Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Seduced and betrayed

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman, who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics, writes for the New York Times.

Donald Trump won the Electoral College (though not the popular vote) on the strength of overwhelmi­ng support from working-class whites, who feel left behind by a changing economy and society. And they’re about to get their reward—the same reward that, throughout Trump’s career, has come to everyone who trusted his good intentions. Think Trump University.

Yes, the white working class is about to be betrayed.

The evidence of that coming betrayal is obvious in the choice of an array of pro-corporate, anti-labor figures for key positions. In particular, the most important story of the week—seriously, people, stop focusing on Trump Twitter—was the selection of Tom Price, an ardent opponent of Obamacare and advocate of Medicare privatizat­ion, as secretary of Health and Human Services. This choice probably means that the Affordable Care Act is doomed—and Trump’s most enthusiast­ic supporters will be among the biggest losers.

The first thing you need to understand here is that Republican talk of “repeal and replace” has always been a fraud. The GOP has spent six years claiming that it will come up with a replacemen­t for Obamacare any day now; the reason it hasn’t delivered is that it can’t.

Obamacare looks the way it does because it has to: You can’t cover Americans with pre-existing conditions without requiring healthy people to sign up, and you can’t do that without subsidies to make insurance affordable.

Any replacemen­t will either look a lot like Obamacare, or take insurance away from millions who desperatel­y need it.

What the choice of Price suggests is that the Trump administra­tion is in fact ready to see millions lose insurance. And many of those losers will be Trump supporters.

You can see why by looking at census data from 2013 to 2015, which show the impact of the full implementa­tion of Obamacare. Over that period, the number of uninsured Americans dropped by 13 million; whites without a college degree, who voted Trump by around two to one, accounted for about 8 million of that decline. So we’re probably looking at more than 5 million Trump supporters, many of whom have chronic health problems and recently got health insurance for the first time, who just voted to make their lives nastier, more brutish and shorter.

Why did they do it? They may not have realized that their coverage was at stake—over the course of the campaign, the news media barely covered policy at all. Or they may have believed Trump’s assurances that he would replace Obamacare with something great.

Either way, they’re about to receive a rude awakening, which will get even worse once Republican­s push ahead with their plans to end Medicare as we know it, which seem to be on even though the president-elect had promised specifical­ly that he would do no such thing.

And just in case you’re wondering, no, Trump can’t bring back the manufactur­ing jobs that have been lost over the past few decades. Those jobs were lost mainly to technologi­cal change, not imports, and they aren’t coming back.

There will be nothing to offset the harm workers suffer when Republican­s rip up the safety net. Will there be a political backlash, a surge of buyer’s remorse? Maybe. Certainly Democrats will be well advised to hammer Trump’s betrayal of the working class nonstop. But we do need to consider the tactics that he will use to obscure the scope of his betrayal.

One tactic, which we’ve already seen with this week’s ostentatio­us announceme­nt of a deal to keep some Carrier jobs in America, will be to distract the nation with bright, shiny, trivial objects. True, this tactic will work only if news coverage is both gullible and innumerate.

No, Trump didn’t “stand up” to Carrier—he seems to have offered it a bribe. And we’re talking about 1,000 jobs in a huge economy; at the rate of one Carrier-size deal a week, it would take Trump 30 years to save as many jobs as President Barack Obama did with the auto bailout; it would take him a century to make up for the overall loss of manufactur­ing jobs just since 2000.

But judging from the coverage of the deal so far, assuming that the news media will be gullible and innumerate seems like a good bet.

AND IF and when the reality that workers are losing ground starts to sink in, I worry that the Trumpists will do what authoritar­ian government­s often do to change the subject away from poor performanc­e: go find an enemy.

Remember what I said about Trump Twitter. Even as he took a big step toward taking health insurance away from millions, Trump started ranting about taking citizenshi­p away from flag-burners. This was not a coincidenc­e.

The point is to keep your eye on what’s important. Millions of Americans have just been sucker-punched. They just don’t know it yet.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States