Tuesday 31st of December 2024

agents of KAOS tried to stop him entering the white house.....

"Everything I believe in, everything that I hold sacred is based upon my belief in the honesty and nobility of my fellow agents, and that belief is unshakable, unarguable and incontrovertible. Of course, I could be wrong." - Maxwell Smart, in "The Decoy."

 

Five Reasons Why Trump Won Again

 

In an effort to address toxic polarization in the U.S., an anthropologist of the “Trumpiverse” explains MAGA supporters’ thinking in the 2024 U.S. presidential election. By ALEX HINTON  

FOR MANY PEOPLE, especially those leaning left, Donald Trump’s disqualifications to be president seem obvious. Why did so many people vote for Trump again, they wonder, and how did he win not just the Electoral College vote this time but the popular vote as well?

Trump’s critics cite his two impeachmentsmultiple criminal indictments at the state and federal levels, and a felony conviction as evidence that he is unfit to be president again. Opponents also say that Trump is a threat to democracya misogynista racista serial liar, and a rapist.

About 78 percent of Democrats and Democrat-leaning independent voters say that Trump broke the law when he allegedly tried to overturn the 2020 election results. But less than half of Republicans think he did anything wrong.

I am an anthropologist of peace and conflict, and I have been studying what I call the “Trumpiverse” since 2015, when Trump descended a golden escalator and announced his candidacy for president. I later wrote a related book in 2021 called It Can Happen Here: White Power and the Rising Threat of Genocide in the U.S.

More recently, I have been examining toxic polarization—and ways to stop it. Many efforts to reduce people’s polarized views begin with an injunction: Listen and understand.

WHY DID PEOPLE VOTE FOR TRUMP?

To this end, I have attended Trump rallies, populist and nonpartisan events, and meetings where Democrats and Republicans connect and talk. Along the way, I have spoken with Trump supporters ranging from the Make America Great Again, or MAGA, faithful to moderate “hold the nose and vote for him” conservatives.

And indeed, many on the left fail to understand who Trump voters are and how they vary. Trump’s base cannot simply be dismissed as racist “deplorables,” as Hillary Clinton famously said in 2016, or as country bumpkins in red MAGA hats. Trump voters trend older, White, rural, religious, and less educated. But they include other groups, including Latinos and male voters.

Many people have thoughtful reasons for voting for Trump, even if their reasoning—as is also true for those on the left—is often inflamed by populist polarizers and media platforms.

Here are five key lines of reasoning that, in varying combinations, informed the choices of Trump voters.

1. MEDIA DISTORTION

Where those on the left see Trump’s many failings, those on the right may see what some political observers call Trump Derangement Syndrome, sometimes simply called TDS.

According to this argument, the left-leaning media dissects Trump’s every word, and the media then distorts what he says. I have found that some Trump supporters think that people who feed too much on this allegedly biased media diet can get TDS and develop a passionate, perhaps illogical dislike of Trump.

I have also heard hardcore Trump supporters argue, with no evidence, that “fake news” media outlets, like CNN, are part of a larger deep state plot of the federal government to upend the will of the people. This plot, according to those who propagate it, includes not just leftists, government bureaucrats, and people who claim to be Republicans but really aren’t, but also people in law enforcement.

Some Trump supporters also see merit in his contention that he is being wrongly persecuted, just as some see the Jan. 6 defendants being persecuted.

2. BREAD ON THE TABLE, MONEY IN THE BANK

“Are you better off than you were four years ago?”

For many Trump voters, the answer to former President Ronald Reagan’s famous question is clear: “No.”

They accurately remember Trump’s term as one of tax cuts, economic growth, and stock market highs.

It is true that overall employment numbers and average pay went up under President Joe Biden. But for some Trump supporters, that economic boost pales in comparison to the massive surge in inflation during Biden’s term, with prices rising almost 20 percent. While the inflation rate has recently abated, prices remain high—as voters are reminded every day at the grocery store.

At the end of the 2024 campaign, polls showed Trump with a strong lead over Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris on how to handle the economy. The economy was a top concern for voters, especially Republicans, and ultimately drove many voters to Trump.

3. BORDER INVASION

Another reason some Americans voted for Trump: immigration.

Like inflation, the number of people illegally crossing the border soared under Biden.

This massive influx of “illegal aliens,” as Trump calls them, dropped to its lowest level in four years in July 2024. This happened after the Biden administration made it harder for immigrants to apply for asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border, a policy measure that is in line with many Republicans’ approach.

In 2022, a poll found 7 out of 10 Republicans worried that “open borders” were part of a Democratic plot to expand liberals’ power by replacing conservative White people with “non-White” foreigners.

Trump played into some people’s mostly false concerns that immigrants living illegally in the U.S. are freeloaders and won’t assimilate, as illustrated by his untrue September 2024 allegations that immigrants were eating pets in Ohio.

In 2022, 82 percent of Republicans said they viewed immigration as a “very important” issue. Trump continues to tout his proposed solution, which includes shutting the border, building a wall, and deporting 11 million immigrants who are living in the U.S. without legal authorization.

 

4. A PROVEN RECORD

Beyond the economy and immigration, some Trump voters simply compared the records of Trump and the Biden-Harris administration and found that the tally tilted firmly toward Trump.

There were no new wars under Trump. Biden-Harris, in contrast, have been saddled with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip. Trump supporters’ perception is that American taxpayers foot a large portion of the bill, even though other countries are also giving money to Ukraine, and Israel is actually buying weapons from the U.S.

I have found that Trump supporters also think he is better suited to deal with the rising power and threat of China. Finally, abortion opponents believe he delivered by appointing Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe v. Wade.

5. THE MAGA BULL IN A CHINA SHOP

While some Harris supporters lamented Trump’s destruction of democracy and decency in politics, I have found that Trump voters see a charismatic MAGA bull in a china shop.

His supporters wanted Trump elected precisely because he is an unrelenting pugilist, or a fighter—as he showed when he raised a fist after the July assassination attemptagainst him.

Some in the Trumpiverse even view him as savior who will rescue the U.S. from a “radical left” apocalypse.

For Trump stalwarts, MAGA is not simply a slogan. It is a movement to save an America that is on the brink of failure.

 

Editors’ Note: Originally published on September 25, this story was updated on November 6 to reflect the results of the 2024 presidential election.

https://www.sapiens.org/culture/why-many-americans-voted-for-trump-again/

 

MANY PUNDITS ON THE LEFT PRAISED THE FLAWLESS KAMALA (HARRIS) CAMPAIGN OVER HER "TOO SHORT" 107 DAYS... ONE CAN BE NEARLY ASSURED THAT HAD HER CAMPAIGN GOT ANY MORE TIME, SHE WOULD HAVE TANKED BY ANOTHER 50 COLLEGE VOTES... THIS IS WHY THE DNC MACHINE DID NOT WANT TO LET SMELLY JOE BIDEN GO BEFOREHAND... THEN THE DNC MACHINE TRIED ALL THE TRICKS OF LIGHTS, SMILES, HOPES, FANFARES AND CELEBRITIES, TO BAMBOOZLE THE PUBLIC INTO BELIEVING SHE WAS SUPER CLEAN AND BETTER THAN TWICE CHEESE SOUFFLé TRUMP AND HIS RACISM, MISOGYNISM, RAPISM AND TAX-EVASIONISM...

HER DEFEAT OF COURSE WAS BLAMED BY HER SUPPORTER ON AMERICA BEING A RACIST AND MISOGYNIST COUNTRY... THEY STILL CAN'T UNDERSTAND WHY AMERICANS COULD NOT VOTE FOR A WOMAN OF COLOR... RACISM AND MISOGYNY HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS... UNFORTUNATELY, KAMALA (HARRIS) HAD NOTHING TO OFFER BEYOND BEING A "WOMAN OF COLOR". NOTHING. NOT A SINGLE POLICY OF VALUE BEYOND VAGUE EXPECTATION... THE COUNTRY HAD GONE WITH OBAMA'S HOPE AND VAGUE, AND ELECTED TRUMP IN RETURN... 

 

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.

sour gripes....

 

Trump Won Less Than 50 Percent. Why Is Everyone Calling It a Landslide?
Right and left have bought the narrative of a crushing triumph. They’re wrong.

 

By MICHAEL SCHAFFER
11/22/2024 [22 NOV. 2024]

 

Is it newsworthy that Donald Trump’s share of the 2024 presidential vote has fallen below 50 percent?

You wouldn’t think it’s a big deal based on the relatively few headlines triggered by the milestone, which passed quietly last weekend as California and other states continued their glacially slow vote counts.

And maybe that’s as it should be. After all, Trump’s 49.9 percent (for now) is still more than Kamala Harris’ 48.3 percent. When the counting is done, the margin will probably have shrunk even further. No matter: It still earns him 312 electoral votes from a population that also gave his Republican Party control of the House and Senate. He won.

All the same, the numbers might seem a wee bit jarring to anyone who has been listening to Washington’s triumphal Republicans and self-flagellating Democrats — all of whom seem to have internalized a version of the story that involves a romping, stomping Trump triumph.

It’s hard to blame them: Even as the counting progressed, Trump’s victory was described as “resounding” by news organizations ranging from the Associated Press to the The Washington Post to the The New York Timesto POLITICO. Others offered “commanding win,” “runaway win” and “dominant victory.”

Say what?

To coin a phrase, we’ve defined dominance down. After years as a 50-50 country, it seems, even a small win gets talked about like a shellacking. Wriggling into office with a puny plurality and less than half the vote in an essentially two-way race used to be considered pretty weak sauce. A squeaker. Why do we now treat a JV-caliber success like some sort of Olympian feat? Following the traumas of 2020, maybe “dominant victory” has come to simply mean a win that doesn’t lead to endless recounts or domestic insurrection.

Washington, please stop this consensus!

This is not to praise the anemic Democratic performance — or question the fact of Trump’s victory. He swept the battleground states, improved his nationwide numbers in places where Republicans usually get wiped out and helped his party narrowly hold the House while taking the Senate. Under our system, that means Trump gets to move into the White House and sign the laws he and his allies push through the legislature. For better or worse, the United States Constitution doesn’t care about margins of victory.

The only thing is, what Trump did this month is a lot like what Joe Biden did four years ago — but with less of the general public on his side. Biden won the vote by about four-and-a-half points, making inroads with GOP demographics and capturing the swing states while his party held the House and retook the Senate by the narrowest possible margin. There was no talk back then of a Biden blowout.

And appropriately so: Biden may have had a popular majority, but it too was a squeaker.

The two winners’ legislative coattails were similarly unimpressive: Biden’s 2020 Democrats retained the House while losing seats, and won the Senate only after a weird Georgia runoff where Trump’s post-election ranting helped the Democrats. Trump’s 2024 Republicans, likewise, have yet to expand their paltry House majority and lost Senate races in at least four states carried by Trump.

In Washington, this kind of comparison can lead to an intense, irritating, unwinnable argument about just whose victory was more impressive — as if “impressiveness” earned the winner any extra powers after inauguration day.

The more interesting question is what this big-win fable is likely to do to our political calculus going forward.

Look on social media and you’ll find folks chalking the blowout narrative up to media gullibility, or worse. Trump, the old real estate salesman, inevitably calls any house a castle and any win a landslide. Once again, they say, people who ought to know better have bought into the hucksterism.

In fact, I’d add some different explanations. Part of it is myopia: The people who watch politics most closely spent the campaign season hyper-focused on a few swing states and a few bellwether demographics. Trump exceeded expectations on all of them. The close attention to officially important races created a perception that dims when you pull back the camera to look at the whole country.

A bigger part of it may be psychology. After 18 months of covering the endless campaign, it’s only human to justify the emotional investment by finding a sweeping verdict in the results — even if it’s not there. Merely assigning control of the United States government for the next four years feels insufficient.

The irony of it all, though, is that the false sense of clarity about the results may actually be a good thing for the Democrats.

Instead of wondering whether some discrete tactic or specific demographic could have put them over the top, the shell-shocked party appears destined to do a deep dive on its long-festering problems: How did the historic party of the little guy come to lose the working class? What’s the cost of placating “the groups,” as Democrats call their often identity-based activist organizations? Is it time to rethink their generation-long embrace of neoliberalism?

Truth be told, these are conversations Democrats needed to have even before they stunk it up on Election Day. But insiders might be less bent on self-examination if the smart set had spent the last two weeks describing an electoral close call instead of a Trumpian walk-over.

On the GOP side, I think the landslide narrative is going to be a more mixed bag.

Yes, Republicans get to feel like winners, which is fun. On the other hand, even in this moment of triumph, they’re really not that popular. A narrative of 2024 that depicted them wheezing into office with an unimpressive vote count might trigger some conversations they need to have, too: Why is a party that promises lower taxes alienating so many of the successful folks who benefit from lower taxes? How are they going to avoid bungling the next national emergency when they’re perpetually hostile to experts? Are extremely online staff bros the GOP version of annoying post-collegiate Democratic aides, a cohort that will soon damage their bosses’ brand?

If Trump — and the slim legislative majorities who take office with him — wants to see the downside of learning the wrong lesson, they need only to look at the folks they’re about to replace.

Biden and the Democrats may not have claimed a landslide, but the message they took was that the administration needed to satisfy the social-justice activists who marched in 2020, avoid looking like squishy centrists and dismiss questions about inflation or age as feckless media parroting of GOP talking points. A lot of those decisions are now being blamed for the 46th president’s unpopularity.

By actually describing the election in all of its unsatisfying shades of gray, the chattering class would be doing the GOP a favor. Far more popular presidents than Trump have been done in by hubris about election results.

And that’s why the wrongheaded Beltway certitude is also damaging to the general public.

Trump is already using the idea of his being the era’s dominant political figure to exert more control over his Republican legislative allies. Demanding that the Senate allow recess appointments is the move of a big-time winner, not a guy who couldn’t even win half of American voters. For a chief executive, it’s always empowering when people buy the idea that you’re a juggernaut. And for this chief executive, with his disregard for old-line norms and his campaign talk of retribution against enemies — and an array of less authoritarian ideas for radical change — it’s especially dangerous.

Sure enough, here’s an op-ed this week from Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy outlining their hope to fire public servants by cutting the budget without congressional sign-off, something that’s currently illegal: “On Nov. 5, voters decisively elected Donald Trump with a mandate for sweeping change, and they deserve to get it.”

For analysts reveling in clear election results — or Democratic reformers embracing the need for a wholesale rethink — it’s pretty hard to push back on these bogus claims of a sweeping mandate if you’re busy echoing those claims.

The presidency comes with enough legal authority by itself. Why assign any small-margin winner the moral authority that comes with a popular mandate? For people in the business of reporting results and analyzing outcomes, it may feel satisfying to claim clarity after months of watching the battle. The only problem is it’s not true.

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/11/22/trump-win-popular-vote-below-50-percent-00190793

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.