The Gold Coast Bulletin

Trumping the naysayers

President’s agenda for change rolls on amid an atmosphere of hysteria

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THE Trump administra­tion is fulfilling its agenda as its opponents, including the overwhelmi­ng bulk of the media, continue to operate at a level of shrill hysteria that is tiresome and ultimately selfdefeat­ing.

Much of the media, including here in Australia, remain preoccupie­d with the superficia­l from President Donald Trump’s playboy past to his weekend tweet mocking NBA star LeBron James, while the Republican base are focused on substantiv­e change.

In what is an astonishin­g feat, given the volume and ferocity of the negative press, Trump’s approval rating among Republican­s soared to 88 per cent, according to the latest WSJ/NBC poll taken between July 15 and 18, making it the highest number achieved by any president within his own party since modern polling began some 70 years ago with the single exception of George W Bush post 9/11.

At the same point in their presidenci­es Jimmy Carter had an approval rating of 52 per cent, Bill Clinton 67 per cent and Barack Obama 81 per cent among Democrats while Ronald Reagan was at 79 per cent among Republican­s.

Media and political pundits afflicted with Trump Derangemen­t Syndrome have cried wolf one too many times. Trust in the media is at historic lows in the US after much of the fourth estate lost any semblance of rationalit­y and impartiali­ty in covering Trump through the election campaign and since his inaugurati­on.

The lines between opinion and news have been entirely blurred. The unrelentin­g negative coverage would’ve destroyed most other politician­s but Trump has a Teflon quality to criticism thanks largely to his enemies consistent­ly overplayin­g their hand.

Among Trump’s greatest assets is that he is blessed with a multitude of thoroughly unpleasant and unhinged enemies who seem determined to have him reelected.

Fake News may be a term that was coined by the Hillary Clinton camp but it has become a catchcry for conservati­ves to describe the falsehoods, half-truths and deliberate omissions of “news” reporting that is boldly biased.

The booming economy doesn’t get the coverage afforded Trump’s dalliances with strippers and playmates or the Russian conspiracy theory but it is what matters most to the heartland.

Trump’s overall approval rating is somewhere between 45 and 50 per cent, depending on the poll, but his support among Republican­s has remained sky high and steady, while his approval rating among Democrats has been recorded as low as 7 per cent in the Pew Research Centre survey published earlier this month.

The ‘partisan gap’ is something we also saw with Obama who had an 81 per cent approval rating among Democrats compared to 14 per cent among Republican­s.

But despite his low ranking with Democrats, Trump’s overall popularity is superior to many other world leaders who enjoy a far easier run with the media. Emmanuel Macron hit a new low of 36.3 per cent in France last week, Theresa May also plummeted to a new low in late July with only 30 per cent of Brits satisfied with her performanc­e while support for Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats’ alliance fell to a new low in the latest polling released on the weekend, however the German Chancellor’s personal approval rating is at a relatively healthy 46 per cent.

Trump, perhaps rememberin­g Reagan’s “dance with the one that brung ya” advice to conservati­ves, hasn’t made the mistake of other centre-right leaders around the world who abandon their base to try to appeal to people who are never going to vote for them.

Sweeping tax cuts have boosted employment and economic activity with the GDP rising by an impressive annual rate of 4.1 per cent in the second quarter. A figure that many economic and political pundits had deemed unachievab­le a year ago.

American workers have seen their wages rise by the biggest margin in a decade, according to the Labour Department’s employment­cost index, thanks largely to a combinatio­n of low unemployme­nt and strong consumer confidence.

In June, the number of job ads exceeded the number of job seekers for the first time since such data was kept, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Unemployme­nt has fallen to 3.9 per cent with an average of 215,000 jobs created each month in 2018.

Prediction­s of doom, gloom and armageddon have been regurgitat­ed ad nauseam from the moment Trump triumphed against Hillary Clinton but the reality has made fools of the doomsayers including once renowned economists such as Paul Krugman who, writing for the New York Times, predicted the share market would “never recover” from a Trump presidency the day after the election. Krugman also warned that Trump would cause “a global recession with no end in sight”.

The economy may be at the heart of the administra­tion’s success with conservati­ve voters but there are plenty of other reasons why Republican­s, even some from the “never Trump” camp, are embracing Trump’s agenda and chief among them is judicial appointmen­ts.

Supreme Court appointmen­ts are enormously important to the base as is Trump’s enthusiasm for a fight whether it’s the culture wars or securing better deals from trading partners.

Republican­s have seen too many gentlemanl­y Republican presidents and presidenti­al candidates slaughtere­d by a partisan Leftist media. This time they elected a fighter and thus far he is delivering.

 ??  ?? Donald Trump’s approval rating among Republican­s is 88 per cent.
Donald Trump’s approval rating among Republican­s is 88 per cent.
 ??  ?? Jimmy Carter (52%).
Jimmy Carter (52%).
 ??  ?? Bill Clinton (67%).
Bill Clinton (67%).
 ??  ?? Barack Obama (81%).
Barack Obama (81%).
 ??  ?? Ronald Reagan (79%).
Ronald Reagan (79%).
 ??  ??

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