedge-fund partners make bundles from confidential information, trading on which used to be illegal.

CEOs cash in their stock options and grants just when they pump up the value of their company鈥檚 stocks with buybacks. It鈥檚 allowed because laws and regulations have been loosened.

Trade agreements are now designed to protect the intellectual property and foreign assets of giant corporations, but nothing is done to protect the incomes of Americans who lose their jobs to foreign competition.

This is business as usual in Washington.聽

Hillary Clinton has a long list of good proposals for helping average working people, but none of them is going anywhere if Washington stays the same and the economic game remains rigged.聽

Instead, Americans will become even more angry and cynical.

That鈥檚 the real reckoning 鈥 hers and ours. 聽

Donald Trump didn鈥檛 come from nowhere. He is the loudest and clearest warning shot across the bow of the current American political economic system.

Hopefully he鈥檒l lose in November. But unless that warning is heeded, the dark anger that has produced him will produce another homegrown demagogue, possibly far worse.

This article first appeared at .

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