Chattanooga Times Free Press

REVEALING THE YEARS-LONG REPUBLICAN SCAM

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Unless something dramatic happens, President Donald Trump will lose in November, taking a good number of Republican enablers with him. The Pew Research Center reported on Thursday: “Trump’s rating from the U.S. public overall for his response to the coronaviru­s has declined 11 percentage points since March, from 48% to 37%.” His overall approval is down to 38 percent. A new poll has his Republican ally, Sen. Lindsey O. Graham, tied in South Carolina. Republican Sens. Susan Collins, Maine, Martha McSally, Arizona, Thom Tillis, North Carolina, and Joni Ernst, Iowa, all trail their opponents in recent polls.

Democrats will have a field day if Republican­s leave town without a stimulus deal. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had this stunning exchange with CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday:

Cramer: “I like your spirit of being more upbeat, more optimistic, so I will offer this: Why can’t you go across the aisle and say, ‘Representa­tive Lewis, civil rights legend, would have loved it if we could do something for the totally disenfranc­hised in this country. No matter what, can we give a huge chunk of money to the people who are disenfranc­hised, to minorities who want so badly to stay in business and can’t and to people who are trying to go to college or have student loans who are minorities who are the most affected because they had the least chance in our country?’ That’s got to be something both sides can agree to.”

Pelosi: “Perhaps you mistook them for somebody who gives a damn for what you just described.”

Cramer: “Ooh, jeez.”

Pelosi: “Yeah. That’s the problem. See, the thing is, they don’t believe in governance. They don’t believe in governance, and that requires some acts of government to do that … . And basically, economists tell us, spend the money, invest the money for those who need it the most, because they will spend it. It will be a stimulus or at least a stabilizat­ion of — and that’s a good thing. Consumer confidence is a good thing for the economy. You know that better than anyone.”

Meanwhile in Ohio, Trump used an official White House visit as a forum to attack presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden. The former vice president, Trump proclaimed, would “take away your guns, take away your Second Amendment. No religion, no anything.” Revealing his own lack of faith and decency, Trump added that Biden would “hurt the Bible. Hurt God. He’s against God. He’s against guns. He’s against energy.”

The Biden team responded more in disgust than anger. “Joe Biden’s faith is at the core of who he is; he’s lived it with dignity his entire life, and it’s been a source of strength and comfort in times of extreme hardship,” spokesman Andrew Bates said. “Donald Trump is the only president in our history to have tear-gassed peaceful Americans and thrown a priest out of his church just so he could profane it — and a Bible — for his own cynical optics as he sought to tear our nation apart at a moment of crisis and pain.”

At this point, we not only see the desperatio­n in Trump’s attacks but the scam Republican­s have pulled for years in the name of “conservati­sm.” Claiming to be the party of values, conservati­ves have lined up behind someone who decries true faith, brutalizes the weak, unabashedl­y displays his racism and acts on every ugly impulse that pops into his head.

The Second Amendment, also a mainstay of right-wing rhetoric and political mobilizati­on, looks like it was cover for a money-making racket. New York Attorney General Letitia James wants to dissolve the NRA and remove “CEO Wayne LaPierre from the leadership post he has held for the past 39 years, saying he and others used the group’s funds to finance a luxury lifestyle.”

Let’s not forget the debt, which Republican­s were happy to ring up when it came to tax cuts for the wealthy or bailouts for big business and their own cronies. But they suddenly rediscover their aversion to spending when it comes to funding state and local government to prevent layoffs of police and fire fighters, expanding food stamps or continuing federal support for unemployed Americans.

Trump and his Republican cohorts seem to be heading for an electoral disaster. Along the way, they are also managing to show us that whether it was on religion or guns or debt, their rhetoric was largely a sham.

 ??  ?? Trudy Rubin
Trudy Rubin

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