Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

They vote Republican and stay poor

- LZ Granderson LZ Granderson is an op-ed columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Donald Trump took his dog whistle down to Florida last weekend, where he reportedly told a room full of donors: “When you are Democrat, you start off essentiall­y at 40% because you have civil service, you have the unions and you have welfare.”

He then drove home this point: “And don’t underestim­ate welfare. They get welfare to vote, and then they cheat on top of that — they cheat.”

It’s hard to believe that trope still works on people. It has always been nonsense.

The Poor Republican voters

Of the 341 counties experienci­ng persistent poverty, the U.S. Census says roughly 80% are in Southern states that voted for Trump. In fact, most of our poorest states have voted Republican in every election since 2000 and have had Republican-controlled state legislatur­es for years. The “welfare vote,” if there were such a thing, is not going to Democrats.

Lord knows I’m not suggesting blue cities and states don’t have their problems. But with so many Americans living check to check nowadays, the problem of “poverty” is not uniquely urban. It’s also not a good proxy for whatever Trump really meant to convey — presumably race.

You would think that by now there would be a less Reaganesqu­e way to rally Republican­s than to rail against the mythologic­al “welfare queens.” Perhaps with all of his court appearance­s Trump didn’t have time to come up with new material.

Or maybe he doesn’t need to. His audience knows what he means. Back home, they’re doing their best to keep “Black” synonymous with “poor.”

When President Lyndon B. Johnson’s “war on poverty” began in 1964, one in five Americans lived in poverty. However, the rate for Black people was 40%, a disparity elected leaders in Confederat­e states appear happy to uphold. For example, Republican­s have had complete control of Mississipp­i’s government since 2012, and Black people in that state are almost three times more likely to live in poverty than their white counterpar­ts.

It’s no coincidenc­e that many of the poorest counties are clustered in the same red states of the Confederac­y: Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas. It’s also not by chance that politician­s on the right characteri­ze poor people as lazy and deserving of their lot in life. This “welfare” dog whistle works for them.

Blaming welfare and the people who get it

In 2018, the Heritage Foundation, a powerful conservati­ve think tank, issued a report on poverty that read in part: “If the amount of work performed in poor families with children were increased to the equivalent of one adult working full-time through the year, the poverty rate among these families would drop by twothirds.”

The Heritage Foundation has a plan for 2025 if Trump retakes the White House. Let’s just say when it comes to helping the poor (or not), the group’s views haven’t changed much.

Take a moment with that implicatio­n: At a moment when about three in four Americans are living check to check, the Heritage Foundation wanted and still wants to spin poverty as if it’s a work ethic issue. Not one of rising inflation or decades of wage stagnation. Not one of systemic racism. And certainly not a side effect of Trump’s 2017 tax cuts that redirected even more wealth away from working people and toward the rich.

For the people in that room in Florida to whom Trump was airing his grievances, I’m sure that’s a welcome conclusion.

In the big picture, Trump is just the latest conservati­ve to rail against the federal government’s attempt to help poor people. President Nixon did it. Newt Gingrich’s “contract with America” was all about that. Both Bushes.

The conservati­ve narrative

It’s all part of the conservati­ve narrative that looks at infrastruc­ture failures of large cities run by Democrats as evidence of too many “welfare queens” getting handouts. You know, as opposed to the loss of tax revenue stemming from white flight. Or federal underinves­tment in infrastruc­ture since the 1960s.

Meanwhile the same predominan­tly white rural stretches that Johnson referenced 60 years ago are still among the poorest.

And their residents keep voting for Republican­s like Trump who slash attempts to help the poor. They don’t think a war on poor people hurts them. Presumably because they keep being told that they’re not the face of “welfare.”

 ?? Spencer Platt/Getty Images ?? Supporters of Donald Trump wait to hear him speak at the Mississipp­i Coast Coliseum on Jan. 2, 2016 in Biloxi, Mississipp­i.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images Supporters of Donald Trump wait to hear him speak at the Mississipp­i Coast Coliseum on Jan. 2, 2016 in Biloxi, Mississipp­i.

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