We turn now to look at the man many credit with helping Donald Trump become president: Steve Bannon, the former head of Breitbart News. During the early days of the Trump presidency, many suggested Bannon, Trumpās chief strategist, was pulling many of the strings in the Oval Office. We speak to journalist Joshua Green about how Bannon took his hard-right nationalist politics from the fringes of the Republican Party all the way to the White House. Green has been closely following Bannonās career for years. In October 2015ābefore Bannon joined Trumpās campaignāGreen dubbed Bannon the “Most Dangerous Political Operative in America.” His new book is “Devilās Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency.”
AMY GOODMAN: We turn now to look at the man many credit with helping Donald Trump become president: Steve Bannon, the former head of Breitbart News. During the early days of the Trump presidency, many suggested Bannon, Trumpās chief strategist, was pulling many of the strings in the Oval Office. Time magazine put Bannon on its cover in February with the headline “The Great Manipulator.” That same month, Bannon, in a rare public comment, outlined his plans for the Trump administration.
STEPHEN BANNON: I think if you look at the lines of work, I kind of break it out into three verticals or three buckets. The first is kind of national security and sovereignty, and thatās your intelligence, the Defense Department, homeland security. The second line of work is what I refer to as economic nationalism. The third, broadly, line of work is what is deconstruction of the administrative state. … If you look at these Cabinet appointees, they were selected for a reason. And that is the deconstruction. The way the progressive left runs is that if they canāt get it passed, theyāre just going to put it in some sort of regulation in an agency. Thatās all going to be deconstructed. And I think that thatās why this regulatory thing is so important.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Steve Bannon speaking at the CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference.
Well, a new book by our guest, Joshua Green, chronicles how Bannon took his hard-right, nationalist politics from the fringes of the Republican Party all the way to the White House. Green has been closely following Bannonās career for years. In October 2015ābefore Bannon joined Trumpās campaignāGreen dubbed Bannon “the Most Dangerous Political Operative in America.” At the time, Bannon was head of Breitbart News and overseeing a multifaceted campaign to take down Hillary Clinton, as well as more moderate Republican candidates. Joshua Greenās new book is titled Devilās Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency.
So, Josh, talk about the rise of Donald Trump and why you think Steve Bannon was so key. Perhaps if there hadnāt been a Steve Bannon, there wouldnāt be a President Donald Trump.
JOSHUA GREEN: Thatās my contention in the book. And I think that the best way to understand this election, to understand what happened and how a guy like Trump wound up in the White House, and really to understand the forces that are roiling our politics and producing such extreme and unusual things, as we see literally every day now in the Trump administrationāto understand that, you have to understand Steve Bannon. To me, he is the narrative thread that runs through not just the rise of Trump, but the rise of this whole right-wing populist, nationalist politics that he has been espousing ever since I first met him in 2011.
And the story I tell in the book, basically, is the intertwined story of the rise of Steve Bannon and Donald Trump. But Bannon, I met back in 2011, when he was working on a documentary film about Sarah Palin, who he hoped would run for president in 2012. And he was trying to fill her head with the same ideas and the same policies that you heard from Donald Trump. It took him a while to find his candidate. But he was brought into Trumpās orbit in 2010. He began advising him, kind of tutoring him on politics informally, at a time when everybody elseāand certainly Iādidnāt take Trump seriously as a politician. I thought he was going to goose his ratings.
But Bannon was able to take his nationalist politicsāand, in particular, the idea that there is political power in taking a hard line on immigration, on demonizing immigrants as marauders and killers, that Trump seemed to have intuitively sensed would resonate among Republican grassroots voters. And the combination of birtherism, which Trump pioneered on his own, and this anti-immigrant sentiment kind of mixed together to produce the candidate who upset the entire Republican field.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about how Bannon came into Trumpās orbit, not originally, but in the summer of 2016, how he came to take over. And this, of course, is also the story of the Mercers.
JOSHUA GREEN: Yeah, sure. Well, I mean, Bannon had been this kind of minor figure in Trumpās life since 2010, when a veteran anti-Clinton activist named David Bossie brought him along on a trip to Trump Tower just to tutor Trump about politics. But he didnāt enter most peopleās political awareness until he took over the campaign dramatically, in August, mid-August of 2016, at a time when Trump looked like he was floundering and almost certainly headed toward a blowout loss.
And I have a scene in the book that begins with the daughter of a right-wingāvery secretive right-wing billionaire named Robert Mercer, who is the co-CEO of Renaissance Technology. Itās a fabulously successful hedge fund.
AMY GOODMAN: Thatās based out in Stony Brook, Long Island.
JOSHUA GREEN: Itās based in Stony Brook, Long Island. Mercer and his daughter, I call them in the book kind of the alt-Koch brothers. You know, the Koch brothers tend to be more mainstream. The Mercers have much more unusual and different beliefs. And they are essentially, or have been, Steve Bannonās benefactors over the last couple years, pouring money into Breitbart News, but also into a movie production company; Cambridge Analytica, a data sciences firm that Trump relied on; and, most importantly, a nonprofit research entity down in Tallahassee, Florida, called the Government Accountability Institute, which produced the Clinton Cash book that came out on the eve of the election and sort of tarnished Hillary Clintonās image by documenting her ties to some of these shady foreign donors.
Well, the Mercers were big backers of Trump. They were originally behind Cruz, but once he fell, they got behind Trump right away, in a way that a lot of other wealthy Republicans were loath to do, giving him money, setting up a super PAC. But Rebekah Mercer, the daughter, who is very aggressive in getting involved in the candidates and causes she backsāI have a scene in the book where she flies out to a Trump fundraiser in Long Island, demands a meeting with Trumpāand you can do that if youāve given him millions and millions of dollars, as the Mercers haveāand says, “Look, youāre losing. Youāre going to lose this election unless you make a change.” And Trump says, “Well, yeah, things arenāt going real well, but…” And she says, “No, youāre losing. And the only way youāre going to win is if you have a radical change. I have a team of people that I think ought to take over your campaign”āSteve Bannon, Kellyanne Conway and, later, David Bossie, all of them veteran Clinton activists. And Trump, who was frustrated with his current campaign manager, Paul Manafort, agrees and says, “OK, letās put them in charge. We need somebody who can hit harder.”
Bannon is this famously aggressive Breitbart News publisher who would not be held back, has the same instincts as Trump. And people didnāt know it at the time, but Trump had known Bannon for a long time. And lo and behold, we wake up, I think on a Wednesday morning, to this announcement that Steve Bannon, despised by just about everybody in Washington, is now in charge of Trumpās presidential campaign.
AMY GOODMAN: And Paul Manafort is out, something he was resisting, and Jared Kushner played a role in that.
JOSHUA GREEN: Well, itās funny. Paul Manafort wasnāt out, originally. And what Trump did was he hired Bannon, I think on a Sunday night, without telling Paul Manafort or anybody else. And thereās a scene in the book, where itās on a Sunday, and Trump tells Bannon, “OK, youāre in. Drive out to my country club in Bedminster, New Jersey, tomorrow. Weāre going to have a senior staff meeting,” with Giuliani and Chris Christie and Manafort and all the kind of campaign brain trust. Kushner actually wasnāt there, because he was off yachting in Croatia with David Geffen, so he wasnāt present for that meeting. But at the meeting, Manafort, who still thinks heās in charge of the campaign, walks into a room and sees Steve Bannon there. And Bannon says, “Hey, Iām kind of joining the campaign.”
And Trump is in a very bad mood, because The New York Times has just run this embarrassing story saying that Trumpās own advisers feel they canāt talk to him, and so they have to go on cable news in order to send a message to Trump. And Trump, whoās been made to look like a fool, explodes at Manafort. Thereās a scene I have in the book where he says, “You know, am I a baby, Paul? Do you treat me like a baby? You have to go on TV?” and curses him, in language we probably canāt use on the air here. A couple days later, decides that Manafort has to go. But Trump, despite the public image, doesnāt like to fire people, so he deputizes his son-in-law, back from his yachting trip with David Geffen, at a breakfast, to get rid of Manafort, who resists. And thenā
AMY GOODMAN: Because, he says, “Youāre going to make it look like Iām guilty on the Russia stuff.”
JOSHUA GREEN: Exactly. He doesnāt want to do it, because heāll look like heās guilty of taking money from this pro-Russian Ukrainian political party. And he resists, and Kushner says, basically, “Youāre going. We have a press release coming out saying that youāve resigned, and that goes online at 9:00 a.m., and thatā in 30 seconds.” And that was the end of Paul Manafort and the beginning of the successful Steve Bannon era of the campaign.
AMY GOODMAN: So, letās talk about Steve Bannon and his background, where he comes from, for people to understand the different forces at play.
JOSHUA GREEN: Well, so, the newspaper bio synopsis of Steve Bannon is that he comes from a blue-collar, Irish, Democratic, Catholic, Navy family in Richmond, Virginiaādad was a telephone linesmanāand went to Virginia Tech, got into Harvard Business School, was in the Navy, later Goldman Sachs, and wound up in Hollywood, first as a film financier, an investment banker, and, later, once he had made some money, he moved over to the creative side and began making conservative documentaries.
AMY GOODMAN: When you say “made some money,” weāre talking Seinfeld.
JOSHUA GREEN: Weāre talking Seinfeld, yes. So, the interesting, weird little detail in Bannonās life is that while he was an investment banker, he brokered a deal between Castle Rock Pictures, which owned Seinfeld, which was in its infancy at the time, and Ted Turner, who wanted to buy the shows. And as Bannon tells me the story in the book, you know, when they sat down on the table, Turner was short of cash. And so, rather than let the deal fall apart, Bannon tookāin lieu of his ordinary advisory fee, he took a basket of residuals from five television shows, including Seinfeld. As we all know, Seinfeld went on to become, I think, the most popular sitcom in television history and throw off an awful lot of money. Bannon and his partner own a very small part of that, but enough that theyāve made millions and millions of dollars from it. So, once Bannon got to that point, he decided he wanted to give a kind of a full airing to his hard-right conservative politics, which I think he had kept hidden as he traveled through the worlds of Harvard and Goldman Sachs and Hollywood, where youādā
AMY GOODMAN: Goldman Sachsās hero, Michael Milken.
JOSHUA GREEN: Thatās true. Bannonāso, Bannon was at Goldman Sachs as an investment banker in the mid-1980s, at the height of the leveraged takeover boom. If youāve ever read Barbarians at the Gate or some of these books, you know that there were these outsiders who were kind of storming the fortress and taking over sort of fattened corporations that were vulnerable to these outsiders. Bannon, I think, to his frustration, worked for Goldman Sachs, which would never align itself with a corporate raider, as it always did defense. But he recognized in Michael Milken a guy who was kind of his spirit animal: “Hereās an outsider, you know, storming the fortresses, and heās winning. And these establishment banks, like the ones that Iām working for, really donāt get it, and theyāre losing.” I think that lodged in his mind. And Bannon, later on, when he got to Breitbart News, portrays himself in a political sense very much like Michael Milken portrayed himself in a financial sense back in the ā80s.
AMY GOODMAN: Went to jail, by the way, right? Of course, for people who donāt know, the younger set.
JOSHUA GREEN: Oh, yes, he went to jail, not aāyeah, not a minor footnote in Milkenās story. He was busted for insider trading and went to jail for a number of years. But I think Bannon liked the dark, outsider narrative that Milken told. And Milken kind of cultivated his own image, before he went to jail, as this guy who was storming the fortresses and was taking on the fattened, lazy, corrupt establishment, and thereby was doing something good. Bannon did the same thing at Breitbart News. The way he would talk about what he was doing was: “Weāre taking on the establishments of both parties, the crony capitalists.” So I think he learned a bit from Milken.
AMY GOODMAN: Weāre talking to Joshua Green, senior national correspondent for Bloomberg Businessweek. His new book, Devilās Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency. I want to turn to a speech that Steve Bannon delivered via Skype to a conference held inside the Vatican in 2014.
STEPHEN BANNON: I believe the world, and particularly the Judeo-Christian West, is in a crisis. And itās really the organizing principle of how weāve built Breitbart News to really be a platform to bring news and information to people throughout the world, principally in the West, but weāre expanding internationally, to let people understand the depths of this crisis. And it is a crisis ofāboth of capitalism, but really of the underpinnings of the Judeo-Christian West and our beliefs. We are in an outright war against jihadists, Islam, Islamic fascism. And this war is, I think, metastasizing almost far quicker than governments can handle it.
AMY GOODMAN: Thatās Steve Bannon, delivering a Skype address to a Vatican conference in 2014. Joshua Green, talk about the religion that informs Steve Bannonās politics.
JOSHUA GREEN: Well, so, we just talked about kind of the newspaper bio of Steve Bannon and the blue-collar background. But the most interesting line of research for this book is Bannonās religious and intellectual biography. And this is a story that hasnāt been told, that I go into some detail in in the book.
But in the course of my reporting, I asked Steve BannonāI said, “You know, when you were at that Vatican conference”āand this wasnāt just a Vatican conference, this was a group of far-far-right conservative Traditionalist Catholics. Bannon name-checked a man named Julius Evola, who was an Italian intellectual and Benito Mussoliniās fascist ideologist at the beginning of World War II. And I said, “Steve, if youāre not an anti-Semite and a Nazi and a white supremacist, as youāre often charged with being, but you say youāre not, why is it that you are familiar with people like Evola?” And he said, “Oh, you know, when I developed my ideas about nationalism, I went back and was looking for an intellectual edifice to kind of inform these ideas. And to find nationalist thinkers, you really have to go back to the 1930s and the 1940s, when those ideas were ascendant. But the real guy who influenced me,” Bannon told me, “was an man named RenĆ© GuĆ©non, who was Evolaās intellectual godfather.”
GuĆ©non has a fascinating biography. He was born in France in the late 19th century to a Roman Catholic family, practiced occultism, Freemasonry, and later converted to Sufi Islam and observed the Sharia, which is a very unusual guru, it seemed to me, for a guy like Steve Bannon, who is so virulently Islamophobic. But GuĆ©non was the founder of a religion, a kind of religious philosophy, known as primordial Traditionalism. Thatās capital-T Traditionalism. And primordial Traditionalism holds that there is common spiritual truths, unifying spiritual truths, at the heart of ancient religions, like the Hindu Vedanta, Sufism, medieval Catholicism, even paganism. And these are original spiritual truths that were revealed to mankind in the earliest ages of the world but had been lost in the West by the rise of secular modernity.
So, Bannon, who was raised in a very traditional Catholic family, who went to a right-wing Catholic military high school and has been steeped in this right-wing, Western sieve curriculum, believes, as GuĆ©non does, that we are entering a dark age, that the rise of the Enlightenment in the 1500s has led us toward apocalypse, and that if he canāt prop up traditional values and do what GuĆ©non had hoped to do, which was to, quote, “restore to the West a traditional civilization,” then mankind is going to be destroyed. And that is his animating belief.
AMY GOODMAN: And I wanted to turn to Julius Evola, in his own words, the monarchist and racial theorist who struck an alliance with Benito Mussolini. His ideas became the basis of fascist racial theory. This is Julius Evola speaking with a French filmmaker in 1971 about what he considered the positive aspects of fascism and, in particular, national socialism, Nazism.
JULIUS EVOLA: [translated] There are positive and valuable aspects. Those which I could value are the reconstruction of the authority of the state and the idea of overcoming class conflict toward a hierarchical and corporative formation, to some extent, of a military and disciplined style within the nation, in addition to some of their anti-bourgeois proposals. To me, all of that is positive.
AMY GOODMAN: Thatās Julius Evola, one of the people Steve Bannonā
JOSHUA GREEN: Iāve never seen that clip. So, the unifying thread here is that Evola also looked to GuĆ©non for inspiration. GuĆ©non was the godfather of this capital-T Traditionalist movement. Now, GuĆ©non believed that the way to spiritual transcendence was to basically indoctrinate small groups of important people all over the world, what we would today call influencers. And he was veryāhe believed that if you couldāif you could push spiritual change, then political change would follow.
Evola is the black sheep of the Traditionalist family and had a different view. He said, “No, we canāt just sit back and try and change peopleās spirituality. We need to go out and change society.” So Evola went out and struck an alliance with Benito Mussolini to try and exert power in the Italian government, which he had. He was, as you said, the chief racial theorist for Mussolini. They had a falling out, and Evola later moved on to Hitler in Nazi Germany.
What all three of these men have, though, in common is the belief ināat the heart of GuĆ©nonās religion was the belief in the Hindu concept of cyclical time, the idea that the world passes through set stages. And Evola believed, as Bannon does, as GuĆ©non does, that we are in what the Hindus call the Kali Yuga, a 6,000-year-long dark age in which manās connection to God and the transcendent is wholly forgotten. So, Evola brought these ideas to interwar Europe, to Italy, and tried to change society that way to fight back against it. Bannon has come to this through a kind of populist, hard-right politics, where, through Breitbart and some of these affiliated organizations, heās tried to not only take over American politics, but look at what heās doing in places like the European Union. Heās trying to destroy what he would call these globalist edifices, which he believes is a manifestation of the rise of modernity and something that needs to be destroyed to pull us back to a pre-Enlightenment era.
AMY GOODMAN: Weāre talking to Joshua Green. His new book is Devilās Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency. You also talk about how Breitbart News went after Fox News to make it more extreme, and the gaming background of Steve Bannon, recognizing that Fox News was for old folks. There was this huge young conservative set that he could bring in.
JOSHUA GREEN: You know, another story in the bookāanother thing I got asked about a lot as a political reporter was: Where did this idea of the alt-right come from? Who are these people? How did they infect our politics in the way that they had? And Bannon, oddly enough, is a critical figure in the rise of the alt-right, many of whose members, I should just add as a side note, read and admire Julius Evola and his thinking.
But back in 2007, after Bannon had done Hollywood and filmmaking, he wound up, for about a year and a half, as the CEO of a video game company in Hong Kong, which did not actually make video games that you play. It pioneered something called gold farming, which I had never heard of. But what gold farming is, is the process of going into these massive multiplayer games, like World of Warcraft, and winning armor and prizes and gold, which allow you to advance in the game, but then turning around and selling them to people in the real world. So Bannonās company would hire teams of low-wage Chinese workers to play these games in 24-hour rotating cycles, win all this stuff, and then sell it to wealthier gamers offline, which was considered a serious enough business that Goldman Sachs actually invested money in Bannonās company.
But what happened was, the gamersāmost of the people who played the games considered this cheating, and they got very angry. You know, kids would spend hours and weeks and months absorbed in these games, and didnāt like the fact that there was this shortcut. And so, the gamers themselves organized on message boards. There are special message boards devoted to these multiplayer games. And they organized themselves and said, “Hey, weāre going to put pressure on these video games and make them shut down the practice of gold farming.” And they did. And it destroyedāit bankrupted Bannonās business.
But the lesson he took away from this was that there are millions and millions of young, whiteāmostly whiteāmen who spend their entire lives in these online alternate realities, and thatā
AMY GOODMAN: 4chan.
JOSHUA GREEN: 4chan, exactly, Redditāand that if they are motived to do so, they could be a very powerful political force: “They bankrupted my company. I want to see if I can channel them into politics.” And when Bannon got to Breitbart News, he hired a notorious internet troll named Milo Yiannopoulos to be Breitbartās tech editor and to essentially entice these legions of angry online gamers into the world of populist right-wing politics. And eventually Bannon was able to turn them on to Trump.
AMY GOODMAN: So, you now have Bannon in the White House. His main issues, as he talked about at CPAC, is dismantling the administrative state. Is he succeeding? How powerful is he right now
JOSHUA GREEN: He is, to an extent, not the extent heād like to. But when you saw the CPAC clip that you showed him deconstructing the administrative state, that is a signal that is operating on two levels. If you are a ordinary, traditional movement Republicanāyou donāt like government, you want government to shrinkāyou hear what Bannon said as “Weāre going to shrink government.”
But on another level, and this gets back to GuĆ©non and the Traditionalists, Bannon is using coded language there, which says deconstructing the administrative stateāone of GuĆ©nonās beliefs was that there were two pivotal moments in world history that brought us away from God and the transcendent. One was the destruction of the Order of Knights Templar in 1312, which cut off Western connection to esoteric knowledge. And the other was the Peace of Westphalia, which gave rise to the modern nation-state. That is what Bannon wants to destroy.
AMY GOODMAN: Finally, he talks about fake news. He talks about The New York Times as fake news, but he used The New York Times to advance his goals. And that goes to the issue of Clinton cash, etc.
JOSHUA GREEN: Absolutely, yeah. And so I tell the story in the book. Bannon, for all his complaints about the media, is a very savvy guy who understands how to manipulate the mainstream media. And one of the thingsā
AMY GOODMAN: We just have a minute.
JOSHUA GREEN: One of the things I thought he did so brilliantly, and I write about in the book, was find a way to get his stories into The New York Times. And so, he funded two yearsā worth of research, produced the book Clinton Cash by Peter Schweizer, which documented all this stuff, all these financial connections, and then brought the book to reporters in mainstream outlets like the Times, like the Post, who took these stories, published them in their papers and spread his anti-Clinton message in the mainstream media, dissuading and discouraging a lot of Clintonās own voters. And in the end, that proved to be a very effective tactic.
AMY GOODMAN: And he also went after Fox News.
JOSHUA GREEN: Well, he also went after Fox News because Bannon believes that there is aāthere was a split between populist Republicans and what he would call Fox News establishment Republicans. Thereās a scene in the book of Bannon screaming profanely at Roger Ailes. Eventually Bannon won that war, broke the back of Fox News, and now theyāve become the most pro-Trump station you can find anywhere on the cable dial.
AMY GOODMAN: Finally, we have just 30 seconds, but you went to college with Sean Spicer, Josh.
JOSHUA GREEN: I did go to college with Sean Spicer. I went to Connecticut College, a very PC liberal arts school. He was one of about 10 openly Republican kids on campus, very loud about it. His nickname in college was Sean Sphincter, so that gives you an idea of his popularity. But it was surprising to see where heās wound up, but I certainly recognize the guy that I went to college with.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, weāre going to leave it there. Joshua Green, senior national correspondent for Bloomberg Businessweek. His new book, Devilās Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency.
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