What Will It Take to Beat Donald Trump? – The New York Times

Posted: December 29, 2019 at 11:46 pm

Bill Clinton and Barack Obama both campaigned for, and won, the White House on the watchword hope. What watchword will it take for a Democrat to win this time?

My suggestion: soap.

Nearly three years into Donald Trumps presidency, America needs a hard scrub and a deep cleanse. It needs to wash out the grime and grease of an administration that every day does something to make the country feel soiled.

Soiled by a president who, Castro-like, delivered a two-hour rant at a rally in Michigan the night he was impeached. Who described his shakedown of Ukraine as perfect. Who extolled the worlds cruelest tyrant as someone who wrote me beautiful letters. We fell in love. Who abandoned vulnerable allies in Syria, then opted to maintain troops in the country only for oil. Who, barely a year before the El Paso massacre, demonized illegal immigrants who pour into and infest our Country.

The list goes on, and most everyone feels it. In June, the Pew Research Center published a survey on how the country sees the state of public discourse. The most striking finding: A 59 percent majority of Republicans and Republican leaners say they often or sometimes feel concerned by what Trump says. About half also say they are at least sometimes embarrassed (53 percent) and confused (47 percent) by Trumps statements.

Whats true of Republicans is far more so of the rest of the United States. Pew found that overwhelming majorities of Americans were concerned (76 percent), confused (70 percent), embarrassed (69 percent), angry (65 percent), insulted (62 percent) and frightened (56 percent) by the things Trump says.

These numbers should devastate Trumps chances of re-election. They dont, for three reasons.

First, 76 percent of Americans rate economic conditions positively, up from 48 percent at the time of Trumps election. Second, the progressive lefts values seem increasingly hostile to mainstream ones, as suggested by the titanic row over J.K. Rowlings recent tweet defending a woman who was fired over her outspoken views on transgenderism. Third, the more the left rages about Trump and predicts nothing but catastrophe and conspiracy from him, the more out of touch it seems when the catastrophes dont happen and the conspiracy theories come up short.

No wonder Trumps average approval ratings have steadily ticked up since the end of October. In the view of middle-of-the-road America, the president may be bad, but hes nowhere near as bad as his critics say.

In that same view, while Trumps critics might be partly right about him, theyre a lot less right than they believe. In a contest between the unapologetic jerk in the White House and the self-styled saints seeking to unseat him, the jerk might just win.

How to avoid that outcome?

The most obvious point is not to promise a wrenching overhaul of the economy when it shows no signs of needing such an overhaul. There are plenty of serious long-term risks to our prosperity, including a declining birthrate, national debt north of $23 trillion, the erosion of the global free-trade consensus, threats to the political independence of the Federal Reserve, and the popularization of preposterous economic notions such as Modern Monetary Theory.

But anyone who thinks blowout government spending, partly financed by an unconstitutional and ineffective wealth tax, is going to be an electoral winner should look at the fate of Britains hapless Jeremy Corbyn.

What would work? Smart infrastructure spending. New taxes on carbon offset by tax cuts on income and saving. Modest increases in taxes on the wealthy matched to the promise of a balanced budget.

What these proposals lack in progressive ambition, they make up in political plausibility and the inherent appeal of modesty. They also defeat Trumps most potent re-election argument, which is that, no matter who opposes him, hes running against the crazy left.

Hence the second point. Too much of todays left is too busy pointing out the ugliness of the Trumpian right to notice its own ugliness: its censoriousness, nastiness and complacent self-righteousness. But millions of ordinary Americans see it, and they wont vote for a candidate who emboldens and empowers woke culture. The Democrat who breaks with that culture, as Clinton did in 1992 over Sister Souljah and Obama did in October over cancel culture, is the one likeliest to beat Trump.

Finally, the winning Democrat will need to make Trumps presidency seem insignificant rather than monumental an unsightly pimple on our long republican experiment, not a fatal cancer within it. Mike Bloomberg has the financial wherewithal to make Trumps wealth seem nearly trivial. Joe Biden has the life experience to make Trumps attacks seem petty. Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar have the rhetorical skills to turn Trumps taunts against him.

As with most bullies, the key to beating Trump is to treat him as the nonentity he fundamentally is. Wouldnt it be something if his political opponents and obsessed media critics resolved, for 2020, to talk about him a little less and past him a lot more?

When your goal is to wash your hands of something bad, you dont need a sword. Soap will do.

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What Will It Take to Beat Donald Trump? - The New York Times

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