Los Angeles Times

Of course Trump voters are angry

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Re “Who’s to blame for Donald Trump?” Opinion, March 10

The blame game over the Donald Trump phenomenon intensifie­s. Is it Trump himself? Does it go back to George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, or even way back to Newt Gingrich and slash- and- burn politics? How did the Republican­s become the party of extremists?

The narrative that Trump is the problem is naive. There have always been divisive and unprincipl­ed politician­s seeing political gain by appealing to fear and hatred.

What is new and surprising is the large segment of the Republican Party that embraces those values. Trump did not invent these values, but he has become a magnet for the worst elements in society. The Republican Party appealed to these folks for decades, usually in code language, and now it has the albatross around its neck.

Roger Johnson

San Clemente

Noah Berlatsky has divided up the blame for the rise of Trump ( correctly described as “comical, embarrassi­ng and terrifying”) among the generalize­d notion of a “hollowed out” middle class, Bill Clinton’s open trade policies, Bush’s tax cuts, bank bailouts and other people, institutio­ns and events too numerous to recount here.

The “terrifying” part of the piece that Berlatsky refers to is summed up in the sentence: “Celebrity makes the fascism go down easy.”

Europe in the 1930s was particular­ly hard hit by the Great Depression. Lest we forget, the Nazis came to power in Germany not by a military coup, but by being voted into office by the people who had become dishearten­ed by the economic and political status quo of their time. Nate Tucker

Costa Mesa

Berlatsky asks what has contribute­d to the rise of Trump. Let me suggest an explanatio­n he did not offer.

The Republican base has figured out that the party establishm­ent does not care about the middle class. It has realized that tax cuts for the rich do not trickle down and create middle- class jobs. It has realized that deregulati­on does not create jobs and prosperity but rather caused the Great Recession. It has figured out that the belief that giving money to politician­s is “free speech” is in reality the method used by corporatio­ns and the extremely wealthy use to bribe politician­s.

Democrats have known all of this for years. Members of the Republican base have finally realized that they have been used, manipulate­d and betrayed by the party establishm­ent. Is it any wonder they’re angry? Michael Asher

Valley Village

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