Trump is Not Popular So, Why is There no Effective Opposition to Him?
A recent article in The Economist discusses the lack of effective opposition to Pres. Trump in the United States. The article says,
If a single political idea has tied
Americans together over their first quarter of a millennium, it is that
one-person rule is a mistake. Most Americans also agree that the federal
government is slow and incompetent. Together, these things ought to make it
impossible for one man to govern by diktat from the White House. And yet that
is what this president is doing: sending in the troops, slapping on tariffs,
asserting control over the central bank, taking stakes in companies, scaring
citizens into submission.
The effect is overwhelming, but not
popular. President Donald Trump’s net approval rating is minus 14 percentage
points. That is little better than Joe Biden’s after his dire debate last year,
and no one fretted that he was over-mighty. This is a puzzle. Most Americans
disapprove of Mr. Trump. Yet everywhere he seems to be getting his way. Why?
The article goes on to answer its question by pointing first
to the fact that Trump is moving so fast that the institutions that might exercise
some control cannot keep up. In addition, the article says, his control of the
Republican Party is so complete that “… the party’s organizing idea is that Mr,
Trump is always right, even when he contradicts himself.” Finally, the independent
institutions that might constrain him suffer from a coordination problem. Their
interests are not always aligned.
The Democrats Offer No Alternatives to Trump's Policies
I suggest that there is another reason for the lack of effective opposition to Trump: the
Democratic Party offers no clear policy alternatives to the voters. We live in a time when working Americans are suffering economically, but the Democratic Party has not unified around
a set of economic policy proposals to benefit working Americans. Gov. Newsom of California and Gov.
Pritzker of Illinois show the problem clearly. They are popular among those who hate Trump, but their
popularity is based entirely on their clever and very public opposition to his attempts
to take over policing in their states. Standing against Trump or even against fascism is not the same
as offering a program to benefit working Americans.
The Democratic Party is not without ideas. The party's left wing does have policy proposals to offer the voters, but the proposals have mostly been rejected by the party’s leaders and by so-called “centrist” Democrats on the grounds that the proposals are “too radical.” The policies are not really radical, but the people on the left wing of the party have never pointed that out. They don't explain how their proposals flow from basic American values. Instead, the left likes to talk about “revolution" in vague undefined terms and about "socialism" with no clear definition for that word, either.
Trump's Republicans Offer Concrete Proposals
Trump and the Republican Party offer proposals to deal
with the concerns of the voters. The proposals are fraudulent, but they are
persuasive. The Democrats offer no alternatives except to say that Mr. Trump is
a fascist who is destroying our democracy. That is true. He is trying to destroy our democracy, but that fact is not uppermost in the mind of a woman
trying to support herself and her child on her earnings as a waitress. She has more immediate problems, and when Trump tells her that he will make sure that she won’t have to pay
income tax on her tips, she is bound to listen. Similarly, a couple that is living paycheck to paycheck and barely able to pay its rent even with two incomes cannot spend much time worrying about the state of our democracy. When Trump tells the couple that their plight is due to the foreigners who have taken American jobs, they are bound to listen, especially when the Democrats are not speaking to them at all.
Democrats May Win in 2026, But in the Long Run, They Must Decide to Stand for Something That Benefits Working Americans
Democrats may win
enough congressional seats in 2026 to end Trump's control of Congress, but in the
long run, the party will not stop hemorrhaging voters’ until it unifies around
a set of policy proposals that promise to benefit working Americans. Being
against Trump is not enough. The Democratic Party must be for something, too.
Good point.
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