Waterloo Region Record

Alabama highlights Trump’s quirks

- Thomas Walkom Thomas Walkom writes commentary for Torstar.

Alabama’s upset senatorial election highlights the contradict­ions behind Donald Trump’s style of populism.

It is an idiosyncra­tic style based in large part on the personalit­y quirks of the largerthan-life U.S. president.

But it is also an attempt to build a political movement that speaks to the racial and class grievances of those Americans — mainly white — who view themselves as outsiders.

In the lead-up to Tuesday’s special election, Trump tried to mobilize his base of so-called deplorable­s behind discredite­d Republican candidate Roy Moore. He failed.

True, those whites who cast ballots voted overwhelmi­ngly for Moore.

Exit polls indicate that 72 per cent of white men who voted had backed the former judge.

The equivalent figure for white women was 63 per cent — this in spite of the allegation­s of sexual impropriet­y levelled against Moore.

But as the New York Times’ Nate Cohn points out, many whites living in workingcla­ss areas of Alabama — people who had supported Republican­s in the 2014 midterm election — this time simply didn’t vote at all.

Add in the fact that the Democrats ran a good campaign in the suburbs and the net result was a narrow loss for Moore.

It is unwise to draw too much from this election. Moore, who has been accused of having sexually abused teenage girls in the past, was an unusually weak candidate for the Republican­s.

Still, Trump endorsed him anyway — presumably in the belief that this would ensure his victory.

What the president forgot is that he has given the working-class elements of his base little reason to be enthusiast­ic about him.

Trump came to power promising to restore manufactur­ing jobs and raise wages. To that end, he pledged to get tough with Mexico and China, force companies to relocate production to America and spend on infrastruc­ture.

Even some unions aligned with the Democrats were pleased. But so far he has failed to deliver. He did manage to bully a couple of auto manufactur­ers into shifting some production from Mexico to the U.S.

But he has not yet pulled the U.S. from the North American Free Trade Agreement that he says favours Mexico and Canada.

Nor has he fulfilled his promise to tackle America’s trade deficit with China, preferring instead to cosy up to Beijing in the hope of enlisting its help against North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

This is a perfectly rational way to behave, but it is not what Trump promised.

Trump’s promised infrastruc­ture program shows no sign of life.

The tax reform package he lauds favours the rich rather than the working class.

It also threatens Medicaid, which provides some health care to the poor.

Trump was elected by a coalition of the disgruntle­d — by workers angered at the decline in their standard of living, by socalled white nationalis­ts angered at what they believe to be the undue deference shown toward racial minorities and by mainstream Republican­s angered at his opponent, Hillary Clinton.

Since that election, he has made rhetorical bows to the white nationalis­ts and substantiv­e bows to mainstream Republican­s. He still skewers Clinton every chance he gets.

He has scaled back environmen­tal regulation­s in a so-far futile effort to resuscitat­e the struggling coal industry.

But otherwise, he has failed the disgruntle­d working class.

So perhaps it is no wonder that Trump’s endorsemen­t wasn’t enough to give Roy Moore victory in Alabama.

Moore was an unappetizi­ng candidate to begin with.

That he was supported by a do-little president made him no more appealing.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES ?? Democratic U.S. senator-elect Doug Jones greets supporters during his election-night gathering in Birmingham, Alabama.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES Democratic U.S. senator-elect Doug Jones greets supporters during his election-night gathering in Birmingham, Alabama.
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