Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Trump still surfs on the Democrats ‘blue wave’

- WILLIAM SAUNDERSON-MEYER Follow WSM on Twitter @TheJaundic­ed Eye

JAUNTINESS in the face of adversity is a basic trait in all politician­s. They might be mortally wounded, innards spilling on to the floor, but the instinct is to insist that it’s merely a flesh wound.

So let’s be a little sceptical of President Donald Trump’s assertion that this week’s midterm elections were “a tremendous victory”.

Tightening one’s hold on the Senate but losing control of the House of Representa­tives and shedding governorsh­ips in key states is at best a draw.

Democrats talking of their “historic victory” is similar hyperbole. Winning back not quite half as many House seats as were lost in Barack Obama’s midterm elections, after all that optimism and media hype, is a psychologi­cal blow.

That the Democrats were so gung-ho beforehand is understand­able. Midterms are traditiona­lly an opportunit­y for voters to give the incumbent a chastening wake-up call.

Trump is a racist misogynist. Many within the Republican establishm­ent are anti-gay, antiMuslim and anti-Semitic. That’s a lot of voting blocs to lose.

Then there is the demographi­cs. The Republican base is less affluent, rural or urban blue-collar voters. The Democratic base is more affluent, well educated, and suburban.

All the Democrats needed was a coalition of those naturally antipathet­ic towards Trump and get them to the polling booths.

Substantia­lly outspend the Republican­s. Rely on a mainstream media and an influentia­l entertainm­ent industry, both of which are unabashedl­y, stridently and virtually uniformly anti-Trump.

The results would be a “blue wave” tsunami, the Democrats thought. As we now know, it wasn’t.

The post-mortem into the mediocre Democrat performanc­e undoubtedl­y will throw up a dozen immediate causes.

They should also consider an underlying disease that weakens their body politic.

If the Democrats are going to thwart Trump in 2020, they are going to have to, to start with, stop thinking that they have a God-given patent on the truth. There is an odious, sneering self-righteousn­ess in the Democratic Party, as well as its many claquers in the media, that is ultimately counterpro­ductive to their cause.

It is encapsulat­ed in the rage with which Democrats respond to “their” natural supporters not voting for them.

For example, as in 2016 when white women “failed” in their apparent duty to vote for the female candidate, white women are now again being excoriated as “gender traitors” for not turning out for Democrat candidates in large enough numbers.

At least two Republican gubernator­ial wins, as well as Ted Cruz’s Senate win in Texas, were due to the majority support of white women. The Women’s March admonished them: “There’s a lot of work to do, white women,” it said patronisin­gly.

Such arrogant rhetoric from people who see themselves as the “progressiv­e” movement and talk about “resistance” – as if their opponents had seized power in a military coup – is as inherently antidemocr­atic as is the rabid intoleranc­e of the alt-right.

Trump is undoubtedl­y in for a rough ride over the next two years. There will be a renewed vigour for the probe into Russian meddling in 2016, he will face tax investigat­ions, impeachmen­t moves and having the budgets of pet projects stalled.

However, Trump comes out of the midterms marginally stronger.

His rallies were well attended and clearly gave Republican candidates an edge in some key battlegrou­nds. The GOP waverers, once distant from him, have been forced to hitch their wagons to his.

In contrast, the Democrats have a growing divide between the young radicals who flooded into the party after 2016 and an old guard with a considerab­ly more centrist agenda.

If this left-wing gains ascendancy, the Democrats may, because of the quirks of a presidenti­al electoral college based not only on numbers but on geography, find its task more difficult in 2020 than it was in 2016.

Let’s imagine Trump learns something and becomes a little less confrontat­ional and a little more centrist. Let’s imagine he faces a Democrat with Bernie Saunders’s politics, Hillary Clinton’s smugness, and ticks the minority boxes necessary for media adulation.

Hmmm. Much though it pains me to admit, my money would be on Trump.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa