On Two Competing Theories of the Election

Most Democrats look at Trump’s performance during the debates and his rallies and wonder how the election could be this close. Matthew Yglesias, on the other hand, looks at the anti-incumbent fever that has overtaken the developed world and wonders how the Democrats still have a chance.

Each question is the answer to the other. If the GOP had nominated someone other than Trump, the Democrats would be done and dusted, based on what has happened all over the world during the past year.

Life in the Time of Trump 2024 (4)

Life in the time of Trump.

Election Day is here.

I really don’t feel great right now;

Trump leaves me full of fear.

Democracy’s on trial today;

The blue team may well lose.

Will we let the founders down?

America must choose.

On an Ambiguous Lesson from History

History tells me that the undecided voters usually reject the status quo and vote for change. The untested shiny object is more appealing than the despised familiar one. How will that play out tomorrow?

In most cases, the challenger would obviously benefit. But in this situation, the apparent alternative to the status quo is a completely known commodity who has dominated politics for the last eight years, while the “incumbent” candidate is younger and is actually more of a mystery to the public. Under these unusual circumstances, which one will be perceived as an agent of change?

I honestly don’t know. We’ll find out this week.

On Trump’s “Accomplishment”

As you watch Trump ramble incoherently in what he insists is “the weave” during his rallies, you are tempted to wonder how in the world he stands on the verge of the presidency again. But don’t underestimate the man; he succeeded in persuading one of our two political parties that a country that is not engaged in any foreign wars and has four percent unemployment and two percent inflation is on the verge of complete collapse, and that the only way to prevent it is to trust him with absolute power.

That may be an appalling “accomplishment,” but it is impressive on its own terms. Who would have thought that a party that nominated Mitt Romney in 2012 would be totally in the tank for Trump today?

On the Three Arguments Against Trump

In the final analysis, there are three reasons why America shouldn’t even consider electing Donald Trump:

  1. HE IS LEGALLY, MORALLY, AND INTELLECTUALLY UNFIT FOR THE JOB: Does this really require any explanation?
  2. HIS AGENDA WILL LEAVE AMERICA POORER, WEAKER, AND MORE DIVIDED: Tariffs, large tax cuts for corporations, and mass deportations will leave our economy reeling. Antagonizing our allies in a myriad of ways will leave us more vulnerable to the revisionist powers. As to the “divided” part, his rhetoric speaks for itself; he views half of America as his enemy and wants to inflict as much pain on it as possible.
  3. THE PUBLIC IS FEELING NOSTALGIC ABOUT HIS RECORD, BUT IT SHOULDN’T: He basically took the Obama economy and juiced it a bit with tax cuts that were supposed to increase investment, but actually increased demand. His pandemic response was chaotic and pathetic. Hamas’ decision to attack Israel during Biden’s watch had nothing to do with the identity of the American president; it was about the Israelis and their lack of preparation, not us. We don’t know for certain why Putin attacked Ukraine when he did, but he might well have held off during the Trump years because he figured Trump would hand it to him without a fight. Biden didn’t succeed in making fundamental changes to the dollar store economy, but he did bring us out of the pandemic recession much faster, and with less pain, than most people would have predicted in 2020. Did Trump accomplish anything like that? No, he did not.

Will We Let the Founders Down?

The Founding Fathers–if you put them on a graph, the line would run from Hamilton on one end to Patrick Henry on the other–disagreed ferociously on the role and power of the central government. The one thing they all agreed on, however, was their fear and disdain for demagogues and men on horseback. They were all familiar with classical history, and they knew the type. They figured that the system they were creating would one day be tested by someone like Donald Trump.

The latest issue of The Atlantic features a Gilbert Stuart portrait of Washington. I can’t stop staring at it, because it is a truly remarkable face. I can imagine it asking me if I’m ready to do what’s necessary to preserve the government he did so much to create. Are we about him let him down? Are we so weak and subservient that we need “protection” from a man who is only running to keep himself out of jail and to force the half of the country that hates him to kiss his ring?

I will do my part on Tuesday. I hope you will do the same.

On Trump, Musk, and Milei

Trump may not be a secret CL, but Elon Musk is a very public one, and he is a prominent supporter of the man on golf cart. He has been telling the world that he can find trillions of dollars of waste in the federal budget; one assumes that means everything except the defense budget, the money required to prosecute Trump’s enemies, and subsidies for Tesla and SpaceX. Mike Johnson has also made some comments about putting a blowtorch to the administrative state. Could we actually be seeing the CL revolution in the making–an American Milei moment?

There are just four tiny problems with this hypothesis. First of all, America is not Argentina; we have two percent inflation and four percent unemployment. Second, Trump has no history as a budget cutter. Third, if the Republicans win control of both houses, they will have tiny majorities, and some of the centrists will be unreliable on budget issues. Finally, unlike Milei, Trump has done nothing to prepare the electorate for enormous budget cuts. The public reaction to what Musk insists is just a dash of temporary pain will be intense, indeed.

On Florida Political Commercials

We are seeing relatively few ads tied to particular candidates. Instead, we are being inundated with commercials supporting or attacking the state constitutional amendments pertaining to recreational marijuana use and abortion. It’s almost enough to make you miss Mark Robinson.

The most interesting thing about the ads opposing the amendments–particularly the ones on the abortion question– is that they focus completely on the fine print, not the gist of the issues. DeSantis isn’t trying to defeat the abortion amendment on the basis that personhood begins at conception, presumably because he knows public opinion won’t follow him on that point. Instead, he’s trying to argue that the amendment goes too far in this way or that (e.g., late term abortions and parental consent); the implication is that a more limited version might be OK and could be on the table in future years.

LOL. DeSantis and his friends are being dishonest here. They know perfectly well that the Florida GOP is never going to back down on what they view as positions essential to the Godly Society. So what else is new?

On Franco and the Definition of Fascism

Franco wasn’t charismatic; in fact, as the story goes, he was so icy that Hitler was afraid of him. He came to power by using the army, not a mass party or a large band of violent thugs. He didn’t create a cult of personality. He didn’t try to make Spain great again by invading South America. And yet, he was unquestionably a fascist.

Most of the definitions of fascism focus on the common characteristics of the Hitler and Mussolini movements and ignore Franco. They shouldn’t. That’s why my definition of fascism is simpler: the pursuit of reactionary goals by extraconstitutional means.

Why Trump Isn’t Hitler

Honesty compels me to tell you that there are numerous similarities between Trump and Hitler. Hitler’s angry, sarcastic speaking style reminds one of Trump. Like Trump, Hitler was attempting to recreate a mythical golden age in his country’s history. He was lazy and liked to pit his followers against each other (imagine Goering, Himmler, and Goebbels in “The Nazi Apprentice”). He was, shall we say, not too concerned with telling people the truth. He rejected the advice of experts and relied on his intuition, which he viewed as being infallible. He tried to overthrow the government in a shambolic coup attempt but faced few legal consequences for it. Finally, he never won a majority of the vote in a fair election–not that it mattered in the end.

But Trump doesn’t have an SA. He’s much older than Hitler, and has less time left to implement his vision, such as it is. He’s far more driven by personal grievances than a monstrous ideology. He’s not a warmonger. His country is not staggering economically. America under the McConnell Project is still governable; the Communists are not the alternative. The differences thus exceed the similarities.

I think.

On Trump, the McConnell Project, and the States

Power abhors a vacuum. Since the McConnell Project has made it virtually impossible for Congress to pass meaningful legislation–it can barely keep the lights on–real authority has passed to the judiciary and the states. Most of the publicity, of course, has focused on red state efforts to limit “freedom” to reactionary white male Christians, but some blue states have retaliated with mirror image legislation. The country was already splintering; Mitch has made things worse, although that was probably never part of the plan.

A big part of the Trump agenda will be to bring the liberal parts of the judiciary and the blue states under heel, since they will be the most active participants in the resistance. To what extent will he succeed? To what extent will the McConnell Constitution survive him? We will only find out if he wins.

Uncle Joe’s Cabin (22)

Joe, Dr. Jill, and Hunter are at the White House, discussing the campaign.

JILL: You dropped out about a hundred days ago. How are you feeling about that?

JOE: It was kind of like the stages of dealing with death. I was angry at first. Now I accept it. Kamala has a fighting chance, and I didn’t. I didn’t have the energy to deal with Trump and the state of public opinion. Plus, I don’t have the pressure of being the only one standing between the country and fascism anymore. It’s a weight off my shoulders.

HUNTER: But Dad, you saved America from Trump before. You would have done it again. Besides, the party and the country owed you! You were entitled to run again!

JOE: That’s Trumpist talk, son. The country didn’t owe me power. In a liberal democracy, power is a privilege, not a right. When it’s time to go, it’s time to go.

JILL: I think it’s for the best. And I think America will ultimately recognize what you accomplished. It will just take some time.

JOE: If there’s one thing that really bugs me, it’s that the country doesn’t appreciate everything we’ve done. All the polls say Americans think they’re worse off now than they were in 2020. That’s just not true.

JILL: They blame you for inflation, which wasn’t your fault.

JOE: It’s a bunch of malarkey. Inflation was a worldwide phenomenon. They even had it in Japan. We came back from the pandemic with the strongest economy in the world. And even Kamala can’t persuade the people that we did a good job. At this point, she isn’t even trying.

JILL: It’s really frustrating. Trump gets a pass for the pandemic unemployment, even though his response was ridiculous and chaotic, but you don’t get a pass for pandemic inflation.

JOE: I don’t get it. I really don’t.

HUNTER: Dad, we really need to talk about a pardon before you leave.

JOE: It’s too early, son. Let the process play itself out. You might not need one.

HUNTER: But you know I’m the victim of political persecution. No one else would have been prosecuted for those offenses.

JOE: There’s some truth to that. We’ll just have to wait and see what happens. Maybe Trump would agree to pardon you if he wins.

JILL: Perhaps if Trump wins, you could offer to tell the DOJ to drop the charges against him in an effort to bind the nation’s wounds in exchange for a pardon for Hunter. It would be a good way to start the new presidency. Trump would actually come across as a unifier.

JOE: That’s an interesting idea. I hope Kamala wins and it never comes into play, but I’ll keep it in mind if things go the wrong way.

Is Trump a Secret CL?

In an interview with Ezra Klein in yesterday’s NYT, Ramaswamy tells us that Trump is threatening to impose universal tariffs solely as a temporary expedient to force our friends to lower theirs. He also advises us that, after the border is under control, Trump will support efforts to liberalize the immigration system to bring in hordes of foreign talent. Finally, Trump will put a torch to the welfare state, reduce the national debt, and drive our workers out of the hammock of dependency. In short, Trump isn’t a Reactionary; he’s a secret Conservative Libertarian. He may have personal issues with Paul Ryan, but his hidden ideology is Ryan on steroids.

You may interject at this point that Ramaswamy is deluded, and that his version of “Trump” belongs in a libertarian comic book. Trump wants to bring back the economy of the 1950s and force people to suck up to him, not create Galt’s Gulch. I agree, but there is a larger point here; Trump has convinced an extremely wide range of extremists with very different dreams that he is on their side even though he has an extensive record that proves them wrong. The first step in creating the new shining city on the hill, whether it be the Godly Society or the techno-aristocracy, is to pull down the corrupt bureaucrat-ridden system we have today. Trump’s powers of destruction are an indispensable phase of the revolution.

What YIMBYs Don’t Get

Loud backup beepers most of the day, every working day. Countless large trucks rumbling through our subdivision, damaging our roads and endangering pedestrians. A lost view of the river. Changed community aesthetics. Swarms of noisy employees.

Those are the impacts of the construction of just one enormous house in our neighborhood in a period of over a year. There is nothing in it for us except inconvenience. It disrupts our quality of life and gives us nothing positive in return.

The YIMBYs clearly have a case for more housing, but they don’t appear to understand that while additional residential development may be in the best interests of the community as a whole, it imposes nothing but costs on the surrounding owners. The answer to this is for government and developers to provide benefits to the neighborhood in mitigation for those costs. I suggested two ways of doing that in a post about a year ago. I wish the YIMBYs would embrace one or both of them.

On Trump, the McConnell Project, and the Left

As I’ve noted many times before, the McConnell version of the Constitution, based on the Electoral College, Republican gerrymandering, the filibuster, and reactionary judges, makes it extremely difficult for the left to win and exercise power. That is the principal reason the Harris campaign isn’t promoting an ambitious agenda for the next four years.

But polarization and the filibuster work to slow down the GOP to some extent, as well–at least at the federal level. Trump’s agenda relies mostly on executive action, not legislation, but the time will come when he will want to legislate, as well. Then what?

McConnell is now an outsider within the GOP. There will be efforts made to get rid of the filibuster. In addition, Trump will almost certainly be violating court orders on immigration issues in order to please his base. Both of these developments will throw the viability of the McConnell Project into question.

The ultimate beneficiaries of reactionary activism may well be the left. The Supreme Court will be less of an obstacle to fundamental reform if Trump establishes a right to ignore it, and the filibuster won’t be a problem if the GOP gets rid of it.