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Republican disdain for big cities is a losing strategy

- Jonah Goldberg

“God bless real Michigan. God bless real America. God bless the greatest president in our lifetime, Donald Trump,” Ted Nugent recently declared at a Michigan rally.

It’s ironic that Trump, the first president born and raised in New York City (or any major city) since Teddy Roosevelt, has hitched his presidency to the idea that “real America” is not to be found in urban areas.

Real America— a term beloved by Richard Nixon— tops the long list of conservati­ve catchphras­es capturing the sense of grievance dominating so muchof the right these days. Real America is “flyover country,” a term used more by thosewho resent it than by those who actually use it as a term of derision. In today’ s Republican mythology, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco and other major cities are hometo the elites— or, if you include the shores of Lake Michigan, the even more hated “coastal elites.”

It’s a funny definition of real America that excludes not just the bulk of the population but also the centers that define so much of our culture and history. After all, the American Revolution is a story set largely in New York, Boston and Philadelph­ia. When foreigners visit America, they don’t spend a lot of time checking out the grain silos of North Dakota.

Real America, we’re told— mostly by right-wing media figures who don’t live in it— is rural, brimming with country music blared from pick up trucks adorned with gun racks and maybe a bale of hay or a dog in back.

I don’t mean to belittle that America. I like that America and think it’s a repository of values worth celebratin­g. But American conservati­sm shouldn’t be reduced to nostalgic agrarianis­m.

Stadtluft macht frei (“city air makes you free”) is a German phrase dating back to the Middle Ages. Legally, it described a rule that if a serf lived in a city for a year and a day, his feudal master could no longer claim him. But the phrase came to mean more than simply away of escaping feudal bondage. Cities have long been where the poor and the enterprisi­ng goto find opportunit­y and prosperity, to sculpt their lives a mid the economic dynamism that conservati­ves are supposed to celebrate. Cities are where most immigrants go to pursue the American dream. Andit’s not just immigrants fromother countries. Agood rule of thumb for determinin­g whether a state is trending “red” or “blue” is to look at whether young people are moving inor out.

Of themore than 3,100 counties in the country, 31 of the mac count for nearly a third of gross domestic productand the lion’s share of growth in good jobs. The combined payrolls of Amazon and K roger are about equal to the total number of agricultur­al workers.

Bizarrely, the GOP has abandoned the battlespac­e to the opposition. Of the20 largest U.S. cities, three have Republican mayors. San Diego, at No. 8, is the only one in the top 10. The last Republican mayor of LA, Richard Riordan, left office nearly 20 years ago. Chicago hasn’t seen a Republican mayor since William Thompson was reelected to a second term in 1927, the year before the debut of sliced bread. Even cities that occasional­ly elect GOP mayors are usually under the thumb of Democratic city councils.

It’s not like cities couldn’t use some political competitio­n. It’s amusing towatch liberals such as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez describe long voting lines in New York City as “voter suppressio­n.” Who runs those elections? Who runs the cities where concern over police abuses are most prevalent? The continued COVID-19 shutdown of major school systems is driven in no small part by teachers unions, which have anear strangleho­ld in major cities.

Republican­s are great at talking about the economic toll of red tape on the little guy. But their policies tend to focus on Fortune 500firms. What about the small shop and restaurant owners, plumbers, contractor­s, et al.? American cities are looking more and more European these days, as the rich gentrify the down towns and the poor are banished to the outer suburbs. Reforming urban zoning would probably do more to lift the economic tide than cutting the income tax. But when did you last hear a Republican talk about zoning?

For good or ill, the real America that elected Donald Trump is shrinking. If the GOP doesn’t broaden its horizons, the party will vanish along with it.

 ?? NATIHARNIK/AP ?? Spectators applaud last month as aTrump 2020 float drives by during the annualAppl­ejack parade inNebraska City, Nebraska.
NATIHARNIK/AP Spectators applaud last month as aTrump 2020 float drives by during the annualAppl­ejack parade inNebraska City, Nebraska.
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