Donald Trump and America’s Broken Populist Promise
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“Honey, you gotta learn to quit expectin’ help.”
My grandma told me that on Jan. 23, 1996. I was 14 years old and watching President Bill Clinton’s infamous “The Era of Big Government is Over” State of the Union. As a candidate, Clinton had been heralded by my family as the reincarnation of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, a man my grandparents believed would’ve ended poverty if he hadn’t been assassinated, but all that hope engendered by JFK’s heir apparent was long gone by then.
The signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993 was when the bloom came off that rose. My family of dirt-poor factory workers saw NAFTA’s adoption as the death knell of American manufacturing and viewed Clinton’s signature as tantamount to treason. So Grandma wasn’t surprised when his reelection chances led to a right turn, but I was still young enough to be disappointed. I always thought somebody, anybody, would step in and help my family.
By the time Donald Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower, I’d learned to quit expecting. Watching your hometown get decimated and your family suffer endlessly will do that. And when pundits and commentators began referring to Trump’s rhetoric and platform as “populist,” I had no doubt it was just another iteration of Republicans courting the working-class without any intention to follow through.
Surprisingly though, the populist label stuck with Trump despite his billions of dollars, private jumbo-jet, and gold-gilded penthouse. Mainstream outlets began referring to him in kind, whether it was The New York Times, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, or Politico, which ran a piece by Michael Lind declaring Trump “The Perfect Populist.”
The coverage of candidate Trump was a maddening affair. The networks turned their cameras to him, hit record, and broadcast to millions of people his uninterrupted rants where, in the same breath, he bragged about his wealth and his ability to help “real Americans.” And yet, despite the transparency of his message, they continued referring to him and his twisted lie of a campaign as populist, which was more than enough to win the support of my family, who had long since forgotten our grandma’s warning.
At the heart of Trump’s “populist” appeal was his constant criticism of the country’s trade deals and a promise to return to prevalence the manufacturing and coal jobs that had kept my family afloat for generations. Under a Trump administration, the Republican nominee promised, they’d get “tired of winning” as all those jobs of the past would come streaming back.
The first test of that promise came in November of 2016 when President-Elect Trump and Vice-President-Elect Mike Pence negotiated a deal with Carrier to preserve jobs in my home state of Indiana. The deal was a public-relations boon as Trump toured the facilities and remarked that he’d saved 1,100 jobs that would’ve been shipped to Mexico. In all actuality, the number was closer to 800, and, despite the $7 million worth of tax incentives Trump and Pence pitched the company’s way, more than half of the jobs originally lost still ended up streaming south of the border.
As president, Trump continued the deceit by filling his administration with billionaires and Wall Street heavyweights. There was Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, former CIO of Goldman Sachs with an estimated net worth of $300 million; former CEO of ExxonMobil and 245 Million Dollar Man-turned-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson; Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, who made his billions with leveraged buyouts of failing industries; and billionaire Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos.
Terrible optics aside, it’s been the cabinet’s actions that should cause the most concern as the administration has been doggedly focused on disabling the social safety net, lowering taxes for the wealthy, and, under Secretary DeVos’s incompetent eye, dismantling public education.
In terms of activity, the Trump Administration has shown its priorities by concentrating on moves that would rob tens of millions of Americans of their healthcare, slash Medicaid, strip-mine the budget of helpful programs, dispense regulations of Wall Street passed in the wake of the Economic Collapse of 2008, and deregulate several key laws designed to protect the American people, including their wages, their safety, the air they breathe, and the environment in which they live.