Trump’s suckers
by digby
I wrote about The Donald’s appeal to the working man for Salon today:
Once again, just as everyone was ready to declare him yesterday’s news, Donald Trump scored wins last night in Mississippi, Michigan and Hawaii, and if the media’s ecstatic attention to his every word in his insufferable “victory press conference” is any indication, he’s back in the saddle in a big way.
Trump spared the nation any more talk about his “big hands,” but he did brag about everything else, obviously feeling much more energized than he was in his desultory press conference last Saturday night. He strutted and preened, showed off all his brands, boasted about his golf swing and proclaimed himself the obvious winner of the general election by virtue of his vast property holdings around the country. It was one of his most confident performances — and that’s saying something.
His appeal remains quite broad across the Republican electorate, but much of the chatter afterwards was focused on his alleged affinity with Michigan’s white working class which was taken as a sign that he had a unique path to victory in the fall. There’s no doubt that Trump does very well among that group and it’s worth taking a look at why that is. After all, a megalomaniacal billionaire blowhard seems like an unlikely working class hero.
Nate Silver laid out an interesting analysis earlier this week of six cohorts of the American electorate and how they tend to vote. (It’s from within a larger piece about how Michael Bloomberg would have taken more votes from Democrats than Republicans and thus likely insured a Trump victory.)
The model, which is built on data from the Cooperative Congressional Election Study, divides the American electorate into six roughly equal groups:
African-Americans (12 percent of voting population): extremely Democratic-leaning.Hispanic, Asian, “other” and mixed races (14 percent): Also strongly Democratic leaning, especially in recent elections.
White evangelicals (23 percent): Strongly Republican.
White cosmopolitans (20 percent): These are white, non-evangelical voters who favor both gay marriage and a pathway to citizenship for immigrants who entered the country illegally. They’re a highly Democratic-leaning group, mostly concentrated in urban areas and college towns.
White “picket fence” voters (15 percent): These are whites who are neither evangelicals nor cosmopolitans, but have high socioeconomic status as indicated by income, education levels, home ownership and other factors. This is a largely suburban, center-right group who went for Mitt Romney over Barack Obama about 2 to 1 in the previous election.
White working-class voters (16 percent): Whites who are neither evangelicals norcosmopolitans, and have lower socioeconomic status. Once a good group for Democrats, they now vote Republican about 2 to 1.
This shows the two coalitions pretty clearly. The Democrats are a multi-racial, multi-ethnic, urban coalition with a few suburbanites and a few members of the white working class. The Republican coalition is made up entirely of evangelical, suburban and working class white people.
What’s striking about this is that while Republicans have certainly taken up the cause of the Christian Right, the other two GOP cohorts have not materially benefited from Republican policies. There may be a few upper middle class whites who like those big tax cuts, but Republicans have offered very little in the way of economic benefits to the middle class suburbanites. Obviously, they get their votes for other reasons.
But what can you say about the working class? They have not only been brutalized by the changes brought about by globalization; the Republicans have gone out of their way to make things worse. Not that Democrats have solved their problems by any means, but they do support workplace safety, environmental rules, raising the minimum wage, universal health care, child tax credits among many other benefits for working people. Republicans promise to reverse all those things and more. Yet many of these people always vote for them anyway. It’s the perennial question: What’s the matter with the working class whites?
Perhaps, like so much else in American life, we simply have to observe that the working class in America is no longer majority white. Retail workers and food service and hospitality and a lot of other working class jobs are held by people of color, many of them women, and they do vote for the party that at least tries to make a material difference in their lives. As it turns out, Democrats are still the party of the working class; it’s just not all that white anymore. And that’s why the white working class rejects them. They do not want to be a member of that particular club if it’s allowing those “other” people to be in it. Nonetheless, even though they are despised by these voters, Democrats still keep pushing for policies that will make their lives better.
In this cycle these voters are enthusiastically turning to Donald Trump, who promises to deport millions and “make America great again.” Some people think that it’s not his authoritarian racism and xenophobia that draws them but rather it’s because he promises to “renegotiate trade deals.” And maybe some of them are. But they should listen to what he’s really saying.