It was also down to central bank actions which, I would say, were not subject to meaningful democratic control.
This is kinda the point though, and linked to the graph of the rich people share of income. I would argue the underlying cause of both the return to pre-Depression levels of inequality and the change in voter behavior are ultimately caused by the concentration of power enjoyed by the capitalists, and afact liberals
don't have a compelling answer to how that is going to be dealt with by working within the system.
Note that I'm not opposed to working within the system, I'm only arguing that working outside it is frequently necessary. And I think that, as
@schlaufuchs was saying earlier in the thread, it's not that I want to see anyone dead, it's that I really do think that ultimately the kinds of changes I want to see are only likely to happen over the bodies of the rich and probably of a lot of their non-rich simps too.
It's not like we have no historical precedents. Think about what likely would have been required to "win the peace" after the American civil war.
Incidentally, US labor law is at best a mixed bag because while it does protect workers from some of the worst abuses (at least in theory, in practice it does little of this) it is also designed to allow the state to crack down directly on some of the more effective tactics available to organized labor.
Gotta disagree on this one. Rich people have unjust power over others through the structure of capitalism, independently of their participation or non-participation in parliamentary politics.